‘Ware’ jobs are: A’zon hiring 125K
Amazon is hiring 125,000 warehouse workers, some of whom will earn up to $22.50 an hour, the company said Tuesday.
As the race to hire warehouse workers intensifies in preparation for the holiday season, Amazon has hiked its average starting wage for fulfillment and transportation workers, who will now earn more than $18 an hour, Amazon said, up from about $15.
In some of the tightest labor markets, which tend to be urban areas, the e-commerce giant is paying up to $22.50 an hour and is also dangling $3,000 sign-on bonuses, the company said.
Amazon is also opening more than 100 fulfillment centers and regional delivery stations this month, after opening more than 250 in the past 12 months.
The company did not immediately disclose the locations of those facilities, including whether any will be in the New York area.
The hiring binge comes as most retailers, including Walmart, Target, Home Depot and Macy’s, typically announce plans to add seasonal workers, but this year many large companies are opting to hire full-time instead of temporary employees, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
“With just a few short weeks from the start of the holiday shopping season, retailers are announcing permanent hiring plans rather than seasonal ones,” Senior VP Andrew Challenger
said in a statement Tuesday.
Walmart this month announced plans to hire 20,000 logistics workers, but has yet to announce seasonal hiring plans, Challenger said.
Last week Walmart boosted store associates’ wages by $1 an hour, which raises the average hourly rate to $16.40, the company said.
So far this year, US companies have announced just 190,000 seasonal-hiring jobs, down from 301,700 this time last year, according to the outplacement firm.
Many companies are also sweetening fringe-benefit packages, including Amazon and Walmart, which announced programs to cover college tuition at certain universities.