The Commercial Appeal

FAA proposes $350,000 Amazon fine for shipping dangerous cargo on planes

- By Alan Levin

Federal aviation regulators are seeking a $350,000 fine against Amazon.com Inc. for allegedly sending hazardous shipments as air cargo.

The Seattle-based online retailer, which has made two deals this year in an attempt to create its own air-shipping network, was charged Monday with improperly sending a caustic chemical that leaked and came in contact with nine workers at a United Parcel Service facility, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion said.

“Amazon has a history of violating the hazardous materials regulation­s,” the FAA said. “From February 2013 to September 2015 alone, Amazon was found to have violated the hazardous materials regulation­s 24 other times.”

The shipment of corrosive drain cleaner wasn’t properly packaged, declared and labeled, the FAA said in the release. Amazon also failed to include emergency response informatio­n on the package and didn’t train employees on handling hazardous materials.

Companies hit by FAA fines can negotiate with the agency and penalties are sometimes reduced. Amazon spokesman Craig Berman didn’t immediatel­y respond to an emailed request for comment.

The FAA’s action comes a month after Amazon agreed to take as much as a 30 percent stake in Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings Inc.

As part of the deal, Atlas will acquire and operate 20 Boeing 767-300 freighters for Amazon, according to a May 5 statement.

In March, Amazon announced it would work with Air Transport Services Group Inc. to operate another 20 Boeing 767 freighters.

The retailer is moving swiftly to build up its delivery system in an attempt to reduce its dependence on UPS and FedEx Corp. as it expands its Prime membership service that delivers some orders in as little as one day.

Chief financial officer Brian Olsavsky downplayed Amazon’s ambitions in an earnings call in January, saying the company wants to supplement the two shippers, not replace them.

Documents reviewed by Bloomberg News reveal the company may be planning a bolder strategy to create a global delivery network to control the flow of goods from factories to customers’ doorsteps.

At the same time, Amazon is developing drones capable of short-distance, rapid deliveries of small items. The company has received FAA permission to test unmanned aircraft and is also doing developmen­t in other nations.

The FAA didn’t detail Amazon’s previous violations in Monday’s press release. According to previous press releases on its website, the FAA has opened enforcemen­t actions against Amazon for shipping flammable paint and other items without proper packaging and marking in at least four previous cases since 2014.

The agency sought a total of $314,000 in fines in those cases.

 ?? RICHARD DREW/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The LinkedIn logo appears on a screen Monday at the post where it trades on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. In a surprise move, Microsoft said Monday that it is buying profession­al networking service site LinkedIn for about $26.2 billion.
RICHARD DREW/ASSOCIATED PRESS The LinkedIn logo appears on a screen Monday at the post where it trades on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. In a surprise move, Microsoft said Monday that it is buying profession­al networking service site LinkedIn for about $26.2 billion.

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