Chicago Sun-Times

Activists: Too many Amazon employees getting hurt on job

In 2018, 40 workers at Monee plant injured so badly they were unable to return to work, protesters say

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO, STAFF REPORTER sesposito@suntimes.com | @slesposito

At first, Brian Whitlock enjoyed his job organizing products — from cellphone cases to 20-pound bags of dog food — on shelves in a massive Amazon warehouse.

For one thing, the pay at the downstate Monee facility was higher than what he’d been making at his previous job, working at an auto parts store.

Beginning in October 2018, Whitlock worked four to five 10hour shifts each week, he said. But try as he might, he just couldn’t keep up with Amazon’s famously speedy work rate. That’s because Whitlock has Tourette syndrome, which, among other things, causes involuntar­y muscle spasms.

Whitlock, 35, said he asked his bosses if they’d make a “reasonable accommodat­ion” for his condition. He even brought in a doctor’s note. His bosses refused his request, he says.

“One day, due to the stresses of the job, I ended up having a complete nervous breakdown,” Whitlock said Tuesday, as he joined other former Amazon workers and community activists outside a downtown Amazon Go store. “I was totally unaware of where I was or what I was doing. I was unaware of my surroundin­gs.”

Activists with Warehouse Workers for Justice say they’ve obtained safety records from the Monee plant, showing, among other things, that 25 workers were injured in 2018 during the holiday season. For all of 2018, 40 workers suffered injuries so severe that they were unable to work at their Amazon jobs, according to the activist group.

“The push for faster and faster deliveries comes with a price — a price paid through the injuries of local workers,” said Robert J. Clack, a spokesman the activist group.

Tuesday’s demonstrat­ion comes on the heels of a Nov. 25 report from the non-profit Center for Investigat­ive Reporting, which reviewed internal injury records from 23 of

Amazon’s 110 fulfillmen­t centers across the nation. The investigat­ion found the rate of serious injury for the 23 facilities was more than double the national average for the warehouse industry.

But Kelly Cheeseman, a spokeswoma­n for Amazon, said the company takes “an aggressive stance on recording injuries no matter how big or small, which results in elevated recordable rates and makes comparison­s misleading.”

Cheeseman also said that “selfintere­sted critics, particular­ly unions and groups funded by our competitor­s, have a vested interest in spreading misinforma­tion about Amazon ...”

Whitlock said his nervous breakdown led to a week-long hospital stay. His supervisor­s at Amazon wouldn’t let him return to work without a doctor’s note. But it took Whitlock two weeks to get a doctor’s appointmen­t.

“In that time, they told me I had abandoned my job and they fired me,” Whitlock said.

Whitlock, who is currently unemployed, said he wouldn’t wish his Amazon experience on “my worst enemy.”

“You’re basically he said.

Whitlock said he has considered suing Amazon, but didn’t think he had a “leg to stand on,” going up against the company’s teams of lawyers.

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 ?? STEFANO ESPOSITO/SUN-TIMES ?? Demonstrat­ors protest Tuesday outside a downtown Amazon Go store.
STEFANO ESPOSITO/SUN-TIMES Demonstrat­ors protest Tuesday outside a downtown Amazon Go store.

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