Labour board says Amazon illegally fired outspoken workers

Labour board says Amazon illegally fired outspoken workers

AgenciesUpdated: Tuesday, April 06, 2021, 07:59 AM IST
article-image

The National Labour Relations Board has found that two outspoken Amazon workers were illegally fired last year.

Both employees, Emily Cunningham and Maren Costa, worked at Amazon offices in Seattle and publicly criticised the company, pushing it to do more to reduce its impact on climate change and to better protect warehouse workers from the coronavirus.

Cunningham shared with The Associated Press an email from the NLRB, which said it found that Amazon violated the rights of the two workers. The government agency also confirmed on Monday that it found merit in the case. The news was first reported by The New York Times.

In a statement, Amazon said it fired the employees for repeatedly violating internal policies, not because they talked publicly about working conditions or sustainability.

"We support every employee's right to criticize their employer's working conditions, but that does not come with blanket immunity against our internal policies, all of which are lawful," the Seattle-based company said.

Cunningham said the ruling proves that they were on the right side of history.

"Amazon tried to silence us," said Cunningham. "It didn't work." Because of the ruling, Amazon could be forced to offer Cunningham and Costa their jobs back, pay them back pay and reimburse them for expenses related to losing their jobs.

Cunningham and Costa, who were user-experience designers at Amazon, were the two most prominent voices among a group of workers who wanted the company, which has a giant carbon footprint, to take more steps to combat climate change and to stop doing business with oil and gas companies. They held protests and spoke to the media about their concerns.

About a year ago, Cunningham and Costa planned a call between Amazon warehouse and office workers to talk about unsafe conditions in the e-commerce giant's warehouses. Before it could happen, Amazon fired both women. An Amazon executive quit in protest, saying he couldn't stand by as whistleblowers were silenced.

Amazon's treatment of workers has been in the spotlight recently. Votes are currently being counted to determine whether workers at an Alabama warehouse want to join a union. Organizers there want Amazon to pay workers more, give them more break time and to be treated with respect.

Last year, Amazon also fired Christian Smalls, who led a walkout at a New York warehouse, hoping to get the company to better protect workers against the coronavirus. Amazon said it fired him for breaking social distancing rules. The New York attorney general, which is suing Amazon for not protecting workers enough during the pandemic, alleges in her lawsuit that the firing was meant to silence other workers from making health and safety complaints. (

RECENT STORIES

World Economic Forum 2026 Davos: Maharashtra Emerges As ‘Gateway Of India’ For Global...
World Economic Forum 2026 Davos: Maharashtra Emerges As ‘Gateway Of India’ For Global...
FLY91 Launches Daily Kochi–Agatti Flights, Announces Expansion To 7 New Regional Stations
FLY91 Launches Daily Kochi–Agatti Flights, Announces Expansion To 7 New Regional Stations
Gold Breaches ₹1.5 Lakh Per 10 Grams Mark; Silver Surges To Record ₹3.23 Lakh Per Kg
Gold Breaches ₹1.5 Lakh Per 10 Grams Mark; Silver Surges To Record ₹3.23 Lakh Per Kg
Investors’ Wealth Erodes By ₹9.86 Lakh Crore As Stock Markets Tumble
Investors’ Wealth Erodes By ₹9.86 Lakh Crore As Stock Markets Tumble
Canada–China Trade Deal Ill-Timed And One-Sided Amid Unresolved Disputes: Report
Canada–China Trade Deal Ill-Timed And One-Sided Amid Unresolved Disputes: Report