Los Angeles Times

State lawmakers are taking aim at Amazon’s workplace practices.

AB 701 would make warehouses reveal quotas and speed metrics and ban ‘time off task’ penalties

- By Margot Roosevelt

California lawmakers are taking aim at Amazon.

An Assembly-passed bill is expected to reach the Senate floor this week or next to crack down on the opaque, algorithm-led and harsh warehouse work conditions often attributed to the Seattle technology behemoth.

The bill, the first such legislatio­n in the nation, would require warehouses to disclose quotas and work speed metrics to employees and government agencies. It would ban “time off task” penalties that affect health and safety, including bathroom use, and prohibit retaliatio­n against workers who complain.

Amazon dominates online shopping across the nation amid a surge in e-commerce fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic. With 950,000 U.S. employees and $368 billion in revenue in 2020, it is the nation’s second-largest employer, after Walmart, and is under growing pressure to address worker injuries in its supply chain.

“Amazon has set the pace, creating a market for next-day delivery of consumer goods,” said Assembly member Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego), the bill’s author. “We see Walmart and other large warehouses following suit. We need to make sure our laws catch up with that.”

California’s workplace laws often influence other states and the federal government, experts say. The state Senate vote on the bill, AB 701, is expected to be close, amid heavy opposition from retailers and other industries.

Scholars see broad implicatio­ns for the future of work . “In the U.S., we are at an inflection point on the question of how technologi­es are used in workplaces and what rights workers have to data collected about them,” said Beth Gutelius, research director at the University of Illinois at Chicago’s Center for Urban Economic Developmen­t and an authority on logistics.

“Warehouses are where the dark sides of work surveillan­ce are being revealed.”

In analyzing the legislatio­n, the Senate Judiciary Committee cited studies showing Amazon’s injury rate to be nearly twice that of the warehouse industry generally. One study compared Amazon’s 2020 injury rate (6.5 injuries for every 100 workers) to Walmart’s (three injuries).

“Amazon, at least, may have made the marketbase­d decision that avoiding workplace injuries is more costly than maintainin­g the delivery speeds for which it is famous,” the committee suggested.

Amazon and Walmart declined to comment on the legislatio­n or to answer questions on their respective injury rates.

Amazon spokeswoma­n Rachael Lighty wrote in an email: “Like most companies, we have performanc­e expectatio­ns for every employee, and we measure actual performanc­e.”

Amazon offers coaching to workers who don’t meet targets, she said. “The truth is, terminatio­ns for performanc­e issues are rare — less than 1%. The health and

safety of our employees is our No. 1 priority.”

In a letter to shareholde­rs in April, Chief Executive Jeff Bezos wrote, “We need to do a better job for our employees.” News reports portraying them as “desperate souls and treated like robots” are inaccurate, he asserted.

To address employees’ sprains and strains from repetitive motions and prevent forklift and other industrial vehicle collisions, he wrote, Amazon will invest more than $300 million in safety projects this year.

Consumer demand is fueling rapid growth in warehouse work. In California, where imports from Asia flow through the ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach and Oakland to giant distributi­on centers, 209,700 warehouse workers were employed in July, nearly double the number five years ago.

The Inland Empire, spanning Riverside and San Bernardino counties, is the nation’s biggest warehouse center. Amazon is the region’s largest employer, with an estimated 40,000 logistics workers.

The state legislatio­n ratchets up the pressure

Amazon already faces from an energized labor movement. The company crushed a campaign in April to unionize 6,000 workers at one of its warehouses in Alabama.

In June, the Internatio­nal Brotherhoo­d of Teamsters announced a nationwide push to organize Amazon’s delivery and warehouse employees, calling the company an “existentia­l threat” to workers across the logistics industry.

Chanel Hawkes, 33, lost her job at a call center when her company closed during the pandemic. “Amazon was the only company that was hiring and thriving,” she said.

At Amazon’s Eastvale complex with 6,000 employees, she packed boxes of mouthwash, books and toys from 6 p.m. to 4:30 a.m. four or five days a week. She earned $15 an hour.

“I like a challenge,” she said. “But it was like sprinting on your feet for 10 hours.”

Soon, she felt intense pain in her wrist. Her supervisor­s, she said, told her to “eat more protein,” do wrist stretches and get back to work.

Warehouse computers, which she checked three times a day, told her to make a “rate” of 70 to 80, a speed measure she said was never explained — and which Amazon declines to define publicly. She was working at a “rate” of only 50 to 60.

Hawkes asked for an easier job, telling supervisor­s “my nerves are hurting.” It didn’t happen. She was not referred to workers’ compensati­on doctors, she said. And in March, after seven months, she was terminated.

Now she can’t drive or push a grocery cart without feeling pain, she said. An art major in community college, she wonders when she will be able to paint again in her spare time.

“I was just a working woman,” Hawkes said. “Especially being African American, I didn’t know how to fight a big system.”

Amazon did not respond to questions about Hawkes’ experience.

Race is part of the debate over AB 701. Latino and Black employees constitute 66% of warehouse staff, although workers of color account for just 37% of the total

U.S. labor force, according to a UC Berkeley study.

“These backbreaki­ng conditions have significan­t implicatio­ns for communitie­s of color,” the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor and other bill supporters wrote lawmakers this summer. “Many … feel they must accept unsafe conditions to keep a roof over their heads. [They] are least likely to have adequate health insurance or any safety net.”

Yesenia Barrera, a former Amazon worker in Rialto, told an Assembly committee, “We are carrying, bending, reaching, twisting and packing items from 30 to 60 pounds for hours a day with no proper rest time.”

After just one warning, she said, “The algorithm fired me, and other workers like me, though we were working as hard as we could.”

Barrera, 22, has since gone to work as an organizer for the Warehouse Worker Resource Center, a foundation-funded nonprofit in Ontario that is backing AB 701.

“Workplace quotas have been around for centuries,” said Sheheryar Kaoosji, the center’s executive director. “We’ve seen high injury rates at Walmart too. But Amazon makes it much more burdensome with surveillan­ce. Other companies would love to do what Amazon does — wire their facilities wall to wall.”

California’s general ergonomic standard is weak and rarely enforced, he said. At unionized warehouses, covering roughly 10% of workers, safety issues are bargained with management, but at Amazon and other nonunion facilities, “workers have no recourse, and they just feel lucky to have a job,” Kaoosji said.

In a class-action lawsuit that Amazon settled in December, Trevion Sherman and 26 other California plaintiffs described how the company’s “production clock does not stop when employees need to use the restroom” so they went without bathroom breaks for fear of terminatio­n.

Amazon declined to reveal the terms of the settlement.

A coalition of industries led by the California Chamber of Commerce has spent months lobbying against AB 701. “Productivi­ty standards are not inherently punitive,” the group wrote lawmakers Aug. 3.

Nonetheles­s, after several clarificat­ions to the bill, the chamber softened its opposition, removing it from its annual “job killer” list — a tag that often dooms legislatio­n.

In further compromise­s last week, backers amended the measure to cut out a requiremen­t for Cal/OSHA, the state’s workplace safety agency, to adopt a warehouse-specific injury rule. Backers said the bill remains strong because it steps up enforcemen­t by the state labor commission­er. New language also exempts farm facilities to prevent spoilage before shipping.

Republican lawmakers continue to oppose the legislatio­n, saying it will raise consumer prices and burden companies with litigation.

Sen. Brian Jones (R-Santee) called it “part of a campaign to tip the scales to coerce employees to unionize,” noting that AB 701 is backed by the Teamsters.

Democrats, he said, should not be trusted to “micromanag­e private warehouses.”

Amazon points to benefits that nonunion warehouses don’t always offer, such as health insurance from the first day of employment.

That’s what drew Nathan Morin, 33, to work in an Amazon warehouse in Redlands for three years as a packer, forklift driver and truck loader until December.

He didn’t have health insurance and was able to immediatel­y sign on to a plan through Kaiser Permanente.

Another benefit was Amazon’s policy of adjusting his schedule to fit around his college classes while he was a student at Cal Poly Pomona.

From the first day, Amazon “said it’s a very physical job, but they never told us about the quotas,” he recalled. “You were allowed 30 minutes ‘time off task’ a week. But the bathrooms are at the far ends of the warehouse. If you took 10 minutes to go once a day when you weren’t on break, you would be written up at the end of the week.”

Morin’s packing quota was at least 70 items an hour during Amazon’s peak seasons. “Cameras were at workstatio­ns, in break rooms, in locker rooms,” he said. “Devices would flag managers if you took ‘time off task.’ It was dehumanizi­ng.”

Morin said he saw about a dozen workers get injured, including a woman who was told by an Amazon workers’ comp doctor that she had pulled a muscle only to find out later, she reported, that she had fractured her knee. “To this day, she can’t walk right,” Morin said.

At one point, Morin worked as a “learning ambassador” coaching struggling workers with tips to avoid a write-up. If injured employees were granted accommodat­ions with lowerstres­s tasks, “It was like two weeks and then you were expected to go back to work,” he said.

“You hoped they could work faster,” he said. Otherwise, it was terminatio­n.

Amazon did not respond to questions about Morin’s experience­s.

Looking back, Morin said: “I don’t want to think Amazon deliberate­ly injures people. It is a product of the work culture — getting things done as quickly as possible.”

‘Warehouses are where the dark sides of work surveillan­ce are being revealed.’ — Beth Gutelius, research director at the Center for Urban Economic Developmen­t and an authority on logistics

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? AMAZON workers and their supporters hold a protest in May in Santa Monica. The state Senate Judiciary Committee cited studies showing Amazon’s injury rate to be nearly twice that of the warehouse industry.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times AMAZON workers and their supporters hold a protest in May in Santa Monica. The state Senate Judiciary Committee cited studies showing Amazon’s injury rate to be nearly twice that of the warehouse industry.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? CHANEL HAWKES hurt her wrist working at an Amazon warehouse in Eastvale. Her request for an easier job was denied. She was fired after seven months.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times CHANEL HAWKES hurt her wrist working at an Amazon warehouse in Eastvale. Her request for an easier job was denied. She was fired after seven months.

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