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Roundup: Amazon plans to hire 100,000 new employees in US and Canada

Roundup: Amazon plans to hire 100,000 new employees in US and Canada

Roundup: Amazon plans to hire 100,000 new employees in US and Canada

Amazon.com Inc., No. 1 in the 2020 Digital Commerce 360 Top 1000, is hiring 100,000 full and part-time employees across the U.S. and Canada, offering starting wages of at least $15 an hour, the latest announcement in the Seattle-based ecommerce giant’s hiring spree.

The new jobs include benefits and sign-on bonuses of as much as $1,000 in select cities and access to training programs, the company said in a statement on Monday. This is in addition to the 33,000 corporate and technology employees the Seattle-based ecommerce giant announced last week, it said.

Amazon also plans to open 100 new operations buildings in September across fulfillment centers, delivery stations, sorting centers and other sites, the company said in the statement.

Amazon has been adding jobs globally as its business and market valuation have soared, increasing numbers of full and part-time employees by about 10% to 876,800 in the first six months of 2020, according to its July financial report. Earlier this month, the company announced plans to add 7,000 permanent workers in the U.K. and has made similar announcements in Ireland and South Africa.

Its shares have surged almost 70% this year, lifting its market value to $1.56 trillion, as the company’s online shopping services became vital to many households under lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Still, the company has attracted criticism for how it’s treated workers. The company posted—and then abruptly deleted—a position for an analyst to research “labor organizing threats against the company” calling it “inaccurate.” However, labor activists said the listing suggests Amazon is trying to prevent workers from collective bargaining, which drew attention earlier in the year after some employees protested conditions in warehouses that they said put them at risk of catching the coronavirus.

Amazon said in July it had spent $4 billion in the second quarter on COVID-19-related initiatives to keep employees safe and provide them with additional compensation. Founder and CEO Jeff Bezos is the world’s wealthiest person, with a net worth of about $184 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

Amazon to hire 7,000 people in UK

Amazon.com also plans to hire an additional 7,000 people for permanent jobs in the U.K. this year, increasing its workforce to more than 40,000 to deal with a surge in demand for online shopping.

The company has already added 3,000 jobs to its U.K fulfillment centers, sort centers and delivery stations, and the additional roles will be in its corporate offices and two new fulfillment centers opening in the North East and the Midlands in the autumn of this year, Amazon said in a statement on Thursday.

Amazon is looking for engineers, human resources and IT professionals, as well as finance, health and safety professionals, and packing and shipment teams. In addition, the company said it was creating about 20,000 new seasonal positions in the U.K. across three pop-up facility centers for the holidays.

The U.K., like many other countries, is struggling to find ways to protect workers after the COVID-19 pandemic forced shops and restaurants to shut. The government is under pressure to extend a furlough program that’s helping to pay wages at about 10 million jobs in the U.K. and is due to wind down next month. Business Secretary Alok Sharma called Amazon’s move “hugely encouraging.” The company also announced plans to create 3,500 new tech and corporate jobs in U.S. cities last month.

Amazon said in Thursday’s statement that it provides some of the “most advanced workplaces of their kind in the world,” with systems to ensure the wellbeing and safety of all employees. Workers will be offered benefits including private medical insurance, life assurance, income protection, subsidized meals and an employee discount, as well as a company pension plan.

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