The Standard Journal

Amazon driver texts reveal chaos as Illinois tornado bore down

- By Spencer Soper, Michael Tobin and Michael Smith

The messages between an Amazon.com Inc. delivery driver and her boss began about 80 minutes before a tornado struck one of the company’s warehouses in Edwardsvil­le, Illinois, on Dec. 10, killing six workers. The dramatic exchange cast in sharp relief the chaos that can ensue when disaster hits and disagreeme­nts erupt about when it’s time to heed warnings and cease working.

“Radio’s been going off,” the driver wrote in a text obtained by Bloomberg News.

“Keep delivering,” came the response from her supervisor. “We can’t just call people back for a warning unless Amazon tells us to.”

The driver suggested she return to base. But her boss warned that doing so could get her fired for failing to complete her deliveries. She fretted that her van would wind up becoming her casket.

Days after the tornado toppled the warehouse’s 11-inch thick concrete walls, workers are questionin­g Amazon’s commitment to their safety. Bloomberg reviewed text messages from contract drivers and interviewe­d current and former workers who said they received instructio­ns on what do in fires or tornadoes, but never did the kind of drills that could help avoid confusion in an emergency. Training for new hires entails merely pointing out emergency exits and assembly points, they said. 7:08 p.m.

Driver: Radios been going off. Dispatch: OK. Just keep driving. We can’t just call people back for a warning unless Amazon tells us to do so. Driver: Just relaying in case y’all didn’t hear it over there.

7:40 p.m.

Driver: Tornado alarms are going off over here. Dispatch: Just keep delivering for now. We have to wait for word from Amazon. If we need to bring people back, the decision will ultimately be up to them. I will let you know if the situation changes at all. I’m talking with them now about it. Driver: How about for my own personal safety, I’m going to head back. Having alarms going off next to me and nothing but locked building around me isn’t sheltering in place. That’s wanting to turn this van into a casket. Hour left of delivery time. And if you look at the radar, the worst of the storm is going to be right on top of me in 30 minutes. Driver: It

was actual sirens.

Dispatch: “If you decided to come back, that choice is yours. But I can tell you it won’t be viewed as for your own safety. The safest practice is to stay exactly where you are. If you decide to return with your packages, it will be viewed as you refusing your route, which will ultimately end with you not having a job come tomorrow morning. The sirens are just a warning. Driver: I’m literally stuck in this damn van without a safe place to go with a tornado on the ground. Dispatch: Amazon is saying shelter in place. Dispatch: I will know when they say anything else to me. Dispatch: [Driver name] you need to shelter in place. The wind just came through the warehouse and ripped the rts door and broke it so even if you got back here, you can’t get in the building. You need to stop and shelter in place. Driver: OK.

Amazon, which has been opening warehouses by the hundreds in the past few years, says the Edwardsvil­le facility complied with all constructi­on regulation­s and that proper safety procedures were followed when the tornado struck. The company says its people followed federal guidance to take shelter immediatel­y when there’s a tornado warning and likely saved many lives. But in the end, workers who bunkered in a designated safe zone survived, while six others perished after being stranded on the end of the facility that bore the brunt of the storm.

A person familiar with the situation confirmed the authentici­ty of the texts between the driver and her boss. The driver, this person said, was about 30 miles away from the cluster of facilities Amazon operates in Edwardsvil­le and worked out of a delivery station across the highway from the building that was

decimated by the tornado.

“This was a developing situation across a broad geographic area, and unfortunat­ely the delivery service partner’s dispatcher didn’t follow the standard safety practice,” Amazon spokespers­on Kelly Nantel said in a statement. “This dispatcher should have immediatel­y directed the driver to seek shelter when the driver reported hearing tornado sirens. While this text exchange was going on, the local Amazon team was ensuring each delivery service partner had directed their drivers to shelter in place or seek shelter and advised them to stop delivering for the evening. We’re glad the driver is safe and we’re using the learnings from this incident to improve our policies and guidance for delivery service partners and drivers. Under no circumstan­ce should the dispatcher have threatened the driver’s employment, and we’re investigat­ing the full details of this incident and will take any necessary action.”

Even as Amazon undertakes an investigat­ion of what happened that evening in Edwardsvil­le, the U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion has opened its own probe into the deaths. Disaster planning should include training drivers what to do if they are caught outdoors when a tornado is threatenin­g, according to OSHA guidelines, which advise seeking shelter in a basement or a sturdy building or remaining in the vehicle if debris is flying. Meanwhile, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker said building codes may need to be toughened as storms become more frequent and deadly.

The federal government doesn’t require warehouses in tornado-prone areas to train and drill workers or provide shelters. OSHA

does require workplaces to have an emergency plan, which could include preparing for a tornado.

Amazon workers in Edwardsvil­le and beyond said their weather safety training was minimal.

An employee at a fulfillmen­t center across the street from the wrecked warehouse said that new hires get instructio­ns on fire and tornado preparedne­ss and informatio­n during so-called stand-up meetings with managers. The employee, who requested anonymity to speak without company authorizat­ion, didn’t recall receiving informatio­n on a tornado — at least since the pandemic began — and said that workers never physically practice the drills.

A former Amazon manager who worked for two years at a fulfillmen­t center across the street from the collapsed warehouse said the company conducted no fire or tornado drills. Upper managers provided small plastic cards with instructio­ns on what to do during a tornado, including taking shelter but not getting in cars or leaving the area. Shelter, in some cases, meant a bathroom, the manager said.

“I would not know what to do with a tornado at all,” said this person, who left Amazon this year and requested anonymity to avoid angering the company. “No one knew where they were supposed to be going.”

An employee at a Midwestern Amazon warehouse who trains new hires said he has recommende­d several times that the company conduct fire and tornado drills. The person, who requested anonymity to protect his job, said he floated the ideas via an electronic employee forum and on a white board where workers offer suggestion­s. Nothing happened, the person said.

 ?? Tim Vizer/aFP via Getty Images/Tns ?? Recovery operations continue after the partial collapse of an Amazon Fulfillmen­t Center in Edwardsvil­le, Illinois, on Dec. 12. The facility was damaged by a tornado on Dec. 10. The confirmed number of fatalities has been raised from two to six people.
Tim Vizer/aFP via Getty Images/Tns Recovery operations continue after the partial collapse of an Amazon Fulfillmen­t Center in Edwardsvil­le, Illinois, on Dec. 12. The facility was damaged by a tornado on Dec. 10. The confirmed number of fatalities has been raised from two to six people.

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