Amazon Workers Protest ‘Return to Office’ By Walking Out

Amazon Boxes

There is no doubt that the global pandemic has forever altered how companies do business. Over the course of a few days, seemingly everything shifted from in-person meetings to once office-bound employees working from home. Many businesses realized that employees could actually be more productive, and even though the pandemic (for all intents and purposes) is over, they continue with remote working allowances. However, some companies, such as Amazon, are recalling their staff, sparking mass walkouts in protest.

Tip: Which Amazon Fire TV Stick should you buy?

Protesting Protocol

Globally, many Amazon workers completed their daily tasks from home over the last two years. That started to change in February this year, when CEO Andy Jassy sent out a note to employees about plans to “go back to being in the office together the majority of the time” from May 1, 2023.

A month after being forced to return to the office, almost 2,000 workers walked out in protest yesterday. Organized by the group called Amazon Employees for Climate Justice, it claims that employees weren’t consulted on the plans for returning to the office, which also negatively impacts the environment.

Amazon Box
Image source: Unsplash

“Today looks like it might be the start of a new chapter in Amazon’s history, when tech workers coming out of the pandemic stood up and said, “We still want a say in this company and the direction of this company,” Eliza Pan, founder of Amazon Employees for Climate Justice told Associated Press. Almost 20,000 workers have signed a petition asking the tech giant to reconsider the return-to-office mandate.

Some of the group’s complaints stem from massive Amazon layoffs, with some estimates pegging it at 27,000 since November. Amazon employees from Ireland, South Africa, China, Germany, Poland, Brazil, Canada, and Spain joined the protest in solidarity with their American counterparts.

Good to know: You might be able to catch Amazon Originals on other streaming platforms soon.

Image credit: Unsplash

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Our latest tutorials delivered straight to your inbox

Charlie Fripp Avatar

Read next

When the SS Great Eastern laid the first working transatlantic telegraph cable in 1866, a message that had taken ten days by steamship suddenly crossed the ocean in minutes, and the financial markets of London and New York were forced, within a single trading week, to invent the modern concept of synchronised global price.
The Big Ear telescope was scanning at 1420.4056 megahertz on the night of 15 August 1977, the exact frequency at which hydrogen atoms vibrate across the universe, because Giuseppe Cocconi and Philip Morrison had argued years earlier that any species trying to be found would broadcast on that channel — and then, for 72 seconds, something did.
In 2016, archaeologists dated two rings of snapped stalagmites in France’s Bruniquel Cave to 176,500 years ago, evidence that Neanderthals had walked 336 metres into darkness with fire and built architecture deep underground long before modern humans reached Europe
Otto von Bismarck was 74 when Germany adopted the world’s first national old-age social insurance program in 1889, setting the pension age at 70 after years of fighting socialists with bans, laws, and a promise few workers would live long enough to use
When cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov stepped out of his Soyuz capsule in March 1995 after 437 consecutive days aboard Mir, doctors recorded him at several centimetres above his pre-flight height, and his spine had become so unaccustomed to gravity that the recovery team carried him to a chair rather than risk the compression of letting him walk.
When Bell Labs engineer Karl Jansky pointed a rotating antenna at the sky in 1932 looking for sources of transatlantic radio static, he kept picking up a faint hiss that peaked every 23 hours and 56 minutes, and he eventually realized he had become the first human to hear the center of the Milky Way.
When Harvard astronomer Cecilia Payne submitted her 1925 doctoral thesis arguing that the Sun was made almost entirely of hydrogen, the field’s senior figure Henry Norris Russell talked her into adding a line calling the result ‘almost certainly not real,’ and then published the same conclusion himself four years later to widespread acclaim.
When seismic waves from the Chicxulub impact reached what is now North Dakota roughly ten minutes after the asteroid struck, they appear to have triggered a ten-metre standing wave in an inland river that flung fish onto the bank and buried them under glass beads still falling from the sky.