A recent Senate investigation accuses Amazon of disregarding worker safety in favor of higher productivity. The report claims that Amazon’s relentless focus on speed and efficiency forces warehouse employees to repeat strenuous movements hundreds or thousands of times per shift, leading to elevated rates of muscle and joint injuries. Workers are often compelled to choose between following safety protocols, like seeking assistance to move heavy objects, or facing potential discipline for slowing down operations.
Amazon has dismissed the report’s findings, asserting that it misrepresents the company’s safety record. According to Amazon, worker injuries have declined even as productivity has surged in recent years.
The 160-page report was spearheaded by the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, chaired by long-time Amazon critic Senator Bernie Sanders. The report, titled “The ‘Injury-Productivity Trade-off’: How Amazon’s Obsession with Speed Creates Uniquely Dangerous Warehouses,” highlights alarming claims about the company’s labor practices.
Sanders stated, “Amazon’s executives repeatedly chose to put profits ahead of the health and safety of its workers by ignoring recommendations that would substantially reduce injuries at its warehouses. This is precisely the type of outrageous corporate greed that the American people are sick and tired of.”
The report points to evidence that Amazon’s leadership was aware of the safety risks tied to productivity quotas but failed to implement necessary changes. Internal studies conducted by Amazon, such as Project Soteria, revealed a clear link between work speed and injury rates. The study recommended that Amazon adjust its speed-related discipline and time-off policies to reduce worker injuries.
However, Amazon downplayed the relevance of Project Soteria, calling it “outdated” and “inaccurate.” The company claimed that from 2019 to 2023, injury rates requiring more than basic first aid dropped by 28%, while injuries that caused workers to miss shifts fell by 75%. “The report accuses us of having safety policies in place but not following them, which is hard to square with our significant progress,” said an Amazon spokesperson. “Our strong policies and adherence to them are helping us create a safer work environment every day.”
Amazon’s labor practices have faced scrutiny before. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) proposed fines of $100,000 in 2023, alleging that the company’s work conditions exposed employees to ergonomic hazards. The Senate report criticized these fines as too small to influence a corporation that reported over $17 billion in profits in its most recent quarter.
Legal disputes have also emerged. A lawsuit filed by Washington state’s labor regulators, which relied on Project Soteria’s findings, was dismissed by a state judge who concluded that the regulators failed to prove that Amazon’s work pace was hazardous. Amazon used this dismissal to bolster its defense against the Senate’s report.
Senator Sanders and his committee argue that Amazon’s efforts to downplay Project Soteria’s findings are part of a larger strategy to avoid accountability. “The injury data and internal reports clearly show that Amazon’s productivity demands are taking a toll on its workers,” the Senate report states.
The report’s release has reignited debates about corporate responsibility and labor rights. Critics argue that corporations like Amazon should be held to higher safety standards, especially given their vast financial resources. On the other hand, Amazon maintains that its investments in safety initiatives have yielded tangible improvements, a claim it backs with data on injury reduction.
As the Senate’s findings circulate, they are likely to add fuel to ongoing conversations about labor reform, workplace safety, and corporate accountability in the e-commerce sector.