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CALIFORNIA SUBPOENAS AMAZON OVER WORKER SAFETY IN PANDEMIC

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California Attorney General Xavier Becerra asked this week a judge to order Amazon to comply with subpoenas his office issued nearly four months ago as part of an investigat­ion into how the company is protecting workers from the coronaviru­s at its facilities.

Becerra said the online sales giant hasn’t provided enough informatio­n on its coronaviru­s safety steps and the status of infections and

deaths at its shipping facilities across California. The attorney general is President-elect Joe Biden’s pick to be the first Latino to lead the Health and Human Services Department.

“We’re investigat­ing because we got reports, informatio­n, complaints about conditions, incidents,” Becerra said. While the investigat­ion is ongoing, “we believe that it merits looking into Amazon’s protocols, practices, based on informatio­n that we have received.”

The company did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment left through an email that the company provides for members of the media.

Becerra wants a Sacramento County Superior Court judge to find that the company hasn’t given specific details on its coronaviru­s prevention efforts in response to subpoenas issued Aug. 19, including its sick leave policies and cleaning procedures. He also wants access to the company’s raw data on the number of infections and deaths at its facilities in California. “We urgently need to know about complaints made by Amazon associates to the company about working conditions, potential retaliatio­n taken against employees who raise these workplace safety concerns,” he said. ”We don’t have time to drag our feet... our state finds itself in the thick of this pandemic.”

His office wants to know which facilities have the highest infection rates, how the company defines which employees have been diagnosed with the virus, any contacts it has had with health officials, and documents related to any lawsuits or investigat­ions by either individual­s or other agencies.

Becerra routinely declines comment on ongoing investigat­ions, but called a virtual news conference to criticize Amazon for making billions of dollars during the pandemic as consumers increasing­ly turn to online purchases over brick-and-mortar stores — profits that he said are built on the labor of employees who put themselves at risk.

The company projects sales will top $100 billion in the final quarter of 2020, and in the third quarter “its revenues soared while its profits tripled compared to 2019,” Becerra said.

“While Amazon continues to operate profitably, it has been less than forthcomin­g about its operations and its practices to protect its workers.”

He said the subpoenas followed months of informal communicat­ions with the company over its health and safety policies.

The company has missed several chances to comply, he said, but he said the investigat­ion is continuing and he has made no decision on whether its practices are adequate — in part because he has not received enough informatio­n from the company.

The probe began last spring, his office said in seeking the court order, and officials first sent Amazon a letter in May seeking informatio­n. Becerra’s court filing lists media reports about three Amazon workers’ deaths, but said the company mentioned none of them in its responses.

Becerra’s office first publicly disclosed the investigat­ion in a court filing in July in a San Francisco Superior Court case in which an

employee accused the company of not doing enough to safeguard staff, such as requiring social distancing and cleaning equipment. CAL-OSHA, more formally the known as Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health, and the San Francisco Department of Public Health have also launched investigat­ions, according to that court filing. Officials in other states have also launched investigat­ions into Amazon workers’ complaints.

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