A large number of Amazon workers rely on food stamps for assistance
From [HERE] Over the past year, U.S. cities and states have been tripping head-over-heels in an effort to be the host of the next Amazon headquarters. Last year, New Jersey approved an incentive package that would give Amazon tax breaks worth $7 billion if it moved to Newark. Philadelphia has offered $2 billion in tax exemptions over 10 years, Georgia $1 billion, and Maryland a whopping $8.5 billion.
But while state lawmakers continue to one-up each other in the race to host Amazon’s new HQ, a very different picture has emerged at the lower rungs of the company, where warehouse employees are so underpaid that they already incredibly reliant on state subsidies to survive.
According to the New Food Economy, Amazon ranks high on the list of employers with massive numbers of employees enrolled in SNAP (the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, otherwise known as food stamps). In Ohio, around one in 10 Amazon employees uses SNAP; in Pennsylvania, about one in nine. In Arizona, nearly one in three Amazon employees is enrolled in the food stamp program.
Later this year, Amazon will start accepting food stamps for online grocery orders, from which it stands to benefit enormously as one of the nation’s top retailers. That means the company will be the recipient of government assistance (in the form of tax breaks and incentives) while its own workers are forced to rely upon that same program to survive.
Amazon, it’s worth noting, is set to effectively monopolize e-commerce by 2021. Its CEO, Jeff Bezos, is worth around $112 billion.
The SNAP numbers are the latest in a series of revelations surrounding working conditions inside Amazon’s warehouse facilities. On Thursday, The Intercept noted that, in addition to being a top SNAP recipient, Amazon’s median employee pay was only $28,446 — 9 percent less than the industry average and well below the U.S. living wage.
On Sunday an undercover researcher also told The Sun that Amazon warehouse workers in Britain were reportedly peeing in bottles to avoid being accused of “time-wasting” for taking breaks. Amazon has also patented wristbands which track employee movements, which developers described as a “labor saving measure.”
Amazon’s white-collar employees aren’t excluded from the list of questionable work environments either. In 2015, an investigation by The New York Times found that Amazon employees were encouraged to work upwards of 80 hours a week; several described an environment of “purposeful Darwinism” and workers regularly crying at their desks.
Bezos, meanwhile, recently took the top spot on Forbes’ world’s billionaires list. His $112 billion net worth is equal to the combined wealth of 2.3 million Americans, according to USA Today. [MORE]