What A Day - Amazon The Wrong Side Of The Law
Episode Date: February 18, 2021Over two million Texans are still without power, and there’s a new storm on the way that’s expected to prolong the icy conditions. Oregon, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia are among the other sta...tes dealing with fallout from the extreme weather.New York’s AG Letitia James sued Amazon this week, alleging that some of its warehouses failed to keep workers safe during the pandemic. We also spoke to an Amazon employee that works in the company's Bessemer, Alabama fulfillment center about the unionization effort there, and what the company is doing to suppress it.And in headlines: Facebook blocks all news in Australia, LA’s board of education defunds school police, and millions of counterfeit N95 masks have been seized in the past few weeks.Show Links:"How you can help Texas winter storm victims"https://www.cnn.com/2021/02/17/us/texas-winter-storm-how-to-help-iyw-trnd/index.html"How to help and get help in Texas as the winter storm causes power outages"https://www.texastribune.org/2021/02/16/texas-power-outage-help-warming-shelter/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Thursday, February 18th. I'm Akilah Hughes.
And I'm Gideon Resnick, and this is What The Day, where we are testifying at the GameStop hearings today on behalf of people who bought a tiny bit of Nokia stock at the absolute wrong time.
Yeah, they were expecting a text message saying to get out now, but it never came, so they gotta be heard, y'all.
Yeah, I didn't get a text. I didn't get a call.
I didn't get an email.
On today's show, a new lawsuit against Amazon
and a conversation with one of their employees in Alabama,
then some headlines.
But first, the latest.
The freezing temperatures and inclement weather in Texas
are still ongoing,
with over 2 million still without power as of last night. Safe water is also an issue.
Harris County, which includes Houston, was under a boil water advisory and officials asked that
water be used for essential purposes only. But to make matters worse, there's a new storm on
the way that's expected to prolong frigid temperatures and cause more icy conditions.
More than 100 million Americans are still under some winter weather advisory,
according to the National Weather Service.
Yeah, truly, truly nuts. And there's also people feeling this in Oregon, Tennessee,
Kentucky, Virginia, and elsewhere. And yesterday we talked about why the Texas
grid is under so much pressure and why it is failing, basically going it alone,
not preparing and not regulating companies to make winter upgrades. And it really does bear repeating that Republicans like Texas Senator Ted Cruz,
Texas Governor Greg Abbott, and Texas AG Ken Paxton all blame California's Democratic leadership
for the devastating wildfires that happened here. So I really hope that they're ready to accept
hefty blame for what's going on in Texas. Ted Cruz, for his part, was like, I have no defense on Twitter. So clearly he's aware
of his idiocy. But thankfully, FEMA is on it. The agency has sent 60 generators to help power
critical infrastructure, as well as send blankets, bottled water, and meals. And power grid officials
there have spoken up about the rolling outages, saying they hope to shorten the duration to 30
minutes to an hour for residents so that people can maintain heat and safety,
but they're not confident in their ability to do so for the next couple of days.
Yeah, certainly hope that this situation gets better and fast.
Yeah. And finally, you may have heard some really ignorant statements from Governor Abbott
saying that wind turbines are the cause for this,
which Gideon and Erin explained yesterday was not true.
So there's also been this now former mayor of
Colorado City, Texas, calling his citizens lazy and saying he has no obligation to help them.
And lest we forget, former Texas governor and former energy secretary Rick Perry saying Texans
are willing to freeze to stop green energy from coming to the state, which speak for yourself,
Rick, just know that these are unhelpful idiots and that there are organizations that are actually
on the ground helping.
Yeah, we've put links in our show notes if you do want to learn more or donate.
Yeah, check them out.
But let's move on to our next story.
The state of New York versus Amazon.
On Tuesday, New York's Attorney General Letitia James sued the company over working conditions in their warehouses.
So Gideon, take us through what we learned.
Yeah, so James is largely focusing on two specific facilities here,
one in Staten Island and the other in Queens, according to the New York Times.
The suit alleges that these facilities just didn't provide good enough safety measures
for their workers during the pandemic, including that the company didn't adequately clean their
buildings or do adequate contact tracing when people tested positive.
The suit claims that Amazon got written notifications of at least 250 employees
at the Staten Island facility having COVID. And in more than 90 of those instances,
the suit alleges that the employee had been at work the week before without Amazon closing those
portions of the facility and doing state mandated ventilation. Yeah, so par for the course for
Amazon. But the last time we talked about Amazon, it was in an interview with Christian Smalls,
a former employee who led a walkout at the Staten Island warehouse and was later fired.
His name did come up in the suit. That it did. The suit referenced his very firing. James alleges
that it was in retaliation, which is also what Smalls told us during our interview. Though Amazon
has said it was because he violated their quarantine policy by showing up at the building
after being exposed to another person with COVID.
But here's an important addition.
James Suit says that there were two Amazon human resource employees who talked about Smalls firing.
These people reportedly said that it was not fair to fire him because the company hadn't said that its quarantine policy barred him from being outside the building, which is where the protests took place.
It wasn't actually in the facility.
Yeah.
And so how has Amazon responded to this so far?
Well, in a way that I'm sure would not surprise you or most people listening. For one thing,
Amazon preemptively filed a suit seeking to stop James from filing this one. Their argument seems
to be that federal labor laws are applicable here as opposed to New York state laws. They also
reportedly said that their safety measures, quote, far exceed what is required under the law. And they mentioned a surprise positive inspection by the New York City
Sheriff's Office and other things that they were doing on site like testing and temperature checks.
So we'll have to see where this all ends up going and if Amazon will pay damages to workers like
Smalls, which is something the suit is also seeking. Yeah, and this is all happening as a
major union pushes underway at an Amazon facility in Bessemer, Alabama. So let's talk about that.
Voting is ongoing, and so are the efforts against it. They are indeed. According to reporting from
the outlet More Perfect Union, Amazon allegedly changed the timing of a traffic light outside
the facility, which union organizers believe is a way to keep them from
canvassing workers who stop at the light. Now, what this outlet is reporting is that late last
year, Amazon had told officials in the county that there were traffic delays around shift changes
that were happening and then asked for the light change as a result. The county reportedly obliged,
but it's unclear if they knew or understood the impact on the union drive itself.
And as we've talked about before, Amazon has reportedly been putting up anti-union flyers
in some places and tried unsuccessfully to delay the start of this very vote.
Yikes. And you've been trying to get in touch with employees down there to get a sense of
how this whole process is actually going. So fill us in.
Yes, this is the most fascinating story, I think, to me and you and a lot of other people,
because it's the first union push in the US to even make it to a vote in seven years. It is a
big, big deal. Last week, I got the chance to speak with Jennifer Bates. She's worked at the
Bessemer facility since last year, and she's a learning ambassador, which basically means that
she trains employees. I asked her about the work, and literally the first thing that she started
telling me about it was just how much walking and climbing stairs and physical labor is involved.
These are big facilities, and these are active roles.
She said that shifts are typically around 10 hours or more with just two 30-minute breaks, and that from the moment you enter the building, you have to scan your badge as you move around so that they can monitor your work and measure your so-called time off task, which is the phrase that gets thrown around.
There are write-ups if you hit something like 30 minutes in time off task outside of breaks.
By the way, that includes time spent going to the bathroom and walking back and forth to it.
Sometimes they could be spaced far out from where you are.
And Bates supports the unionization effort and is feeling pretty positive
about her co-workers' support for it as well.
But she also told me about how management is messaging against it and what they're telling
employees about it.
They're going to take your money and buy luxury cars and go on vacation.
And another one is the, well, we had the newsletter in the bathroom behind the door.
Right now we have the flyer for talking to us about why we don't need it.
Also, we have anti-union people coming to our workstations and talking to us about it,
about not voting and telling us that you're going to lose your benefits if you vote the union in.
Yeah, so as a result of all that,
Bates said that some employees are fearful
in only getting one side of the story,
which is the one that Amazon wants to tell.
Yeah, and what did she say personally
about what the union would mean for her?
The thing that was crazy was that
the asks here are just not that big.
Like, a little more time for breaks,
a little less overbearing monitoring,
making sure to space workers out by six feet because of the pandemic. And she's hoping that small changes like that
will make a big difference. You'll have time to spend with your family and won't have to be
in wheelchairs and knee braces and back pain, you know, taking pain medication. Who wants that?
I want to be able to go to the restaurant without someone
watching me or watching my time. And I have to go in and try to rush what I'm doing just to try to
get back and stand in. Yeah, not a lot being asked there. She also told me that she's hoping,
yeah, a union will be able to stick up for workers. And one of the things that she mentioned
is that rules change and that workers don't feel like they're able to share their sides of the story when issues do come up with management.
We're going to keep following the story as it progresses. And I'm hopeful for the opportunity
to report and air more conversations with workers as this talking about some major developments in the field of texting.
Over 200 new emojis were announced yesterday, which will be on the new iPhone OS set to come out next month. There seem to be at least three new emojis relevant to vaping,
including exhaling face, face with spiral eyes, and face in clouds.
You'll be able to send hearts that are both on fire and covered in bandages.
And of course, the headphone emoji has been updated
to look like Apple's own AirPods Max headphones.
So Giddy, have you looked at the new emojis and what are your thoughts?
I feel like our concern about public health has just invaded every aspect of our lives now that
you have hearts covered in bandages. That's very like, you know, something could be going wrong.
You have this syringe that's been updated. I mean, I feel like that's more about like a broken heart,
right? Like it's mending, I'm mending my hair from from emotion or from the pandemic that we're
living through who's to say i i and then the syringe thing too is like that's very clearly
a play you know having the one without the blood and it's very clearly a play of like
oh you can post about getting your vaccine and use this new uh syringe emoji to do it which like
you know that's that's fine and cute but it just me it shows like, I feel like we all got the same
thing on the brain and it's in every part of our lives.
Yeah, I mean, I think you're not wrong. You know, they've had a lot of time at home in the pandemic
and their brains do seem to be focused a little bit on that and this new emoji
drop. Yeah, but have you looked at these so far?
What are your thoughts here? There's a lot of, there's a lot of vape action. That's, I don't, that's weird.
I mean, I'm super into the new vape emojis. I think that they're ridiculous. Like I think that
the one where there's all the face in the smoke should be like, I just walked through a vape
cloud. You know, those become a thing again, when we get to leave our houses, because that was a
big deal for me in New York. I'm like, can you guys stop vaping giant clouds of cherries?
It's disgusting.
I hate it.
So I think that that one's pretty innovative also.
Maybe speaks to what they were doing in the pandemic.
But there's some other really cool things in the new emoji drop.
You know, there's like interracial, intersex, inter-everything relationships.
So there's like little hearts between them, which I think is really important and inclusive.
And like, yeah, I think that people have had to be very creative in the past trying to show who they're with through emojis.
And I'm like, oh, finally, you all figured this out.
I do think that there's a lack of like a red Afro.
I feel like the overlap of curly haired, red headed people is just never going to be addressed.
Yeah, there's there's definitely definitely more inclusivity that's happening,
but not full inclusivity that is happening.
But, you know, with each new drop,
I think we're getting a more perfect society.
That's what the emojis want us to think, and I think it.
Yeah, you know, they're definitely trying to bring us all together with these.
They're very cute.
And just like that, we've checked our temps.
Stay safe.
Send us your favorite emoji, and we'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Facebook implemented a policy blocking all news content for users in Australia yesterday.
Last year, the tech giant announced its decision to put a ban on news for Australian users in response to a proposed law that would require tech platforms to pay publishers for their content.
Under the proposal, platforms would have to negotiate contracts with publishers in order for news to appear on their sites. A spokesperson for Facebook argued that publishers were the ones who chose to share stories on their platform to get new readers,
which is another way of saying we're actually already paying you in clout.
Both Facebook and Google criticized the proposal when it was announced,
but Google ended up taking a very different approach,
actually cutting deals with major publishers to license content for their site.
Yeah, I hope that news sites start blocking Facebook from being posted
on their stories. You know, I don't want to see anybody's update in the stories anymore. Well,
the Board of Education in Los Angeles voted on Tuesday to defund its school police department
and invest in programs that serve black students. Way to go. Happy Black History Month.
The plan cuts $25 million from the school police department's budget,
plus a third of its staff, and it bans pepper-spraying students.
Finally.
The bulk of the money will be used to hire support staff,
including climate coaches,
who will be responsible for de-escalation strategies,
ending racial discrimination and disciplinary actions,
and addressing implicit biases.
Extra funding will also go to over 50 schools
with higher Black student populations.
Activists and community leaders have long warned
that school police forces disproportionately target and over-police black and brown students, and many
are calling the decision a move in the right direction. In response to the cuts, 20 officers
resigned. I guess they're upset they can't abuse black people anymore. Well, in taking this action,
LA joins other school districts like the ones in Oakland and Portland, which have cut down or
eliminated school police. Young people in England will soon be able to make money just by participating in the global trend called getting COVID
as the country has approved the world's first clinical trial,
which involves infecting healthy participants.
So the primary aim of the so-called challenge trial
is to determine the smallest amount of virus that is required to cause infection.
Additionally, researchers hope to compare and test different vaccines
in a controlled setting and generally learn more about the virus.
With 15 million people vaccinated in England and a sense of cautious optimism that the guards at Buckingham Palace can soon take off their masks and go back to flaunting those famous, beautiful frowns, some have suggested that this trial is coming too late.
Researchers argue that we might need new vaccines to combat new strains of COVID, and these trials will allow them to test vaccines quickly. Hear, hear. Well, one good rule is to be yourself, which is why bad masks need to stop pretending
they can filter 95% of airborne particles. Cut it out. 10 million fake N95s have been seized by
federal agents over the past few weeks, with the latest bust happening yesterday in a Massachusetts
warehouse. These masks say they're from 3M, which is considered the gold standard for COVID
prevention, so there's a risk they'll be bought by hospitals and medical groups in need
of effective PPE. Over the course of the pandemic, federal agents from the Department of Homeland
Security, the FDA, and the FBI have recovered $33 million in fake COVID-related products
and arrested more than 200 people. From my perspective, counterfeiters should focus less
on making stuff that could seriously endanger
people and more on making Air Force Ones that don't look like drawings of Air
Force Ones.
Like put it to good use guys.
Federal officers said fakes can sometimes be spotted based on grammatical
errors or typos on packaging.
If your mask is labeled musk,
it won't protect you well from viruses,
although maybe it will help you date Grimes or ride a spaceship to another
planet.
Who's to say? Also Rush Limbaugh, who made millions by being racist into a microphone,
has finally died. And those are the headlines.
That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
avoid counterfeit wads, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just mask packages for grammar like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Akilah Hughes.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And be yourself, masks.
You know, just go out there and try your hardest, but don't pretend that you're something you're not.
Yeah, be confident and flaunt it.
Be who you are, you know?
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis.
Sonia Tan is our assistant producer.
Our head writer is John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Katie Long,
Akilah Hughes, and me. Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kshaka.