Amazon delivery stations are being outfitted with robots across the country, leading to fewer workers and speedup for the workers that remain. Workers have reacted with defiance at the delivery station where I work.

Amazon fulfillment centers, where items are packaged up, have been gradually automating, but until now, delivery stations were mostly operated by human labor. Now, entire systems are being retrofitted or entirely removed “in the name of safety” and “for the good of employees.” But automation means workers will be laid off, shifted into new positions, or forced to transfer.

I work at the New York delivery station DBK4, in Maspeth, Queens, and it’s a window into this future. Smack in the middle of New York’s largest borough, DBK4 processes 60,000 to 100,000 packages daily, depending on the season. It employs 200 to 500 people inside the warehouse, plus up to 1,000 drivers.

Amazon has recently automated 80 percent of the conveyor belts in the facility with a new type of technology called ADTA (Auto Divert to Aisle). Before automation, the job was done in two parts; a belt brought packages from the loading dock and ‘pickers’ standing along its length picked up the packages. The pickers put packages onto racks corresponding to neighborhoods. A second worker, known as a stower, often working multiple aisles, then put those packages into bags bound for specific neighborhood blocks.

  • thejoker954@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    It’s such a joke. Amazon is so desperate for automation, but is too stupidly arrogant to realize the tech really isn’t there yet.

    I work at a amazon facility with robots and management does everything in their power to keep me away from them because I can outwork the bots without breaking a sweat.

    • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pub
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      16 hours ago

      but is too stupidly arrogant to realize the tech really isn’t there yet.

      Just use AI lol

      I laugh, but that’ll probably come next …

    • ILoveUnions@lemmy.world
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      18 hours ago

      Doesn’t matter if they’re slower. They aren’t paid by the hour. They got no need to sleep. That’s why we need to organize and fight back, while we still can

      • thejoker954@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        The amount of times the shit breaks down combined with the slower speeds means it doesn’t really matter if they work 24/7 right now.

        Yes, robots are coming, but amazon has been acting like they will be here tomorrow since it’s inception.

        The reality is robots that cost less than people that at least do comparable work in the same time frame is still a decade or 2 away optimistically.

        Amazon trying to force it doesn’t change that.

        Amazon is to robots what meta is to vr. Dumping tons of money trying to force the ‘future’ today.