Every day at 4:30 a.m., Dwayne
Wilson, 25, wakes up to find out whether he’s going to be needed as
a forklift driver at the warehouse he works at in the Los Angeles
neighborhood of Wilmington. Sometimes he gets a call telling him not
to come in. Sometimes he goes in to find out that he’s not needed
that day. On average, he works just three eight-hour days per week,
at $15 per hour.
“Even if I work every day and I
have an amazing work ethic,” Wilson says, “I still could be sent
home after waiting for so long because they fill the spot.”
The products that Wilson moves are
destined for Amazon customers, but Wilson doesn’t work directly for
the e-commerce giant. He works for California Cartage, a logistics
company that has a contract to unpack shipping containers full of
Amazon goods. Wilson says that the majority of the cargo moving
through his warehouse is headed straight to Amazon fulfillment
facilities.
The national unemployment rate hit
3.8 percent in May, the lowest level since 2000, and companies across
the country are complaining about the difficulty of finding workers.
Yet Amazon has been able to staff its warehouses with workers who
frequently earn little more than the local minimum wage. Many of them
are contingent workers like Wilson, who get none of the stability and
benefits that often come with working for one of the country’s
largest companies.
Amazon has been able to keep
finding workers for its warehouses—and keeping wages low—in part
by tapping into areas where the economic recovery has been weak. New
Jersey and California contain two of the largest numbers of Amazon
fulfillment facilities in the United States.
In 2012, Amazon opened a warehouse
in San Bernardino, Calif., a city about 70 miles east of Wilmington.
San Bernardino has a per capita income of $14,922 according to the
latest American Community Survey in 2016, less than half the national
average of $29,892.
San Bernardino didn’t regain the
number of jobs it lost in the recession until 2015, according to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics. Amazon, on the other hand, recently
released figures showing profits of $2.5 billion for the last
quarter, the third consecutive quarter the company produced a profit
of more than $1 billion.
The 2016 per-capita income of
Carteret, New Jersey, another port city where Amazon opened a
warehouse, is $24,926. On the whole, New Jersey’s recovery has been
slower than California’s. The state didn't gain back the number of
the jobs it lost during the recession until 2016.
Wilson left a better-paying job in
the warehouse of an animal pharmaceutical manufacturer in Omaha,
Neb., to move in with his mother who was living on disability in Long
Beach and needed his support. In California, the two live together in
a two-bedroom apartment where they pay $1,400 per month. Wilson
initially began working at California Cartage because it was the
easiest job he could get with his background in warehouse work.
Wilson’s situation could improve
if he gets a job working directly for Amazon. But he faces long odds,
not to mention that Amazon workers don’t have it easy either.
A report from
the Institute for Local Self-Reliance showed fulfillment centers
often pay less than the industry average for comparable work.
Sheheryar Kaoosji, an organizer at
the Warehouse Worker Resource Center, an Inland Empire-based worker
center, says that the demand for Amazon jobs in the area is so high
that it’s often a challenge for workers who are hired on a
part-time basis to secure a regular full-time position. Those
part-timers are often not told what time their shift begins until two
hours before they’re expected to show up.
“Those workers have to hustle to
try to take every opportunity they’re given,” Kaoosji says. “If
they pass something up. If they say, hey, I can't make it this day,
they're much less likely to actually get that permanent position.”
Even when workers do get hired by
Amazon, those jobs don’t necessarily last.
“Often we have folks who stick
around after the Christmas rush, and they get laid off because
Amazon—especially compared to a lot of companies—they have a
really, really exaggerated kind of seasonal hiring,” says Kaoosji.
Wilson’s job is characteristic of
many workers in the lowest rung of the logistics industry, which is
increasingly being propelled directly or indirectly by Amazon. Both
in Amazon facilities, and even more so in warehousing centers that
handle Amazon freight, a large part of the workforce is often
part-time or contingently employed through staffing agencies.
Northern New Jersey exurbs like
Newark and New Brunswick are logistics hubs with a high concentration
of “perma-temp” positions—where a temp agency connects workers
to the same job at warehouses on a consistent basis. Carmen Martino,
a labor studies professor at Rutgers, says it’s common for temp
agencies to pop up in neighborhoods with a high concentration of
immigrant workers where the per-capita income is low.
“Actually, some years back, we
mapped wherever the staffing agencies were located in proximity to
where the workers lived,” Martino says. “And you can see in
places like New Brunswick where the agencies were like a picket
fence, right around the highest concentration of immigrant workers.”
Martino says it’s cheaper for
warehouses to use temp agencies because they don’t have the
responsibilities of providing for injured workers or paying for state
and federal taxes on employees. It’s also more efficient for the
temp agencies because they have to spend less time on training.
Meanwhile, workers like Wilson,
stuck under these conditions, continue to work with no benefits and
unstable hours, while companies like Amazon see their profits
increase with no end in sight.
>> The article above was written by Max Parrott, and is reprinted from In These Times.
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