Bristol Post

Amazon worker, 63, ‘too slow’ according to tracking device

- Mary STONE mary.stone@reachplc.com

A63-YEAR-OLD Amazon worker in Bristol was reportedly put on a final warning for productivi­ty after a tracking device deemed his work too slow. The incident, which happened a few years ago, was recounted by Labour MP Darren Jones during a grilling of Amazon’s European head of public policy Brian Palmer in front of the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Select Committee.

During the hearing on Tuesday, MPs challenged him over Amazon’s approach to workers’ rights and his claim that the company surveils its goods and not its workers. The MP for Bristol North West was unsatisfie­d with Mr Palmer’s responses and gave a specific example from his constituen­cy to illustrate his point.

Mr Jones said: “He was 63, he was (working) with you just to fill his time before his pension. He came to see me in my surgery to tell me that he had...some kit that basically told him he wasn’t packing things quickly enough and he’d had two strikes already.

“So he went to see his productivi­ty manager, and the productivi­ty manager said, ‘Why are you not packing things more quickly? The system is telling us you’re not being productive enough.’ And he said, ‘I’m 63, I’m working as quickly as I can. It’s pretty cold in here, I can’t go any quicker.’.. That is surveillin­g the worker, isn’t it? Not the goods?”

When Mr Palmer said he wasn’t familiar with the specific instance, Mr Jones interjecte­d: “I don’t want you to comment on the individual case because that’s a copout of an answer,” before later challengin­g him again, “Do you not see there’s a problem? There’s an algorithm here tracking a human worker...you were going to sack him based on what the algorithm decided whether he was productive or not - that’s an issue isn’t it?

“The conversati­on he had with his productivi­ty manager was ‘well, the system told me you’re not being productive enough,’ that’s not a human in the loop that’s a human telling another human

what the computer told him.”

A clip of the questionin­g was tweeted by the Politics JOE UK account, but the full committee footage is available on the Parliament.tv archive.

Mr Palmer admitted that Amazon does follow the productivi­ty of workers in its warehouses and that what the Bristol employee had said, about the company’s policy of terminatin­g employees with three tracked performanc­e strikes, was correct.

However, he added: “The number of performanc­e-related folks that leave the company is a very small minority, that is not where we focus.

“If there are issues where someone is having performanc­e-related issues, we want to understand why and how we can help them.”

Mr Jones asked him to answer the question that “if someone has three productivi­ty flags on the system, can they be fired at

that point?” After a hesitation, Mr Palmer said the answer was yes.

However, he added that conversati­ons would take place with management and HR and more likely the employee would be invited to consider a different role in the company to better suit their skills.

Amazon’s Bristol warehouse in Avonmouth is one of dozens of fulfilment centres (FC) that the company has across the UK.

It’s home to around 1,500 workers who handle hundreds of thousands of items every day.

The questionin­g was part of the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee’s investigat­ions into how artificial intelligen­ce and technology is changing the workplace and what this means for the UK workforce. Mr Palmer was one of several representa­tives of employers, also including Zoom and techUK.

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 ?? ?? Amazon’s warehouse in Avonmouth and, inset, Bristol North West MP Darren Jones
Amazon’s warehouse in Avonmouth and, inset, Bristol North West MP Darren Jones

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