A new national report released Wednesday says workers at Amazon's Minnesota warehouses suffer from a high rate of injury and those at its Shakopee facilities experience large pay gaps by race.
The report — compiled by the National Employment Law Project with assistance from local workers rights group the Awood Center — calls for a state investigation of health and safety hazards at the Amazon facilities as well as an examination of the online retail giant's practices when it comes to how it monitors and pushes employees' work speeds.
The report examines data from the U.S. census, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) office. It concludes that despite the rosy picture that Amazon has painted for the public, its continued growth has come with "human costs."
"The first thing that we realized when we started looking into this is just how off the charts the injuries are," said Irene Tung, one of the report's authors and a senior researcher at the New York-based National Employment Law Project.
Amazon declined to comment on the report.
Since it opened its large fulfillment center in Shakopee five years ago, Amazon has continued to expand its physical footprint in Minnesota. This year it opened a fulfillment center in Lakeville. Amazon also recently opened a sortation center in Maple Grove. Over the years, Amazon representatives have said the company has invested more than $3 billion in the state over the years and employed thousands.
Workers at its Shakopee facilities are more than twice as likely to be injured at work as other Minnesota warehouse workers. The report says Amazon reported to OSHA that from 2018 to 2020 Amazon warehouses in Minnesota tallied 792 work-related injuries. The report's authors analyzed that the rate of injuries at those facilities is 11.1 cases annually per 100 full-time workers, or one injury for every nine workers each year. That's more than double the rate at non-Amazon warehouses in the state, according to OSHA data.
Many injuries are musculoskeletal disorders caused by repeated lifting, Tung said.