In
a proposed class action filed in Brooklyn federal court,
Christian Smalls alleged Amazon failed to provide needed
protective gear to its "predominantly minority" workforce,
subjecting them to inferior working conditions than its mainly
white managers.
Citing a leaked memo from Amazon's general counsel to Chief
Executive Jeff Bezos, Smalls also said Amazon fired him after
concluding that as a Black man he was a "weak spokesman" for
workers.
He also said Amazon tried to drum up public support by making
him the "face" of workers criticizing its pandemic response.
The complaint seeks unspecified damages for Black and Hispanic
workers at the Staten Island facility.
Amazon fired Smalls on March 30, saying he joined a protest at
the Staten Island facility despite being on paid quarantine,
after had having close contact with someone diagnosed with
COVID-19.
It fired at least three other workers critical of its pandemic
response in April, citing various alleged workplace violations.
New York Attorney General Letitia James wrote to Amazon later in
April, expressing "serious concern" it was trying to silence
critics of its health and safety measures.
In a statement on Thursday, Amazon spokeswoman Lisa Levandowski
said Amazon's focus on customers "is central to our work in
diversity and inclusion," and that Smalls was fired for putting
others' health and safety at risk.
The Seattle-based company has benefited from the pandemic as
consumers shopped online more often.
Amazon has said it expects to invest $10 billion this year on
COVID-19 initiatives to deliver products and keep employees
safe, including by distributing masks to workers and employing
disinfectant spraying and temperature checks worldwide.
On Oct. 1, Amazon said 19,816 of its 1.37 million front-line
U.S. workers between Mar. 1 and Sept. 19 had tested positive or
were presumed positive for the coronavirus.
It said that was 42% fewer than if the infection rate had
mirrored the rate for the general population.
Last week, a Brooklyn federal judge dismissed a separate lawsuit
accusing Amazon of creating a public nuisance at the Staten
Island facility.
The case is Smalls v Amazon Inc, U.S. District Court, Eastern
District of New York, No. 20-05492.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Aurora
Ellis)
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