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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHe was part of Amazon's coronavirus hiring spree. Two weeks later he was dead.
When Harry Sentoso got called back to work at an Amazon delivery center in Irvine in late March, he was excited.
He had been working in Amazon warehouses on and off for two years, always hoping to get a full-time position but always laid off after seasonal demand died down. Just a few weeks earlier, at the beginning of March, his bosses had told him they didnt need him anymore. He had spent most of the month cooped up at home in Walnut, looking for other work.
Sentoso saw the warehouse job as a last chance to earn some cash before settling down to retirement. A small business he had started with a friend a few years earlier selling forklift tires hadnt taken off, and he didnt want to touch his savings if he didnt have to. He had applied to dozens of jobs in recent years, but Amazon was the best the 63-year-old could find.
Before dawn on March 29, he left home in his Honda Civic, radio tuned to classic rock, and made the drive down to Orange County to work the early morning shift hauling and sorting packages before they went out to customers homes.
https://www.latimes.com/business/technology/story/2020-05-27/la-fi-tn-amazon-worker-dead-hiring-wave
ellie
(6,929 posts)to read.
sdfernando
(4,935 posts)The company I work for has a facility in Irvine, not far off Main street, and just a bit away from John Wayne (ugh!) Airport. I see the Amazon trucks constantly going in and out of the parking lot to the back of the business park. Our facility is in the front and shares the access road. Luckily I don't have to go there much but kinda sobering knowing this is so close.
RIP Mr. Sentoso
uponit7771
(90,335 posts)... what OSHA is going to say to ignore what Amazon is doing