When it came to fast deliveries, Amazon reportedly prioritized speed over safety.
This not-so-shocking revelation is just one of many in the latest issue of the New Yorker, which in a piece titled "Is Amazon Unstoppable?" goes into extensive detail about the company's efforts to grow at any cost — and the destruction that ethos left in its wake.
Of particular note is Amazon's decision to contract out last-mile delivery efforts to a bevy of third-party contractors, despite internal warnings that things could get ugly. According to Brittain Ladd, a former Amazon senior manager interviewed for the story, around 2013 the company decided that it could no longer rely solely on the likes of FedEx and the UPS to deliver its packages. Instead, it would also work with smaller courier firms scattered across the country to supplement its ever-growing demand.
"Frankly, you have very little control over these individuals," Ladd told the New Yorker.
According to the magazine, Ladd went so far as to circulate a written warning among colleagues: "I believe it is highly probable that accidents will occur resulting in serious injuries and deaths."
Mashable reached out to Amazon to confirm the existence of this memo, as well as to determine the company's response at the time to it being circulated. We received no immediate response.
In a statement to the New Yorker, Amazon insisted that it takes action "when [delivery partners] aren’t meeting our high bar for safety and customer experience."
Ladd, of course, was correct. A BuzzFeed News report from August of this year detailed all the ways in which third-party contractors, constantly pressed for time and often facing lax oversight, have encountered workplace abuse, injuries, and even death.
"I attended meetings, and I told them that the last thing you want is a newspaper article reading 'Amazon driver high on drugs hits and kills family,'" Ladd explained to the New Yorker. "But we were growing so fast, and there was so much pressure, and if we tried to build this internally it would have taken at least a year. And so a decision was made that the risk was worth it."
The "risk," of course, being not to Amazon's bottom line but rather to the life and limb of both the couriers forced to work long hours with few breaks and everyone caught in their crosshairs.
One such unfortunate individual, BuzzFeed News reports, was the 84-year-old Telesfora Escamilla. She was struck and killed by a driver working for Inpax Shipping Solutions — a company with an Amazon package delivery contract in Chicago and elsewhere.
"Just months before Escamilla's death," reports BuzzFeed News, "a former employee told BuzzFeed News, Inpax had stopped paying for a critical safety monitoring service it had installed in every van in Chicago — equipment some felt could have helped prevent the accident."
Amazon, notes the New Yorker, had decided "that it wasn’t practical to compel firms to give drivers regular drug tests or to require extensive training." The company reportedly no longer works with Inpax.
SEE ALSO: Activists occupy Amazon office and put giant Jeff Bezos head on Whole Foods roofBut hey, Amazon gets you your packages fast. And despite being warned by its own senior manager that deaths might result, the company is charging ahead.
Try to make sure you're not standing in its path.
UPDATE: Oct. 14, 2019, 2:35 p.m. PDT: An Amazon spokesperson provided the following statement via email:
The source of this information has never been involved in the decision making for these programs, the assertions are wrong, and do not provide an accurate representation of Amazon’s commitment to safety and all the measures we take to ensure millions of packages are delivered to customers without incident. Whether it’s state-of-the art telemetrics and advanced safety technology in last-mile vans, driver safety training programs, or continuous improvements within our mapping and routing technology, we have invested tens of millions of dollars in safety mechanisms across our network, and regularly communicate safety best practices to drivers. We are committed to greater investments and management focus to continuously improve our safety performance.
文章
1
浏览
126
获赞
1
Here's that creepy Rami Malek ad mashed with music from Jordan Peele's 'Us'
It's been an entire month since Rami Malek's promotional video for Mandarin Oriental hotels made theAn extensive, completely serious list of all Trump's accomplished in his first 6 months
Some people say President Trump hasn't accomplished much during his time in office, but those peopleFacebook is testing a mute button for all its annoying notifications
Facebook might finally make it easier to tame its most annoying problem: notifications.The company aHere's a tuna fish sliced in half yet still flailing, refusing to die
Warning: This post can be unsettling for some readers.This fish is clearly refusing to die.In a clipFacebook launches 'Facebook Shops' for more in
Facebook just made it way easier to spend your money on Instagram. On Tuesday, Facebook, which owns12 Russians indicted for DNC hack, officially placing foreign blame on 2016 email attack
Twelve Russian intelligence officers have just been indicted by the Justice Department for hacking tHow the dominoes in Alex Jones' social media empire all fell at once
Life comes at you fast.Over the course of just 24 hours, tech companies have pulled InfoWars head hoGoogle might launch the Pixel 3 on Oct. 4
Google seems to really like the date Oct. 4. It launched a whole bunch of hardware — includingWhat to expect at WWDC 2020: Plenty of new features across all Apple devices
On June 22, Apple will hold is annual World Wide Developers Conference (WWDC). But rather than gatheMicrosoft boss Brad Smith wants stricter A.I. face recognition laws
Microsoft is joining the movement for face-recognition technology regulation.The software giant theDonald Trump nicknames that did nothing to slow his authoritarianism
Since Donald Trump's election, it has felt hopeless staring down the barrel of the rise of fascism,WhatsApp tests a new anti
WhatsApp may soon have a new weapon in the fight against one of the most insidious forms of spam: sThese $315 denim panties are deeply upsetting
"Weird, bad jeans" are practically their own fashion genre by now, and brands are well aware that maThese photos of a very tiny puppy called Tim will make your heart hurt
Dogs come in different shapes and sizes.SEE ALSO: Mom's dog identification fail mAmazon workers on strike as Prime Day kicks off
This Monday is Amazon Prime Day, and like every other year, that means you'll have the chance to get