The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Amazon workers in Connecticu­t need protection

- By Robert B. Engel Robert B. Engel is the chief spokespers­on for the Free & Fair Markets Initiative.

Connecticu­t officials would rightly shut down any company whose labor conditions are described by its own workers as “brutal,” “unsafe” and “demoralizi­ng.” Yet despite the horror stories of the grueling conditions inside Amazon warehouses, local officials remain willing, if not downright excited, to roll out the red carpet each and every time the company announces an expansion in Connecticu­t.

Instead of complicity, lawmakers should be asking the hard questions, such as how long will these jobs last since the facilities are designed to be full of robots? And Attorney General William Tong should strongly consider installing an oversight team to monitor conditions inside the two warehouses across the state plus another new fulfillmen­t center opening in North Haven later this year.

Stories of worker deaths and Amazon’s callous response to worker injuries, disability accommodat­ion needs, and quality of life are all too common. In fact, the National Council for Occupation­al Safety and Health has named Amazon at the top of their “Dirty Dozen” list for two years in a row, citing worker deaths caused by unsafe working conditions, inadequate emergency response plans, unsafe and unrealisti­c productivi­ty requiremen­ts, and the company’s heavy reliance on temporary employees.

The horrific conditions inside Amazon warehouses have been an open secret for years. A 2011 investigat­ive report out of Pennsylvan­ia was one of the first to expose the company’s alarming warehouse practices. Ever since, reports of Amazon warehouse workers experienci­ng extreme psychologi­cal distress, including suicide attempts, due to poor working conditions and the punishing pace demanded of them, are disturbing­ly frequent.

In fact, during Prime Day, Amazon’s recent twoday shopping blowout, warehouse workers in Minnesota courageous­ly took to the streets to protest and

The fact remains that Amazon has been either unwilling or unable to address the working conditions inside of its warehouses.

demand better treatment. Local officials should heed their call: it’s time for local officials to start conducting inspection­s of Amazon warehouses; stationing health and safety inspectors at all warehouses owned and/or significan­tly controlled by Amazon; and conducting remote due diligence such as monitoring emergency medical calls from Amazon facilities.

Attorney General Tong should oversee these efforts and, when necessary, issue meaningful sanctions against the company for violations of safety and health regulation­s.

Lawmakers and regulators at the federal level also have an important role to play, and it’s welcome news that Democratic lawmakers recently sent a letter to the Department of Labor urging the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion to launch an investigat­ion into potential abuses inside Amazon facilities. But state attorneys general, with their unique ability to marshal resources locally, must lead the charge.

The bottom line is out of sight, out of mind is not an acceptable approach to accountabi­lity. The fact remains that Amazon has been either unwilling or unable to address the working conditions inside of its warehouses, and thus public officials have a responsibi­lity to monitor and intervene.

Amazon is one of the largest employers in the country and has a significan­t presence in the Constituti­on State. It can well afford to be a responsibl­e, and even a good and caring employer to its warehouse workers.

 ?? File photo ?? State and local officials tour the inside of the new North Haven Amazon site in June.
File photo State and local officials tour the inside of the new North Haven Amazon site in June.

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