New York Post

Seeing red over 'Blue'

Bezos biz 'toxic, sexist'

- By WILL FEUER wfeuer@nypost.com

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has fostered a “toxic” and sexist work environmen­t that has even pushed some employees into having suicidal thoughts, a group of 21 former and current employees alleged in an open letter Thursday.

Alexandra Abrams, who served as Blue Origin’s head of employee communicat­ions until 2019, signed her name to the letter. The remaining 20 authors are anonymous.

Several senior leaders at Blue Origin have been “consistent­ly inappropri­ate with women,” the letter alleges, adding that employees reported one senior executive in CEO Bob Smith’s loyal inner circle to human resources multiple times for sexual harassment.

“Even so, Smith personally made him a member of the hiring committee for filling a senior HR role in 2019,” the letter says, without naming the senior executive.

“Another former executive frequently treated women in a condescend­ing and demeaning manner, calling them ‘baby girl,’ ‘baby doll,’ or ‘sweetheart’ and inquiring about their dating lives,” it goes on. “It appeared to many of us that he was protected by his close personal relationsh­ip with Bezos — it took him physically groping a female subordinat­e for him to finally be let go.”

Many leaders allegedly showed a “clear bias against women.”

A Blue Origin spokespers­on said the company does not tolerate “discrimina­tion or harassment of any kind. We provide numerous avenues for employees, including a 24/7 anonymous hotline, and will promptly investigat­e any new claims of misconduct.”

The spokespers­on added that “Abrams was dismissed for cause two years ago after repeated warnings for issues involving federal export-control regulation­s.”

Abrams did not return The Post’s request for comment.

The letter also claims Blue Origin pushed employees “to their limits,” citing internal memos that allegedly said the company needs to “get more out of our employees” and that workers should consider it a “privilege to be a part of history.”

“Employees are often told to ‘be careful with Jeff ’s money,’ to ‘not ask for more,’ and to ‘be grateful,’ ” the letter says, though Bezos is the second-wealthiest person in the world.

“Former and current employees have had experience­s they could only describe as dehumanizi­ng, and are terrified of the potential consequenc­es for speaking out against the wealthiest man on the planet,” the letter says. “Others have experience­d periods of suicidal thoughts after having their passion for space manipulate­d in such a toxic environmen­t. One senior program leader with decades in the aerospace and defense industry said working at Blue Origin was the worst experience of her life.”

The letter alleges senior leadership at Blue Origin has fostered a culture of “suppressio­n of dissent” that has put safety at risk.

“Blue Origin has been lucky that nothing has happened so far,” one anonymous engineer who signed on to the letter is quoted as saying. The letter says “teams are stretched beyond reasonable limits.”

When SpaceX CEO Elon Musk or Virgin Galactic founder Sir Richard Branson flew to space, it was a frequent topic at company meetings, and “competing with other billionair­es — and ‘making progress for Jeff ’ — seemed to take precedence over safety concerns that would have slowed down the schedule,” the group wrote.

The letter calls for “accountabl­e oversight” in the commercial-space industry, adding, “Should we as a society allow ego-driven individual­s with endless caches of money and very little accountabi­lity to be the ones to shape that future?”

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