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Las Vegas Amazon facilities under multiple state investigations amid employee COVID-19 illnesses

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Amazon operates several large warehouses which are scattered across the Las Vegas valley
Amazon operates several large warehouses which are scattered across the Las Vegas valley
Amazon operates several large warehouses which are scattered across the Las Vegas valley
Posted at 7:04 PM, Jul 27, 2020
and last updated 2020-07-28 08:48:52-04

LAS VEGAS (KTNV) — Internet juggernaut Amazon is flourishing during the COVID-19 pandemic as people turn to online shopping for supplies, but Nevada authorities are investigating the company after insiders say employees are getting sick and management is slow with revealing details.

In a massive, 2.4 million square foot facility near Sloan and Tropical Parkway in Las Vegas, hundreds of Amazon employees file in and help the behemoth internet company deliver everything from above ground swimming pools to toothbrushes.

In a public relations video release, Amazon touted the steps the company is taking to combat the spread of COVID-19.

The precautions include employee temperature checks, mandatory mask-wearing, routine building cleaning, and social distancing for employees.

Several Amazon employees tell 13 Investigates they are raising concerns about their safety.

"Some people aren't even following [those precautions] and furthermore, in the break room, there's a lot of people and it's hard for us not to come into contact with each other because we are right next to each other," said one insider who spoke on a condition of anonymity.

The same insider fears retaliation for revealing details.

She believes the company, which brought in about 280 billion dollars in 2019, has been slow to reveal new cases of COVID-19 among Amazon employees.

"We were concerned already because we are in a warehouse and there are so many people and we don't know where [the new cases] are coming from or who has [COVID-19,] explained the insider.

The trouble started in March when word began to spread among employees of possible illness.

At the time, the company allowed for unlimited, unpaid time off for employees.

The insider says management otherwise downplayed the presence of the illness among employees.

"Pretty much don't worry about it and they told us it wasn't in our warehouse, it was in another, and it's all just a rumor," said the insider.

But as weeks went by the company acknowledged cases among employees.

An Amazon spokesperson confirmed a case at a "North Las Vegas facility" on April 24th.

The company operates several large warehouses scattered around Southern Nevada and insiders say concerns spread even more among employees about the exact location of the confirmed case.

13 Investigates obtained an internal email that revealed the company's public relations team deemed local news reports about the situation as 'inaccurate' adding the positive case was at a facility internally dubbed "LAS 2" and at the time, no reported cases at the facility named "LAS 7."

The email instructed employees to disregard news stories and management would 'hopefully report new cases before it hits the news.'

"When we had the second confirmed case, there was one person in management, I'm not sure of his position, but they had made a comment that 'well, by now you all should be immune to it, if you've been exposed to it, so you have nothing to worry about," said the insider.

RELATED: Amazon seeks to hire 100,000 to keep up with surge in orders

The situation went downhill according to the insider.

13 Investigates obtained more internal communications sent on May 5 which revealed an employee at LAS 7 tested positive for COVID-19 on April 30.

The email revealed the employee was present at the facility for several weeks prior to testing positive.

The company told employees the facility was deep cleaned in accordance with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines.

"It's hard to say you are sanitizing the place, which is not sanitized, by using it every day, the whole time we're there," said the insider.

"Close it down for two days since you hired so many people or allow those whoa re sick not to feel threatened with their jobs if they need to take off," said the insider.

The insider says the company eliminated the unlimited time off for employees despite a rise in the number of reported cases among Amazon employees

Internal communication revealed new reported cases at LAS 7 on:

  • May 11
  • May 13
  • May 15
  • May 18
  • May 22
  • June 1
  • June 5
  • June 10
  • June 15
  • June 24
  • July 15 (multiple individuals)
  • July 18 (multiple individuals)
  • July 21 (multiple individuals)

The communication to employees indicated the company was unable to reveal who had tested positive, citing privacy concerns.

"We work very hard for these people," said the insider.

"We go above and beyond, and some people I see, they work many, many, many hours just to help those in our community," added the insider.

As concerned employees reached out to 13 Action News, KTNV reached out, repeatedly to Amazon.

Amazon's public relations representatives released generic statements that did not include specific locations or confirmed cases.

We are supporting the individuals who are recovering. Our top concern is ensuring the health and safety of our employees, and we invested approximately $4 billion from April to June on COVID-related initiatives to get products to customers and keep employees safe. This includes spending more than $800 million in the first half of the year on COVID-19 safety measures, with investments in personal protective equipment, enhanced cleaning of our facilities, less efficient process paths that better allow for effective social distancing, higher wages for hourly teams, and developing our own COVID-19 testing capabilities.
Lisa Guinn

13 Investigates asked about Nevada OSHA authorities about coronavirus complaints against Amazon.

State authorities revealed there are multiple, active investigations including two at the "LAS 7" warehouse, nine at the "LAS 2" warehouse, and additional complaints at other facilities in the Las Vegas valley.

State authorities could not reveal details about the cases citing the on-going nature of the investigations.

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