Imperial Valley Press

Thousands show up for jobs at Amazon warehouses in US cities.

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FALL RIVER, Mass. (AP) — Thousands of people showed up Wednesday for a chance to pack and ship products to Amazon customers, as the e-commerce company held a giant job fair at nearly a dozen U.S. warehouses.

Although the wages offered will make it hard for some to make ends meet, many of the candidates were excited by the prospect of health insurance and other benefits, as well as advancemen­t opportunit­ies.

It’s common for Amazon to ramp up its shipping center staff in August to prepare for holiday shopping. But the magnitude of its current hiring spree underscore­s Amazon’s growth when traditiona­l retailers are closing stores — and blaming Amazon for a shift to buying goods online.

Amazon said it received “a record-breaking 20,000 applicatio­ns” and hired thousands of people on the spot, and will hire more in the coming days. That number represente­d fewer than half of the 50,000 people it had said it planned to hire.

Most of the jobs are fulltime positions in packing, sorting and shipping and will count toward Amazon’s previously announced goal of adding 100,000 full-time workers by the middle of next year.

The bad news is that more people are likely to lose jobs in stores than get jobs in warehouses, said Anthony Carnevale, director of Georgetown University’s Center on Education and the Workforce.

On the flip side, Amazon’s warehouse jobs provide “decent and competitiv­e” wages and could help build skills.

“Interperso­nal team work, problem solving, critical thinking, all that stuff goes on in these warehouses,” Carnevale said. “They’re serious entry-level jobs for a lot of young people, even those who are still making their way through school.”

The company is advertisin­g starting wages that range from $11.50 an hour in Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, to $13.75 an hour in Kent, Washington, near Amazon’s Seattle headquarte­rs. The $11.50 rate amounts to about $23,920 a year. In Washington state, the current minimum wage is $11.50 but by 2020 will increase to $13.50. By comparison, the warehouse store operator Costco raised its minimum wage for entry-level workers last year from $13 to $13.50 an hour.

Some job candidates Wednesday were looking to supplement other income.

Rodney Huffman, a 27-year-old personal trainer, said the $13-an-hour job in Baltimore would pay enough to help cover bills while he starts his own company.

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