Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Amazon workers are struggling to survive on low wages


Report: 10 Percent of Amazon’s Ohio Workforce on Food Stamps, 17 Percent NATIONWIDE


Slave wages, and working hours designed to prevent you from  getting unemployment, medical insurance, and other things, cops and firemen get BECAUSE THEY HAVE A UNION THAT IS IN BED WITH THE STATE. For Amazon and others, its starve to death.
Amazon ranks high on a list charting Ohio’s employers with the most workers and their family members on food stamps, with a new report estimating that more than 10 percent of its workforce in the state qualifies for the federal aid.
The progressive policy group Policy Matters Ohio stated, as of August, Amazon had 1,430 workers and family members on food stamps, which helps low-income people purchase food. It ranks 19th on a list of 50 large employers in the state, according to the group.
Since a typical beneficiary gets benefits for roughly two people, that means the online retail giant has about 700 workers on the program in Ohio, The Columbus Dispatch reports:
To be on the list, a company has to have a large number of workers in the state. In addition, that company has to have a significant number of workers who don’t make much money or maybe work part time.
Workers getting food stamps in essence becomes an additional taxpayer subsidy for the companies that pay low wages, said Zach Schiller, Policy Matters’ research director.
“We’ve appreciated having more employment, but maybe we should be focusing economic development dollars on good jobs. It’s pretty clear that a lot of these jobs are not good jobs,” he said. “That should raise a policy question for our public officials, and that’s why we think its worth pointing out.”
David Rutz
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