In a sweeping new report, which Amazon disputes, Sen. Sanders says the company's focus on speed leads to "uniquely dangerous" workplaces.
Teamsters President Sean O'Brien and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) are threatening an Amazon strike for disingenuous reasons.
Senator Bernie Sanders unveiled an investigation into Amazon’s treatment of injured employees, shedding light on workplace safety concerns. Among the cases highlighted was Denise, an Amazon worker who broke her ankle on the job.
Bernie Sanders is blasting Amazon founder and executive chairman (former CEO) Jeff Bezos after he attended dinner with Donald Trump as Amazon workers go on strike at seven facilities in California, Georgia,
A new committee report on working conditions at the e-commerce giant says that Amazon knows the risks to worker safety and routinely looks the other way.
The firm discouraged injured workers from seeking outside medical care and ignored internal safety recommendations, a panel led by Sen. Bernie Sanders found.
Just as Amazon warehouse workers are threatening to launch the "first large-scale" unfair labor practices strike at Amazon in US history, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) released a report accusing Amazon of operating "uniquely dangerous warehouses" that allegedly put profits over worker safety.
Amazon knew of the link between increased worker injuries and the company's production quotas, but its executives allegedly rejected safety recommendations to loosen its mandates, an investigation by lawmakers found.
Amazon employees are pressured to work at an “extremely fast and often dangerous pace,” according to a congressional investigation led by Sen. Bernie Sanders.
Amazon.com Inc. faces renewed scrutiny over its warehouse safety practices following a Senate investigation that claims the e-commerce giant manipulated injury data and prioritized speed over worker safety,
Teamsters requested an investigation of the flood from Amazon's warehouse that swamped a picket line in Queens; they also filed for a restraining order against the NYPD.
In the last decade, Amazon’s revenue grew about 540% while its net income moved from losing money to 30.42 billion in profits this past year. The ride up wasn’t always smooth, however. For example, in 2020, sales jumped 38%, and net income nearly doubled.