For Sean Carlisle (a pseuÂdoÂnym) a 32-year-old gradÂuÂate stuÂdent and native of California’s Inland Empire, the last three years at his local AmaÂzon fulÂfillÂment cenÂter have been an eduÂcaÂtion. As a stuÂdent of urban planÂning, he studÂies how built enviÂronÂments shape a community’s behavÂior. As a pickÂer, he packs items at a breakÂneck pace amid stacks of invenÂtoÂry and snaking conÂveyÂor belts while delÂiÂcateÂly pracÂticÂing strateÂgies to raise his coworkÂers’ politÂiÂcal consciousness.
Amazon’s logisÂtiÂcal infraÂstrucÂture is designed to make humans perÂform with machine-like effiÂcienÂcy, but Sean is tryÂing to make the workÂplace a bit more human, advoÂcatÂing for stronger workÂer proÂtecÂtions and corÂpoÂrate accountÂabilÂiÂty in his community.
When he first startÂed at AmaÂzon, Sean enjoyed what he calls a “honÂeyÂmoon phase.” He liked that workÂers were proÂmotÂed readÂiÂly to manÂageÂrÂiÂal posiÂtions, espeÂcialÂly peoÂple with a colÂlege eduÂcaÂtion like himÂself. “They ha[d] all these things that help their employÂees advance. They have these school proÂgrams,” he says, referÂring to AmaÂzon’s proÂfesÂsionÂal eduÂcaÂtion schemes. But about eight months in, he realÂized “there was some stuff going on here that realÂly could be improved. [I thought] â€I don’t know if I like this comÂpaÂny as much as I did before.’”Â
“The catÂaÂlyst was seeÂing [so many] peoÂple get hurt,” he conÂtinÂues. He says workÂers would tell him, “ â€I got hurt, and they gave me physÂiÂcal therÂaÂpy, and I got even more hurt because they didn’t realÂly assess me right and now I have this probÂlem.’ ” It was around the holÂiÂday seaÂson durÂing his secÂond year “when things hit a sigÂnifÂiÂcant decline in terms of safeÂty, and there was more focus on proÂducÂtivÂiÂty.” He says that someÂtimes workÂers would acciÂdenÂtalÂly strike the shelves as they navÂiÂgatÂed forkÂlifts through the center’s aisles, causÂing the vehiÂcles to tip over.Â
“The safeÂty probÂlems conÂtinÂued to get worse, and my coworkÂers and I would say, â€Hey, [the manÂageÂment has] got to do someÂthing about this,’” he recalls.
Sean believes the speed with which workÂers must process orders—someÂtimes hunÂdreds of items per hour—leads them to cut corÂners or ignore probÂlems with their equipÂment. He says that one byprodÂuct of the relentÂless presÂsure to pack more items faster is a high turnover among those who “couldn’t keep up.” BurnÂing through new hires creÂates a conÂstant churn in the workÂforce, as temÂpoÂrary workÂers are cycled in and out durÂing peak seasons.
Amazon’s offiÂcial data on workÂplace injuries sugÂgest that many of its fulÂfillÂment cenÂters have rates that far exceed the averÂage wareÂhouse. Yet the comÂpaÂny claims these staÂtisÂtics are priÂmarÂiÂly a tesÂtaÂment to its meticÂuÂlous reportÂing rather than a reflecÂtion of its shodÂdy safeÂty stanÂdards. “We ensure we are supÂportÂing the peoÂple who work at our sites by havÂing first aid trained and cerÂtiÂfied proÂfesÂsionÂals onsite 24/7, and we proÂvide indusÂtry leadÂing health benÂeÂfits on day one,” a spokesperÂson said in an email.
AmaÂzon also claims to have spent “over $1 bilÂlion [on] new investÂments in operÂaÂtions safeÂty meaÂsures” that include proÂtecÂtive techÂnolÂoÂgy, sanÂiÂtiÂzaÂtion proÂceÂdures, and trainÂing and eduÂcaÂtion proÂgrams for workÂers. The comÂpaÂny mainÂtains that it is “conÂtinÂuÂousÂly learnÂing and improvÂing our proÂgrams to preÂvent future inciÂdents. ”Sean conÂtends that some manÂagers have simÂply failed to take workÂplace hazÂards seriÂousÂly. He recalled his surÂprise when a manÂagÂer told him, “â€if peoÂple didn’t feel safe, they wouldn’t go to work.’”Â
“That’s not how that works, dude,” he musÂes. “PeoÂple go to work because they need a payÂcheck, not because they feel safe.”
While workÂing as a pickÂer, Sean’s acaÂdÂeÂmÂic work led him to a camÂpaign against the planned conÂstrucÂtion of a huge carÂgo facilÂiÂty for San BernardiÂno InterÂnaÂtionÂal AirÂport. VarÂiÂous comÂmuÂniÂty groups, includÂing TeamÂsters local 1932 and enviÂronÂmenÂtal activists, formed the San BernardiÂno AirÂport ComÂmuÂniÂties CoaliÂtion to oppose the project, which they warn will deepÂen the ecoÂnomÂic and enviÂronÂmenÂtal exploitaÂtion of the region by corÂpoÂraÂtions like AmaÂzon—the area’s largest priÂvate employÂer. Despite a legal chalÂlenge brought by the coaliÂtion’s leadÂing groups earÂliÂer this year, the facility’s conÂstrucÂtion is movÂing forÂward, and Sean has now shiftÂed his focus to helpÂing proÂtect his coworkÂers from the pandemic.
One pracÂtiÂcal benÂeÂfit that Sean and the othÂer orgaÂnizÂers aim to secure for workÂers in the short term is paid leave so that those affectÂed by the panÂdemÂic can stay home withÂout sacÂriÂficÂing wages. The comÂpaÂny iniÂtialÂly proÂvidÂed unlimÂitÂed unpaid leave for workÂers who self-isoÂlatÂed due to COVID-19-relatÂed health conÂcerns but endÂed the polÂiÂcy in May. Now Sean is encourÂagÂing coworkÂers to seek benÂeÂfits under a new state law for food-indusÂtry workÂers that proÂvides up to two weeks paid leave for workÂers who have been advised by a medÂical proÂfesÂsionÂal to self-isoÂlate or ordered not to work.
AmaÂzon iniÂtialÂly argued that it was exempt from the manÂdate. But as Vice reportÂed in July, comÂmuÂniÂty groups and labor activists, along with the state labor commissioner’s office, presÂsured the comÂpaÂny to comÂply on the grounds that its wareÂhousÂes serve as major retail food disÂtribÂuÂtors. In June, approxÂiÂmateÂly two months after the order was enactÂed, AmaÂzon finalÂly agreed to folÂlow the law.
With a poster detailÂing the state’s new paid-leave polÂiÂcy now on disÂplay in the breakÂroom, Sean says he is advisÂing his coworkÂers to take advanÂtage of what he calls a legal “loopÂhole” that allows AmaÂzon employÂees to take paid time off outÂside of the comÂpaÂny’s more restricÂtive allotÂment. The workÂers who qualÂiÂfy have manÂaged to use the law “just to take a break, or reevalÂuÂate their situation.”
Sean says that despite his advoÂcaÂcy on behalf of AmaÂzon employÂees, he has avoidÂed the kind of retalÂiÂaÂtion from manÂageÂment that othÂer workÂer-activists have reported.
At the same time, he acknowlÂedges, “I’m also not tryÂing to [proÂvoke] them directÂly.” When it comes to engagÂing with his colÂleagues on workÂplace jusÂtice issues, he says, “UsuÂalÂly, I’ll have a conÂverÂsaÂtion where it just kind of unfolds like, â€Man, someÂone in my famÂiÂly just recentÂly passed, and I can’t take time off work.’ And I’m like, â€Oh, you should check out the law that was just recentÂly passed and I think you can get time off for it.”
Sean is buildÂing a safer workÂplace withÂin Amazon’s e-commerce leviathan one conÂverÂsaÂtion at a time. The son of an ironÂworkÂer and grandÂson of a teamÂster, his sense of misÂsion is informed by the famÂiÂly stoÂries he heard as a child about strikes and pickÂet lines.
AmaÂzon, which has manÂaged to keep unions at bay for years, bears litÂtle resemÂblance to the union shops of past genÂerÂaÂtions. But today’s AmaÂzon wareÂhouse workÂers and driÂvers are just as critÂiÂcal to California’s econÂoÂmy as the longÂshoreÂmen, truck driÂvers and iron workÂers were a cenÂtuÂry ago. “I see AmaÂzon as someÂthing that’s probÂaÂbly here to stay and likeÂly going to shape our future and our underÂstandÂing of AmerÂiÂcan capÂiÂtalÂism and conÂsumpÂtion,” he says.
Though yesÂterÂday’s milÂiÂtant shop-floor strugÂgles have long fadÂed from CalÂiÂforÂniÂa’s indusÂtriÂal landÂscape, the chalÂlenges facÂing the labor moveÂment remain basiÂcalÂly the same. When workÂers orgaÂnize, Sean says, they can “hold the comÂpaÂny accountÂable and shape it to be the comÂpaÂny it is. WithÂout the workÂers, the comÂpaÂny would not be what it is.”
This blog originally appeared at In These Times on October 7, 2020. Reprinted with permission
About the Author: Michelle Chen is a conÂtributÂing writer at In These Times and The Nation, a conÂtributÂing ediÂtor at DisÂsent and a co-proÂducÂer of the “BelaÂbored” podÂcast. She studÂies hisÂtoÂry at the CUNY GradÂuÂate CenÂter. She tweets at @meeshellchen.
About the Author: Molly Crabapple is an artist and writer in New York, and is the author of, most recentÂly, DrawÂing Blood and BrothÂers of the Gun, (with MarÂwan Hisham). Her art is in the perÂmaÂnent colÂlecÂtions of the MuseÂum of ModÂern Art. Her aniÂmatÂed short, A MesÂsage from the Future with AlexanÂdria OcaÂsio-Cortez, has been nomÂiÂnatÂed for a 2020 Emmy for OutÂstandÂing News AnalyÂsis: EdiÂtoÂrÂiÂal and Opinion.