The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fife warehouse workers fearing infection spread

Amazon showing ‘blatant disregard’ for social distancing rules, GMB Union claims

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Amazon workers in Fife are “petrified” of being infected with coronaviru­s after being left to work in packed warehouses with no hand sanitiser or personal protection equipment.

The GMB Union has claimed people at Amazon fulfilment centres across the UK have reported being left in crowds of between 200 and 300 people and having to reuse equipment multiple times without hand sanitiser being available.

The company’s Dunfermlin­e complex, which is one of the biggest in the UK at the size of around 14 football pitches, is still operating throughout the crisis, although customers have been warned delivery times for certain products will take far longer than usual.

While employees are striving to process orders in the midst of the pandemic, the GMB say there is “no way” Amazon workers can keep a safe distance from each other and hit productivi­ty targets.

Mick Rix, GMB national officer, said workers have reported water dispensers being used over and over again without being disinfecte­d, dirty canteen tables with used tissues on them, team leaders giving feedback without staying two metres away and no sanitiser or alcohol wipes to clean equipment.

“We are so angry about this – these workers are petrified of catching and spreading Covid-19 and rightly so,” Mr Rix said.

“Amazon is blatantly disregardi­ng the two-metre social distancing rules, there are no masks, no sanitiser and with the vast amount of people working there there’s no way of keeping them from getting ill.

“Amazon has a duty of care – not just to its own workers but to the whole of the British public.”

Amazon has said it has taken measures to support its workforce across the globe and urged employees who could work from home to do so, although it acknowledg­ed fulfilment centres were not conducive to that.

A spokesman said: “We paused our fulfilment centre public tours programme, cancelled large events, and changed the majority of our job interviews to virtual interviews rather than in-person interviews, which often require travel.

“At the same time, we increased our cleaning of all facilities globally, including regular sanitisati­on of all door handles, stairway handrails, lift buttons, lockers, and touch screens.”

Any employee diagnosed with Covid-19 or placed into quarantine will receive up to two weeks of pay, the firm added.

 ?? Picture: Steve Brown. ?? Inside the warehouse facility in Dunfermlin­e.
Picture: Steve Brown. Inside the warehouse facility in Dunfermlin­e.

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