House Dems Say Amazon ‘Obstructing’ Probe of Warehouse Collapse That Killed Six
A trio of Democrats from the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Reform on Thursday accused Amazon of “obstructing” its investigation into the December 2021 collapse of a warehouse in Illinois that killed six employees.
The collapse resulting from tornado damage at the Amazon fulfillment center in Edwardsville has heightened scrutiny of the e-commerce giant’s labor practices. In late March, the House committee requested documents from the company related to the event, internal reviews of it, and broader extreme weather policies.
The panel’s chair, Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), joined with Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and Cori Bush (D-Mo.) for a Thursday letter to Amazon president and CEO Andy Jassy highlighting that the company “has failed to meaningfully comply with the committee’s requests.”
“These documents were due on April 14, 2022,” the letter states. “Amazon still has not produced any of the key categories of documents identified by committee staff, let alone the full set of materials the committee requested.”
“On May 17, 2022, counsel to Amazon claimed that Amazon is withholding these documents based on work-product and attorney-client privileges,” the document continues. “As committee staff previously informed your counsel, the committee, under chairs of both parties, does not recognize common-law privileges as valid reasons to withhold documents from Congress.”
“Amazon’s inability to produce even this limited set of materials in a timely manner is troubling,” the letter adds, “given that the company represented to members of Congress more than four months ago that it was ‘conducting a thorough internal investigation’ into the Edwardsville events, and ‘cooperating’ with an inquiry by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).”
Since the March request for records, the letter points out, “OSHA revealed that an inspection of the Edwardsville facility ‘raised concerns about the potential risk to employees during severe weather emergencies,’ and recommended that Amazon ‘voluntarily take the necessary steps to eliminate or materially reduce your employees’ exposure’ to the risk factors OSHA identified.”
The document also cast doubt on Amazon’s willingness to address issues internally, noting that last month, “shareholders—following the company’s recommendation—defeated a proposal for an independent audit of working conditions at the company’s warehouses,” a vote that came the same day that they approved Jassy’s compensation package worth over $212 million.
“The committee will grant an extension until June 8, 2022, for Amazon to complete its document production,” the letter concludes. “If Amazon fails to do so, the committee will have no choice but to consider alternative measures to obtain full compliance.”
The warning came a day after Jassy received another letter from members of Congress related to other labor concerns—specifically, plans reported by The Intercept in April to ban certain terms like union, living wage, and slave labor from an internal messaging application.
“This disturbing report is part of a pattern of worker exploitation, retaliation, and union-busting on the part of Amazon,” the app-related letter adds, requesting documents and responses to a series of questions by June 16.
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Jessica Corbett.