Amazon workers won’t get paid for Covid leave anymore

Amazon workers won’t get paid for Covid leave anymore


A worker sorts out parcels in the outbound dock at Amazon fulfillment center in Eastvale, California on Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2021.

Watchara Phomicinda | MediaNews Group | The Riverside Press-Enterprise via Getty Images

Amazon is cutting paid time off for front-line U.S. workers who test positive for Covid-19, effective Monday.

All U.S.-based Amazon workers who test positive for Covid-19 will now get up to five days of excused, unpaid leave, the company told workers in a notice sent Saturday. A spokesperson told CNBC workers are still able to use their sick time off if needed.

In Saturday’s notice, Amazon added that workers waiting for Covid test results will no longer have time off excused since rapid tests are now widely available.

The e-commerce giant has slowly pulled back its Covid policies as vaccines have become more widely available and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention changed its guidance. The company initially offered up to two weeks of paid time off for any employees diagnosed with Covid-19 or placed into quarantine. In January, the company reduced paid leave time to one week, or up to 40 hours.

As part of the pullback, Amazon will stop sending site-wide notifications of positive cases in its facilities, unless required by law. The company will also end incentivizing vaccination efforts, it said.

“The sustained easing of the pandemic, ongoing availability of COVID-19 vaccines and treatments, and updated guidance from public health authorities, all signal we can continue to safely adjust to our pre-COVID policies,” the company said in the notice.

The decision will likely spark a backlash from pro-union workers who are arguing for better working conditions and improved benefits at its warehouses. The move comes a day after an Amazon warehouse on New York’s Staten Island closed its union drive. The National Labor Relations Board will begin counting ballots on May 2.

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.



Source

Wikipedia parent partners with Amazon, Meta, Perplexity on AI access
Technology

Wikipedia parent partners with Amazon, Meta, Perplexity on AI access

Riccardo Milani | Afp | Getty Images Wikimedia announced new deals with several artificial intelligence companies in a blog post on Thursday, including Amazon, Meta and Perplexity, as part of the company’s 25th anniversary. Through the new partnerships under Wikimedia Enterprise, companies will pay Wikipedia to use its data to help develop and train AI […]

Read More
Cloudflare acquires AI data marketplace Human Native
Technology

Cloudflare acquires AI data marketplace Human Native

A logo of CLOUDFLARE sits outside the company’s house on the opening day of the 55th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, January 20, 2025. Yves Herman | Reuters Cloudflare is acquiring artificial intelligence data marketplace Human Native, the company said Thursday, as it expands its push to develop transactions […]

Read More
AI startup Replit launches feature to vibe code mobile apps
Technology

AI startup Replit launches feature to vibe code mobile apps

Thomas Fuller | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images AI coding startup Replit is now letting users create and publish mobile apps for Apple devices using only natural language prompts, the latest evolution in so-called vibe-coding. The Mobile Apps on Replit feature, introduced on Thursday, allows creators and small business owners to go from […]

Read More