“You’re Just Disposable”: New Accounts from Former Amazon Employees Raise Questions About Working Conditions

Share:
February 14, 2020

In recent weeks, Amazon has stepped forward to promote the company as a force for good in the American economy, and tout its treatment of workers at the sprawling network of warehouses where millions of packages are prepared for delivery each year.

But in interviews for a new FRONTLINE documentary, former Amazon employees who worked in the company’s warehouses — which it calls “fulfillment centers” — describe a work environment in which they felt pressured to pick and pack items at productivity rates they say are “unrealistic.” Their stories echoed the more than 50 interviews FRONTLINE conducted with similar workers across the country.

“The part they don’t talk about is the safety rules that you have to ignore to make rate,” one former Amazon fulfillment center employee tells FRONTLINE producer and director James Jacoby in the above excerpt from Amazon Empire: The Rise and Reign of Jeff Bezos. “It’s not just that you go in and you do your job and that’s it … it’s incredibly hard to meet rate while following all the safety procedures.”

In the documentary, which was released Feb. 18 and is now streaming online, the former employees say the pressure they feel is heightened by Amazon’s use of technology to gather data on what’s happening — and how quickly — in its warehouses.

“We’re not treated as human beings, we’re not even treated as robots,” one former employee says in the above scene. “We’re treated as part of the data stream.”

Amazon has recently come under similar criticism from a group of 15 Democratic senators — including presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren — who sent a letter to Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos condemning what they said was the company’s “dismal” record on worker safety, and calling for change to its “profit-at-all costs culture.”

In the FRONTLINE documentary, Jeff Wilke, one of two CEOs under Bezos, strongly defends the company’s treatment of workers and its commitment to safety.

“From the moment I arrived 20 years ago, I made it very clear to our operations teams that we will not compromise the safety of our employees to do anything else,” Wilke says in the above clip. “So we have a culture that if we are asking people to do something that they have to do too fast to be safe, they can raise their hand and say, ‘this isn’t right,’ and we’ll fix it.”

Wilke stresses that the company has become an industry leader in training its workforce for career advancement, and says its hourly workers — for whom Amazon’s minimum wage is double the federal standard — are offered the same benefits Amazon executives receive. 

“These are great jobs,” he says.

For the full story, watch Amazon Empire: The Rise and Reign of Jeff Bezos: 

Amazon Empire: The Rise and Reign of Jeff Bezos premiered Tuesday, Feb. 18 on PBS stations. The full documentary is now streaming in this story, in FRONTLINE’s collection of more than 250 streaming films, on the PBS Video App, on YouTube and on-demand.

This story has been updated.


Patrice Taddonio

Patrice Taddonio, Senior Digital Writer, FRONTLINE

Twitter:

@ptaddonio

More Stories

“Somber Day” in Uvalde as Community Commemorates One Year Since Robb Elementary Shooting
From our partners at The Texas Tribune: Numerous vigils and memorials in Uvalde marked one year since the massacre at Robb Elementary School.
May 24, 2023
“Once Upon a Time in Iraq: Fallujah” Filmmaker on Showing the Impact of War on Humans
The FRONTLINE documentary traces the long-lasting aftermath of the battle of Fallujah through two families, one Iraqi and one American.
May 23, 2023
Surviving the Iraq War’s Bloodiest Battle: An Iraqi Mother’s Story
Prior to an operation to retake Fallujah from insurgents, the U.S. military warned civilians to leave the city. But for many Fallujah residents, leaving wasn’t possible. One Iraqi family shares their story in a new FRONTLINE documentary.
May 23, 2023
How the Mental Health System Affects North Carolina’s Jails and the People That Work There
North Carolina's jails are on the frontlines of the mental health crisis. WFAE examines how jail staff have to tend to inmates with mental health issues and the toll that kind of work can take.
May 23, 2023