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[return to "Amazon, Instacart delivery workers strike for coronavirus protection and pay"]
1. elicas+z2[view] [source] 2020-03-30 17:20:39
>>onewho+(OP)
Here are their demands: https://medium.com/@GigWorkersCollective/instacart-emergency...

- Safety precautions at no cost to workers — PPE (at minimum hand sanitizer, disinfectant wipes/sprays and soap).

- Hazard pay — an extra $5 per order and defaulting the in-app tip amount to at least 10% of the order total.

- An extension and expansion of pay for workers impacted by COVID-19 — anyone who has a doctor’s note for either a preexisting condition that’s a known risk factor or requiring a self-quarantine.

- The deadline to qualify for these benefits must be extended beyond April 8th.

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2. legits+0b[view] [source] 2020-03-30 18:05:58
>>elicas+z2
> An extension and expansion of pay for workers impacted by COVID-19 — anyone who has a doctor’s note for either a preexisting condition that’s a known risk factor or requiring a self-quarantine.

This should be done by the government. It feels unfair to pass this on to consumers, but there should be some sort of "voluntary unemployment" for people with pre-existing conditions right now.

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3. DevKoa+tc[view] [source] 2020-03-30 18:14:53
>>legits+0b
How is it unfair to demand that a business puts some effort in keeping their workforce healthy?

These workers were forced to work during quarantine because the government deemed Amazon an essential business. As a result, Amazon stock's price relative gain to the S&P 500 tumble during this crisis is ~80%, that's almost a doubling of the stock valuation due to the uninterrupted business that these delivery workers made possible.

I repeat: AWS basically doubled their relative stock valuation, withstood one of the biggest stock market tumbles in all history, because their lowest level employees went to work at a point when everybody else stayed at home safe.

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4. legits+tl[view] [source] 2020-03-30 19:04:38
>>DevKoa+tc
What if that's 25% of their workforce? What if it's 50%? Is it up to them to validate the veracity of the doctors' notes? Does Amazon pay full salaries for people who aren't going to work for 18 months? Does Amazon basically create an entirely privatized welfare system?

It just seems to be well outside the scope of things a business should be trying to solve and into the realm of what we have a government for.

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