Skip to main content

Amazon raises overtime pay for warehouse workers, but holds back one benefit

Amazon has announced it will raise overtime pay for its warehouse workers, who are under increasing strain to ship items during the global outbreak of coronavirus, officially called COVID-19. The demand for deliveries from Amazon has skyrocketed as people stay at home and practice social distancing, with shops closed in many countries around the world.

As reported by Reuters, Amazon warehouse workers who are paid an hourly wage will now receive double pay for working overtime over 40 hours per week, which is an increase from the previous rate of 1.5 times pay for overtime. This increase applies from March 15 to May 9.

Recommended Videos

This comes the day after four U.S. Senators sent an open letter to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos calling on the company to do more to protect its workers during the coronavirus outbreak, following a confirmed case of the disease at a U.S. Amazon warehouse. The senators were particularly concerned by the continuing practice of “stand up meetings” at warehouses, which require workers to stand closer together than the six feet of distance recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and other health organizations.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Although the increase of overtime pay will be welcomed by Amazon employees, the Senators requested accommodations that go further, including paid sick leave for employees and hazard pay of time and a half even before overtime. Amazon has said that warehouse employees who are diagnosed with coronavirus would receive “up to two weeks of paid sick leave,” but other workers such as those at the DCH1 delivery station in Chicago receive no paid sick time.

In a blog post on Amazon’s website, Bezos said he was “grateful” to workers but did not offer any further increases in benefits. He also wrote that the company had placed orders for protective gear such as “millions of face masks” for employees, but that these items were in short supply and orders had not been filled.

In other Amazon news, the company has announced that it will stop shipping non-essential products from Amazon.com to Italy and France, due to the severity of the coronavirus outbreaks in those countries. “We will temporarily stop taking orders on some non-essential products on Amazon.it and Amazon.fr,” Amazon.com said in a statement provided to Reuters. “This lets fulfillment center associates focus on receiving and shipping the products customers need most at this time.”

Essential items that will continue to be shipped include health and household items, baby products, groceries, pet supplies, and personal care products. Third-party sellers who sell through the Amazon storefront can continue to ship orders if they do not use Amazon logistics.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Amazon reportedly pushes back Prime Day again
amazon prime boxes

Amazon's Prime Day sale is reportedly being pushed back again as coronavirus cases spike in the U.S.

The massive sale will now be held in early October, according to Business Insider. Amazon is pushing back the sales event — which normally falls in July — due to concerns about the coronavirus interfering with the company's supply chain, according to emails obtained by Business Insider.

Read more
Amazon warehouse workers say $500 coronavirus bonus is a joke
The Amazon fulfillment center in Shakopee, Minnesota

Amazon warehouse worker Sharo Sherif said she hasn’t gotten a paycheck since the beginning of May.

It's not because she’s been fired, but because she had to quarantine after she had COVID-like symptoms, the 23-year-old told Digital Trends. Money is starting to run out.

Read more
Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google will testify before Congress in July
Google & Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai

The top chief executives from Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google will all appear before Congress in late July for an antitrust hearing, according to Recode's Kara Swisher.

Most of the tech giants have appeared before Congress in the past, some multiple times, on an array of issues ranging from data mining to political bias, but this hearing would be the first on antitrust concerns. According to Swisher, Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Google's Sundar Pichai, and Apple head Tim Cook will all participate in the hearing.

Read more