COVID-19 Strike

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I think this is just the beginning of something fatal for the United States.

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Amazon and Instacart workers strike.

Amazon warehouse workers in Staten Island, N.Y., and Instacart's grocery delivery workers nationwide plan to walk off their jobs on Monday. They are demanding stepped-up protection and pay as they continue to work while much of the country is asked to isolate as a safeguard against the coronavirus.

The strikes come as both Amazon and Instacart have said they plan to hire tens of thousands of new workers. Online shopping and grocery home delivery are skyrocketing as much of the nation hunkers down and people stay at home, following orders and recommendations from the federal and local governments.

This has put a spotlight on workers who shop, pack and deliver these high-demand supplies. Companies refer to the workers as "heroes," but workers say their employers aren't doing enough to keep them safe.

The workers are asking for a variety of changes:

  • Workers from both Amazon and Instacart want more access to paid sick time off. At this time, it's available only to those who have tested positive for the coronavirus or get placed on mandatory self-quarantine.
  • Amazon workers want their warehouse to be closed for a longer cleaning, with guaranteed pay.
  • Instacart's grocery delivery gig workers are asking for disinfectant wipes and hand sanitizer and better pay to offset the risk they are taking.
From Grocery Stores To Pizza Delivery, Some Companies Are On A Hiring Spree

Workers at Amazon's Staten Island facility have said that multiple people at the warehouse have been diagnosed with COVID-19. Some of them plan to walk off the job on Monday to pressure the company to close the warehouse for an extended deep cleaning.

At Amazon, which employs some 800,000 people, workers have diagnosed positively for COVID-19 in at least 11 warehouses, forcing a prolonged closure of at least one warehouse in Kentucky. The company says it has "taken extreme measures to keep people safe," including allowing unlimited unpaid leave time for employees who feel uncomfortable working.

Amazon Closes Kentucky Warehouse After Workers Test Positive

Amazon says its decision on whether to close a warehouse for cleaning or for how long depends on where the sick workers were in the building, for how long, how long ago and other assessments. The company has also temporarily raised its pay by $2 an hour through April.

Instacart's army of grocery delivery workers are not employees, but independent contractors. They say the company has not provided them with proper protective items like disinfectants, hazard pay of an extra $5 per order and a higher default tip in the settings of the app.

At The Mercy Of An App: Workers Feel The Instacart Squeeze

Instacart on Sunday said it would distribute supplies, including hand sanitizer, to more workers and that it would change some tipping settings, but did not address paid sick leave for its contractors.

"Actions speak louder than words," Instacart worker Sarah Polito told NPR. "You can tell us that we're these household heroes and that you appreciate us. But you're not actually, they're not showing it. They're not taking these steps to give us the precautions. They're not giving us hazard pay."
 
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Good. If the employers aren't giving the employees who are on the front lines proper protection against this epidemics, then they'll shut down. Hopefully this will create enough uproar for the higher ups to step up and treat them like people.
 
Bad. Fuck these ungrateful clowns using this virus to sneak in unionization (they don't give a shit about "protection"), there's millions of unemployed who would be happy to take these jobs.
 
I've seen that Coronavirus might cause the US to enact socialised medicine in the form Medicare. That will be hilarious to see Trump take the same position as Bernie Sanders If it happens. The level of cope will be legendary.
 
Oh no, people hate Amazon so much they won't work for them, this is the END OF AMERICA!!!


Nope, just Amazon


I won't shed a tear, their "Get back in your cage" mentality brought them here, and new companies will step up to fill the void if they crater, that's the nice thing about capitalism, "next man up" wihtout the need for 20 years of exploratory committees to sort out what to do....
 
Bad. Fuck these ungrateful clowns using this virus to sneak in unionization (they don't give a shit about "protection"), there's millions of unemployed who would be happy to take these jobs.

They'll learn the answer is; What are illegal aliens?
 
Oh no, people hate Amazon so much they won't work for them, this is the END OF AMERICA!!!


Nope, just Amazon


I won't shed a tear, their "Get back in your cage" mentality brought them here, and new companies will step up to fill the void if they crater, that's the nice thing about capitalism, "next man up" wihtout the need for 20 years of exploratory committees to sort out what to do....

Most, if not all, unskilled/entry level jobs like that. I've yet to see this mythical job where you get benefits, good pay, and respect without a degree and some sort of expert level knowledge.
 
Most, if not all, unskilled/entry level jobs like that. I've yet to see this mythical job where you get benefits, good pay, and respect without a degree or some sort of expert level knowledge.


FTFY

Unskilled jobs are always going to be shit, but there are degrees and there are degrees. Far better to learn a trade than to go 100k in debt learning how to do a job that won't pay that back.

Dance degrees and film school exist to slow down wealthy parents.
 
Most, if not all, unskilled/entry level jobs like that. I've yet to see this mythical job where you get benefits, good pay, and respect without a degree and some sort of expert level knowledge.
I think most warehouse jobs are like that. It is a type of job driven purely by metrics and nothing else. I have worked a job like that and everything is about hitting numbers that some higher spot out and alot of the time they are bit ridiculous for someone who respects themselves long term to do.

I honestly dont blame the workers for wanting to strike. I wouldn't imagine how shitty it's got to be just to get a pat on the back saying how important the work you do is then be treated with no respects when you ask for some small concessions.
 
Nitpick, but WTF is with social justice people and their friends in the media using the word "access" everywhere? I've been noticing it a lot more lately. For example:
want more access to paid sick time off.
Why not just say they want more sick time off? There is some weird fixation on the word "access" where it doesn't make a lot of sense. Watch for it, you'll notice it too.
Anyway, while I sympathize with these people, they can be easily replaced by the 3 MILLION people that have recently been laid off...
 
Most, if not all, unskilled/entry level jobs like that. I've yet to see this mythical job where you get benefits, good pay, and respect without a degree and some sort of expert level knowledge.
I know a hospital custodian gig that pays 17/hr, full benefits and 2:1 retirement matching, and all the ot you could ever dream of.

Respect is easy if you come with a decent work ethic. Aka don't bitch if you get asked to work in a different unit for the day.
 
Anyway, while I sympathize with these people, they can be easily replaced by the 3 MILLION people that have recently been laid off...
One thing has been incredibly consistent over the last ten years: modern progressives have zero understanding of leverage or negotiating tactics. They're obviously used to just screaming and getting what they want.
Striking now when half of the service economy is laid off or on furlough because of state-mandated quarantines is about as retarded as the various clickbait merchants trying to create a journalist union around the 4th straight quarter or so they'd seen layoffs in the industry.
 
Bad. Fuck these ungrateful clowns using this virus to sneak in unionization (they don't give a shit about "protection"), there's millions of unemployed who would be happy to take these jobs.
Okay. Let's get people down on their luck looking for funds to get by, have them works hours on end for pennies on the dollars to cut costs, treat them with little to no dignity and threaten to fire them if they speak up.

Even better, during an epidemic where they are considered "essentials" because they are needed to work for our survival, don't give employees any simple precautions so that THEY won't get sick and spread it. Families? Contamination? Fuck that, they're simple workers! If they die or get sick, not OUR problem!

Are you serious?
 
Nitpick, but WTF is with social justice people and their friends in the media using the word "access" everywhere? I've been noticing it a lot more lately. For example:

Why not just say they want more sick time off? There is some weird fixation on the word "access" where it doesn't make a lot of sense. Watch for it, you'll notice it too.
Anyway, while I sympathize with these people, they can be easily replaced by the 3 MILLION people that have recently been laid off...

Seriously, "Okay, you have access now, just submit a request (which we'll deny), hey, you didn't say you'd actually EXPECT to get it!"
 
If that were the case, explain why every Dollar General is horribly understaffed?
I'm just speculating it has something to do with corporate wanting them to hire twice as many people as they need and scheduling them for, at most, 37 hours a week in addition to dealing with just getting random stock to try and sell which is why every one I've been in has shit on those cargo net carts blocking half the aisles.
 
I'm just speculating it has something to do with corporate wanting them to hire twice as many people as they need and scheduling them for, at most, 37 hours a week in addition to dealing with just getting random stock to try and sell which is why every one I've been in has shit on those cargo net carts blocking half the aisles.
You're half right. The random stock is far from random. There are only slight variations on the exact same products sold in a cycle year after year.
 
If that were the case, explain why every Dollar General is horribly understaffed?
That’s how they remain profitable, salaries are the most expensive part of their business, so they just barely hire anyone. It’s a hiring demand issue, not a supply one.

I’m not sure how a strike is the beginning of the end of anything. This happens all the time, unless you mean amazon shipping out infected packages everywhere.
 
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