The Guardian (USA)

US regulators launch investigat­ion into worker death at Amazon warehouse

- Michael Sainato

US regulators have launched an investigat­ion into the death of a 20-yearold worker at an Amazon warehouse in Fort Wayne, Indiana.

Caes Gruesbeck was killed on 9 May while working during his shift at the FWA4 warehouse. Gruesbeck was trying to fix a jam on an overhead conveyor when his head was struck. An Allen County coroner report ruled the fatality was caused by blunt-force trauma.

Workers say the incident occurred while Gruesbeck was operating a oneman lift. A spokespers­on for Amazon said the worker struck his head on an overhead conveyance system while driving the one-man lift underneath it. The worker was wearing proper personal protective equipment, including a hard hat, and fall protection.

After the incident, Amazon sent workers home with pay and canceled upcoming shifts before reopening the warehouse on 12 May.

The Indiana Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion (Osha) has launched an investigat­ion in response to the incident. In 2022, Osha conducted over 1,100 fatality or catastroph­e investigat­ions into workplaces. Osha and the Department of Justice are currently engaged in investigat­ions at numerous Amazon warehouses over worker safety issues.

An Amazon employee claimed management had warned workers about talking to the media about the incident. “They’re saying anyone who talks will lose their job,” they said. Amazon insisted that workers are permitted to speak to the media without retaliatio­n.

The worker also criticized the safety conditions at the site in the lead-up to the incident.

“The one-man lift should not have been under a conveyor that low,” the worker said, explaining that one-man lifts are used by workers to clear packages on conveyor belts at the warehouse when they get stuck.

“Tier 1 employees should not be operating the one-man lifts. They didn’t when we launched the building, only RME was allowed to operate them,” they added, referring to reliabilit­y maintenanc­e engineerin­g workers who maintain equipment used at the warehouse. “We all have a lot of questions. Several people are still traumatize­d. No one wants to lose their job, but we are all realizing we work for a monster.”

An Amazon spokespers­on, Maureen Vogel, said in response to the criticisms: “Employees who are fully trained, as this individual was, have been able to operate one-man lifts.”

Another worker at the site criticized Amazon for not informing employees about the incident in its communicat­ions with workers telling them not to show up for the night shift because the warehouse was closed.

 ?? Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP ?? Caes Gruesbeck was using a one-man lift to clear a conveyor belt when his head was struck.
Photograph: Mark Lennihan/AP Caes Gruesbeck was using a one-man lift to clear a conveyor belt when his head was struck.

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