CORP/BIZ Amazon is ridiculed for trying to motivate Easter Sunday workers with a raffle to win water and a bag of chips

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
I understand, of course, that Amazon didn't have to give its workers anything at all but a paycheck. But that being said, this is a pretty insulting "prize."

What will those lazy, greedy workers demand next? More gruel??

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Fair use cited so on and so forth.


Amazon is ridiculed for trying to motivate Easter Sunday workers with a raffle to win water and a bag of chips
Sophie Mellor
Tue, April 19, 2022, 8:03 AM·3 min read

Amazon workers arriving at one company warehouse on Easter Sunday were greeted with a cheerful message from management.

As a holiday incentive, there would be a contest, and a raffle. Those who picked products above a certain speed would be entered into a draw to win a goody bag.

"Thank you all for coming in on Easter Sunday!" the note said. “Good Luck everyone and THANK YOU!!!”

The grand prize? Water or soda plus a candy bar or bag of chips, worth roughly $2. An amount that when compared to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s hourly haul generated a wave of ridicule from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and many others across social media.

Salary disparity
Bezos, the second-richest man on earth after Elon Musk, has a net worth of $177 billion as calculated by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

The Amazon founder earns $8,961,187 a day—roughly 315 times Amazon's $28,466 median annual worker pay—according to a recent report by Business Insider. And each minute he earns $152,000, more than three times what the median U.S. worker makes in a year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

View: https://twitter.com/MorePerfectUS/status/1516106787451117568


Calls for union grow stronger
The raffle garnered a strong Internet response and heightened anger toward Amazon's anti-union behavior.

Sen. Bernie Sanders called out Amazon’s “corporate greed” and mentioned Bezos’s $500 million yacht and $175 million Beverly Hills estate. He left out Bezos's $16 million apartment on New York's Fifth Avenue, however, as well as his four condos overlooking Central Park in the same city, his 10-bedroom house in Washington, D.C., and the 30,000-acre ranch he owns in Texas.

View: https://twitter.com/SenSanders/status/1516223640274096128


Dan Price, the founder of credit card processing company Gravity Payments who famously raised the minimum salary for employees at his company to $70,000 and lowered his own wage from $1.1 million to the same amount, also called out Amazon's work practices.

View: https://twitter.com/DanPriceSeattle/status/1516112444514762752


For his part, author and journalist Brian Merchant sarcastically challenged Amazon’s fierce attempts to shut down any unionization at the company.

View: https://twitter.com/bcmerchant/status/1516173456865255424


Amazon workers at a New York warehouse voted on April 1 to join the independent Amazon Labor Union (ALU), a major milestone that could force the retail tech giant to become more accountable for workplace injuries and other employee complaints. Calls for unionization have been growing across the U.S., where Amazon is the second-largest employer.

Amazon has poured resources into fighting unionization efforts, however, regarding unions as an obstacle to business flexibility and warehouse efficiency. After the New York warehouse unionization vote, Amazon said it was disappointed in the outcome. “We believe having a direct relationship with the company is best for our employees,” wrote Amazon in a statement about the results, adding, “We’re evaluating our options, including filing objections based on the inappropriate and undue influence by the NLRB that we and others (including the National Retail Federation and U.S. Chamber of Commerce) witnessed in this election.”

On May 2, a second Amazon facility in New York—the LBJ5 sortation center on Staten Island—will hold a union election over joining the ALU.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
 

hunybee

Veteran Member
yah, they don't have to give them anything above the paycheck. i would not expect anything more than that.

if they called them in to work outside their usual work times, or forced them to work, there is a grey area, i guess.

but to me, a bottle of water or pop and/or a candybar or chips as a prize in a raffle that you have to pick orders above a certain level just to be entered into it and you MIGHT "win" for working on a holiday?

yah, just go ahead and keep it.......
 

subnet

Boot
Not defending amazon but wasn't Dan Price also the guy that ended up renting his house out and living in the garage, while many workers quit, due to his idiotic business/wage decision?
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
For what it's worth, I rarely see the same Amazon driver twice: my neighbors get a lot of packages. On the other hand, the same two Fed-X drivers have been working in the area since Christmas. Before, we were getting new drivers every couple of weeks.

And, no, I don't sit in my living room spying on everyone. My home office faces the street. There is little traffic, so trucks and unknown vehicles catch my attention.
 

Squib

Veteran Member
I would literally shit in my hands and smear it all over this sign, and walk out.

Yeah, it is quite the insult, isn’t it?

Other backhanded compliments and offers:

1) You don’t sweat much for a fat chick!
2) If I was drunk, I’d be all over you girl!
3) I love how you don’t care about what you look like!
4) Wow! You don’t actually look half bad when you clean up!
5) You‘re much nicer in person!
 
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