
A top Amazon software engineer said he resigned last week in response to the e-commerce giantโs termination of workers who raised concerns about conditions in its warehouses amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Tim Bray, who reportedly worked in Vancouver as a vice president and senior engineer for the companyโs Amazon Web Services cloud division, wrote in a blog post that remaining at the company would mean effectively โsigning off on actions I despised.โ
โSo I resigned,โ Bray wrote.
As consumers heeded government directives to stay home and practice social distancing in recent weeks, Amazon faced a surge in demand for essential products that could be delivered to shoppersโ doorsteps. But the company also came under fire for the working conditions at its massive distribution centers during a viral outbreak.
A worker who organized a protest at Amazonโs Staten Island facility was fired in late March, and two vocal critics of the companyโs coronavirus response and climate policies were fired in mid-April. Bray pointed to three other terminations, as well as threats made months earlier to organizers of an employee group that sought to influence the companyโs environmental practices.
Amazon has said it has โtaken extreme measures to keep people safeโ and argued the fired workers had violated company policies.
Bray, however, wrote that โit was clear to any reasonable observer that they were turfed for whistleblowing.โ
He noted he was โpretty blueโ over his decision, which he argued would cost him more than $1 million in salary and stock, โnot to mention the best job Iโve ever had.โ But he also said heโs โbreathing more freelyโ after resigning.
โAt the end of the day, the big problem isnโt the specifics of COVID-19 response,โ Bray wrote. โItโs that Amazon treats the humans in the warehouses as fungible units of pick-and-pack potential. Only thatโs not just Amazon, itโs how 21st century capitalism is done.โ
Amazon did not comment on Brayโs resignation, according to Bloomberg.