'Lack of Respect': Outcry over Amazon Worker's Death on Warehouse Floor
Lack of respect: outcry over Amazon employees death on warehouse floor,' The Guardian, Jan. 9, 2023. Ed. -Work carried on as usual in the facility as workers were not informed of colleagues death even as the body lay on the floor -
On the morning of 27 December 2022 at the Amazon DEN4 warehouse in Colorado Springs, Colorado, 61-year-old Rick Jacobs died on the job after experiencing a cardiac event, right before a shift change. What happened next has angered his former colleagues. Witnesses say a makeshift barrier around the deceased worker using large cardboard bins was used to block off the area on the outbound shipping dock where the incident occurred, & workers criticized the response & lack of transparency about the incident. Amazon denied boxes were used to cordon off the area, but said managers stood around to make sure no one came near for privacy & security.
As workers arrived for their day shift, they say they were not notified about what was going on & continued working as usual while a deceased colleague remained in the facility & emergency responders awaited the arrival of a coroner.
Finding out what had happened after walking through there had made me feel very uncomfortable, as there is a blatant disregard of human emotions at this facility. Management could have released those employees affected by offering [voluntary time off], so that they did not need to use their own time, but nope, that did not happen, said an Amazon employee at the warehouse who works the day shift. They requested to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation. No one should have been told to work alongside a dead body, particularly after witnessing it. Day shift comes in at 7am or 7.30am, & we were never informed until we arrived to where it had occurred. No warnings before walking into the building. No on-site counselor. Simply a flyer put out days later informing us of how to receive mental health counseling.
In a phone call, an Amazon spokesperson said Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) laws and privacy concerns for the family of the deceased meant the company was not able to disclose details about the individual or the incident. They disputed claims that anyone was working near the body or that boxes were used to cordon off the area. They declined to comment on the record citing privacy and respect for the deceased. Amazon did not follow up with a comment in regards to what, if any, protocols the company has for these incidents or what resources were provided to workers immediately after the event or subsequently.
Another worker at the Amazon warehouse said that when they arrived to work that morning there were police & fire trucks at the warehouse, but no explanation as to why. Later, she found out from colleagues that a worker had died on the previous shift. Instantly I was pissed that were all business as usual & theres a human being lying dead in the outbound area & I have to hear about it in the break room, she said & also requested to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation. Why is it that we are still working as usual when someone is dead downstairs? I was angry that they think that our lives dont matter, that theyre going to sweep me out of the way to get a package out. Workers criticized the lack of transparency & the response from management, as they werent provided any information until a week after the incident.
..Its not the first death at an Amazon facility. Amazon is a huge corporation. There should be protocols...
- Read More, https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/jan/09/amazon-employee-death-warehouse-floor-colorado
Joinfortmill
(16,436 posts)appalachiablue
(42,912 posts)there were reports that management at warehouses in Staten Isl., NY wouldn't even tell employees about co-workers who were infected with the virus. To note just one of a number of labor issues there.