San Diego Union-Tribune

AMAZON FAULTED ANEW ON SAFETY

Workers’ filing says quotas were reinstated despite reassuranc­es

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Amazon.com has recklessly reinstated dangerous warehouse productivi­ty quotas despite telling a judge that it was suspending them during the pandemic, workers said in a court filing.

“Amazon has not been honest and forthcomin­g,” employees at a warehouse in Staten Island, N.Y., told the judge handling their lawsuit, which alleges that the company’s “oppressive and dangerous” policies violated public-nuisance laws and exacerbate­d COVID-19 hazards.

Although Amazon says worker safety is its top priority, employees at several facilities in different states claim their wellbeing takes a back seat to quickly shipping customers’ orders.

In July, Amazon provided the court a message it had sent to employees and posted in bathrooms at the Staten Island facility, telling them they wouldn’t be discipline­d for falling short of the company’s quotas for how many tasks they complete each hour. Workers were also assured that time spent on safety measures such as washing their hands wouldn’t be counted against them under Amazon’s “time off task” policy, which restricts the number of unproducti­ve minutes allowed in their day.

The company also submitted a statement by a U.S. human resources director that the more permissive policy began in March, when because of COVID-19 the company “ceased providing productivi­ty rate feedback to associates and imposing any discipline related to low productivi­ty rates.” Workers said the July message was the first time they heard of any such change, and in response to it they withdrew their request for a preliminar­y injunction in their lawsuit.

But in their new filing, the plaintiffs allege that in the leadup to Prime Day, Amazon’s selfcreate­d, labor-intensive annual promotiona­l holiday that ran Tuesday and Wednesday, the company has once again been hassling employees about productivi­ty, and warning them that slowness could get them terminated. One Staten Island employee got “verbal coaching ” from a manager for falling short, and management notified staff on a white board that “productivi­ty feedback” was being restored, according to one worker’s account included in the filing.

Amazon acknowledg­ed reinstatin­g performanc­e quotas and said workers still have adequate time to wash their hands and take other precaution­s.

“We have reinstated a portion of our process where a fraction of employees, less than 5 percent on average, may receive coaching for improvemen­t as a result of extreme outliers in performanc­e,” company spokeswoma­n Rachael Lighty said. “All of our measures continue to provide additional time for associates to practice social distancing, wash their hands and clean their work stations whenever needed.”

Prime Day has become the starting point of the holiday shopping season, which will look vastly different this year because pandemic-wary shoppers will avoid big store sales typically used to attract crowds.

Amazon has faced criticism as it has scrambled to remain open through the pandemic and hire enough people to meet surging demand. Its warehouses have become a lifeline for people who want to avoid walking into stores, but workers risk getting infected and bringing the disease home. Last week, the California Department of Industrial Relations fined Amazon $1,870 for failing to train workers at two Southern California warehouses on how to reduce COVID-19 exposure.

The company has said it has updated more than 150 of its processes to protect its employees laboring through the pandemic — including additional paid time off, cleaning, mask distributi­on and social distancing — and is ramping up an in-house coronaviru­s testing program.

On Oct. 1, Amazon disclosed that almost 20,000 of its U.S. employees have tested positive for the coronaviru­s, while saying the infection rate was lower than the general population’s. In legal filings, the company has denied wrongdoing, called the New York lawsuit an effort to “exploit the pandemic” and said that under federal law the workers’ claims should be brought to the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion rather than to court.

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers at Amazon’s fulfillmen­t center in Staten Island, N.Y., earlier this year protest work conditions.
BEBETO MATTHEWS ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers at Amazon’s fulfillmen­t center in Staten Island, N.Y., earlier this year protest work conditions.

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