Amazon Issued 13,000 Disciplinary Notices In A Single U.S. Warehouse

July 13, 2022

In a single year ending April 2020, Amazon issued more than 13,000 so-called “disciplines” at the company’s warehouse on Staten Island, which at the time employed about 5,300 people.

Although the documents were filed in court papers by a lawyer representing Amazon, they cemented the position of current and former Amazon employees who criticized the enormous pressure to complete tasks as accurately and quickly as the company requires.

For aggrieved Amazon workers, these problems are part of the reason that fuels union efforts across the country.

In March, Amazon’s Staten Island warehouse voted to become the company’s first organized warehouse in the United States.

In response to the company’s work ethic, Amazon said its goals are “fair and based on what the majority of the team is actually accomplishing.”

“We give a lot of feedback to employees throughout the year to help them succeed and make sure they understand expectations,” Amazon said, adding that the company gives employees more praise to workers than criticism.

Amazon acknowledged that the disciplinary action did not reflect its current policies correctly, and in a June 2021 blog post, the company claimed that it had begun calculating the “time off tasks” of workers, also known as periods of inactivity over an extended period of time, before engaging with employees.

The sources for this piece include an article in Reuters.

Top Stories

Related Articles

January 16, 2026 OpenAI could run out of money within the next 18 months. That prediction, issued by Sebastian Mallaby, more...

January 15, 2026 After a year of growing protests over power bills, water use and unmet job promises, Microsoft on more...

January 14, 2026 Anthropic says that more than 90 per cent of the software powering new versions of Claude is more...

January 14, 2026 Lenovo is repositioning itself for a world where enterprise customers no longer want to be locked into more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn