Amazon has fired two workers who recently criticized the company over its warehouse conditions during the current coronavirus pandemic.
As the Washington Post, which is owned by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, reports, employees Emily Cunningham and Maren Costa were both fired on Friday. The two UX designers were members of the Amazon Employees for Climate Justice group and had "publicly denounced" via Twitter the “lack of safe and sanitary working conditions” warehouse workers were being subjected to. Cuningham was the first to tweet criticism, which was then retweeted by Costa. Both offered to match donations up to $500 in order to help warehouse workers who have “struggle[d] to get consistent, sufficient protections and procedures from our employer.”
In a statement, Amazon spokesperson Drew Herdener said the workers had been fired for “repeatedly violating internal policies.” Stating, “We support every employee’s right to criticize their employer’s working conditions, but that does not come with blanket immunity against any and all internal policies.”
Amazon’s external communications policy, the Post reports, stops employees from commenting publicly on its business without approval from executives. Herdener has stated previously that this policy does not allow employees to “publicly disparage or misrepresent the company.” Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
According to the New York Times, a third employee, Chris Hayes, also had his employment cut short by Amazon after he criticized its treatment of warehouse workers. On Friday, Hayes invited co-workers to a virtual discussion with warehouse workers. He'd already handed in his resignation and was planning to leave his job on April 17, but a few hours after the invitation was sent out, a human resources representative told him he would no longer be allowed to work.
This is not the only instance where Amazon has appeared to fire workers over criticism of the company’s handling of the coronavirus. Chris Smalls, an assistant manager at the JFK8 Amazon Fulfillment Center, was fired for “violating quarantine” and having close contact with someone who had coronavirus symptoms. Smalls had previously organized a walkout to demand reasonable protections. An internal report suggested Amazon had intended to smear Smalls by making him “the face of the entire union/organizing movement” and characterized him as “not smart, or articulate.”
More recently, Amazon has started handing out face masks and performing temperature test on workers. The company is also hiring 75,000 more warehouse staff to cope with demand and placed new grocery customers on a wait list this week as it struggles to keep delivery slots open.
TopicsAmazon
(责任编辑:知識)
'Rocket League' Championship Series Season 2 offers $250,000 prize pool
威爾士門將飛踹染紅,伊朗隊補時兩球絕殺 ,下一場要死磕美國(梅西姆巴佩內馬爾比賽)
球王貝利再次住院 !患腸癌後癌細胞擴散至肺部,除了化療外還有哪些新藥新療法 ?(貝利奧特生生病了是哪一集)
U.S. pole vaulter skids to a halt for national anthem
【早報】C羅官宣加盟沙特聯賽!雙驕時代落幕?(c羅正式加盟尤文圖斯)
巴黎聖日耳曼4球大勝+11分優勢領跑,拉莫斯處子球(梅西轉會大巴黎第一場比賽結果)
威斯布魯克砍曆史級三雙!投進兩關鍵三分!單核帶奇才贏步行者 !(哈登27記三分)
Over 82,000 evacuate as Blue Cut fire rapidly spreads in southern California