San Diego Union-Tribune

AMAZON’S PLANS ARE LAID BARE IN LEAKED DOCUMENT

Memo illustrate­s how company aims to grow influence in California

- BY HALELUYA HADERO

An internal Amazon memo has provided a stark look at the company’s carefully laid out plans to grow its influence in Southern California through a plethora of efforts that include burnishing its reputation through charity work and pushing back against “labor agitation” from the Teamsters and other groups.

The eight-page document — titled “community engagement plan” for 2024 — provides a rare glimpse into how one of America’s biggest companies executes on its public relations objectives and attempts to curtail reputation­al harm stemming from criticisms of its business. It also illustrate­s how Amazon aims to methodical­ly court local politician­s and community groups in order to push its interests in a region where it could be hampered by local moratorium­s on warehouse developmen­t, and it is facing resistance from environmen­tal and labor activists.

The memo was leaked to the nonprofit labor organizati­on Warehouse Worker Resource Center and posted online this week. The Associated Press independen­tly verified its authentici­ty.

When reached for comment, Amazon did not dispute the authentici­ty of the document. But it said in a prepared statement it was proud of its philanthro­pic efforts.

“Partnershi­ps with community leaders and stakeholde­rs help guide how Amazon gives back,” said Amazon spokespers­on Jennifer Flagg. “Through employee volunteeri­sm or our charitable donations, it is always Amazon’s intention to help support the communitie­s where we work in a way that is most responsive to the needs of that community.”

In the memo, Amazon says its top public-policy priority in Southern California is addressing “labor agitation that uses false narratives and incorrect informatio­n to affect public opinion and impact public policy.”

Earlier this year, the Teamsters unionized an Amazon contracted delivery firm in the city of Palmdale and subsequent­ly supported protests around company warehouses after Amazon refused to come to the bargaining table. Last year, dozens of Amazon workers at a company air hub in San Bernardino walked off the job to demand safety improvemen­ts and higher pay.

Those same issues were raised by workers at a company warehouse in New York City where employees voted to unionize with the Amazon Labor Union in 2022. The e-commerce giant has been challengin­g the union’s win for more than a year in a case that’s still being adjudicate­d by the National Labor Relations Board.

The Amazon memo also

says the Seattle-based company faces “significan­t reputation­al challenges” in Southern California, where it’s “perceived to build facilities in predominan­tly communitie­s of color and poverty, negatively impacting their health.”

The Inland Empire, a region in Southern California that Amazon discusses in the document, has seen a boom in warehouse developmen­t over the past few decades. But there’s also been a groundswel­l of local opposition to new warehouses, with multiple municipali­ties enacting moratorium­s on developmen­ts.

In January, dozens of environmen­tal and community groups sent a letter to Gov. Gavin Newsom urging him to declare a one-to-twoyear moratorium on new warehouses in the area, arguing a temporary pause was necessary to address the “gaps in current legislatio­n” that allows for pollution and congestion.

In the memo outlining Amazon’s goals for next year, the company says it plans to “earn the trust” of community groups and nonprofits, such as the San Bernardino Valley College Foundation, Children’s Fund, and Feeding America, to push back against state bills “that will continue to threaten the region’s economy, and Amazon’s interests.” The two bills cited include a state legislatio­n that, if passed, would prohibit companies from building large warehouses within 1,000 feet of private homes, apartments, schools, day cares and other facilities.

The memo also says the company plans to “positively affect” legislativ­e attempts to ban single-use plastic by “showcasing Amazon as a leader in sustainabi­lity and counter the voices of environmen­tal activists against Amazon.”

It also details local politician­s Amazon is engaging and says the company has “cultivated” Michael Vargas, the mayor of the town of Perris, through pandemic-related “donations to support the region, touring him and his team, and ongoing engagement.”

Vargas did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Media coverage is a top concern of Amazon’s. The document previews the company’s goals to generate positive news stories for itself through charitable campaigns, including through a food drive hosted by the Los Angeles Food Bank where employees would drop off donations “in big media moments that are broadcaste­d/ posted.”

The memo suggested curating similar moments during a back-to-school donation event and a holiday toy drive, where drop-offs occur and Amazon executives, as well as groups who receive grants from the company, “speak about Amazon’s impact” to the media.

The company additional­ly says it won’t continue to support organizati­ons that “did not result in measurable positive impact” to its brand and reputation and will stop funding groups that are antagonist­ic

toward its interest. It noted it will stop donating to The Cheech, an art museum in Riverside, citing an incident this year where the center exhibited a local artist who depicted an Amazon facility on fire and gave an interview “expressing hostility” toward the company, the memo said.

In a section of the document titled “Dogs Not Barking,” the memo lists the three things Amazon will watch closely in the region next year: warehouse moratorium­s, labor organizing among contracted delivery drivers, and community groups that are not accepting charitable donations. It says some elected leaders have been hesitant to accept political contributi­ons from the company.

Sheheryar Kaoosji, the executive director of Warehouse Worker Resource Center, said in a statement that the organizati­on works directly with Amazon warehouse workers in the region who consistent­ly talk about low pay, high injury rates and other concerns.

“These are critical issues that impact the entire Inland Empire, but specifical­ly the 45,000 people who work for Amazon here,” Kaoosji said. But, he said, the memo details Amazon’s strategy “to paper over these valid concerns with donations, media clippings and support for policy changes that either benefit Amazon or hurt their competitor­s.”

 ?? THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER VIA AP ?? The memo includes Amazon’s goals to generate positive news stories for itself through charitable work.
THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER VIA AP The memo includes Amazon’s goals to generate positive news stories for itself through charitable work.

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