OSHA Is (Finally) Investigating the Hell Out of Amazon
MotherJones
Recent investigations by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration have found that Amazon is continually failing to keep workers like Crane, a packer at a St. Louisarea warehouse, safe from back injuries and other serious, chronic muscular disorders. The agency concluded that Amazon was endangering employees in at least six warehouses across five statesan unprecedented geographic range for its inspectionsin part with intense productivity quotas that drive an injury rate of 6.8 per 100 workers, more than double the industry average. Eric Frumin, health and safety director of the Strategic Organizing Center, a labor union coalition, said OSHA may have just conducted the broadest investigation by the Labor Department in all of history.
The total fines were paltry: $107,144 in total, or 0.00000021 percent of the companys 2022 revenue. (Amazon, which "strongly disagrees" with OSHAs findings, plans to appeal them.) But the fines and investigation are nevertheless historic, say many labor experts and former OSHA officials, signaling an era in which US regulators will pursue real consequences for the shipping behemothstarting, in this case, with more sustainable quotas and a safer workplace.
With ongoing appeals, it isnt likely that well see immediate change for workers like Crane. But theres only so much denial that Amazon can do, says Berkowitz. Upheld, the citations set the stage for steeper fineswillful violations, like those repeated after a citation, can be ten times more costlyand help establish a pattern of worker endangerment. Thats groundwork for court orders forcing Amazon to address warehouse conditions, and potentially for even more sweeping inspections. Also possible: a chilling effect on the Amazonification of the American workforce, in which smaller companies look to impose Amazon-style quotas and practices.
Finally, but...