Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
Warehousing

Diary of a socialist Amazon worker: “Why is it so hot in the warehouses?”

The following is the second entry in the series “Diary of a socialist Amazon worker,” a column authored by Austin Bailey, a socialist-minded worker in his twenties, who has followed the World Socialist Web Site since 2016. Bailey writes this column to reach other workers, especially at Amazon, who have burning questions about the realities of working class life. He is always open to listening to the experiences of other workers, Amazon or otherwise, from anywhere in the world. If you wish to have your story shared, Bailey can be contacted at [email protected] or found on Twitter as @AustinDiary.

September 18, 2022:

The mercury has not dipped below 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32.2 degrees Celsius) of late, meaning conditions inside the Amazon warehouse where I work have been intolerable, to say the least. There is a real danger of heat stroke. Management displays many advisories to keep hydrated on numerous boards and screens but refuses to air condition the spaces where we work. Everyone working here is acutely aware that, as far as the company is concerned, their personal well-being is secondary to reducing expenses and maximizing profits. 

Recently, a co-worker passed out in one of my warehouse’s shipping trailers. I only learned that this had happened after I inquired about her when I noticed she was missing for a few days. While unloading boxes, she evidently became overheated, but the incident was played down and she was sent home quietly. After learning this, I was fairly irate to see management’s “operations” whiteboard claiming that we had gone nearly a month without an accident. With how hot it is, I am sure heat stroke is far more frequent than Amazon wants to let on.

The heat has prompted quite a number of colorful “it’s hotter than” euphemisms from my co-workers, many of which are not fit for print. They are born of an angry and incredulous indignation and are a way of coping with what everyone knows makes no sense.

Amazon is a corporation valued at over $1 trillion. Its revenue last year was nearly half $1 trillion. There is absolutely no reason why the company cannot afford to provide air conditioning, let alone proper air circulation, inside the facilities where the labor of workers like me generates all of this money.

Related posts

ProLogistix Looking To Fill More Than 200 Warehouse Job Openings – CBS Los Angeles

scceu

Warehousing & Storage Services Market 2020 COVID -19 Impact

scceu

Jewel Delivery Drivers And Warehouse Workers Authorize Strike

scceu