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New federal bill aims to slow pace of work at Amazon, other warehouses

Lauren Rosenblatt, The Seattle Times on

Published in Political News

The fight to change warehouse working conditions that has been playing out in state legislatures is now headed to Washington, D.C.

Sen. Ed Markey, D-Massachusetts, and Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minnesota, introduced legislation Thursday that would put new safeguards in place for warehouse workers who are expected to move quickly and face intense oversight, increasing the possible risk of injury.

Similar to state bills that lawmakers, including in Washington, have passed recently, the Warehouse Worker Protection Act would ban production quotas that require workers to move at an unsafe pace, skip bathroom or restroom breaks or cut corners in their work in order to keep up with expectations. It would require companies to disclose more information about the quotas workers are expected to meet and to notify them if those standards change.

The bill would also authorize the Department of Labor to investigate and intervene if it finds a company is setting a pace of work that increases employees' risk of injury or withholding information about worker expectations.

"In short, the Warehouse Worker Protection Act says workers are not disposable resources," Markey said at a news conference Thursday. "Injuries are not just the cost of doing business. The cost of doing business in this country is guaranteeing worker safety and dignity, and not just profits."

Lawmakers in Washington passed a similar bill last year that is set to go in effect in July. After a public comment period that ended in April, the state Department of Labor and Industries is still ironing out some of the details.

 

Washington's law applies to companies that employ 100 workers or more at a single warehouse, or 1,000 workers or more at multiple warehouses in the state.

At both the federal and state levels, the legislation is aimed at warehouse companies in general but advocates continually pointed to one company where they hope to see the legislation have an impact: Amazon.

That's because, advocates said, Amazon has a higher rate of injury than its warehouse peers and has been accused of firing or disciplining workers if they fail to keep up with the strict pace requirements. At the same time, the advocates continued, Amazon has been accused of using technology in its warehouses to closely track its workers' movements and the number of packages that each employee moves.

At Thursday's news conference, two Amazon workers who have suffered injuries on the job said the legislation would help ensure they don't have to choose between a paycheck and the risk of getting hurt on the job.

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