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Former Amazon warehouse medic says she was fired for medical leave, raising safety concerns

Paramedic Enesha Yurchak, who served as an onsite medical representative at an Amazon warehouse in Oregon, is suing the company after her firing in April

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An Amazon fulfillment center is shown in Romulus, Mich., April 1, 2020. A paramedic who used to work as an onsite medical representative at an Amazon warehouse in Salem, Ore. is suing the company, claiming she was fired for taking medical leave and speaking out about workplace safety.

AP Photo/Paul Sancya

Mike Rogoway
The Oregonian, Portland, Ore.

SALEM, Ore. — A former employee at Amazon’s Salem warehouse sued the online retailer Tuesday, alleging she was fired for taking medical leave following apparent coronavirus infection and for speaking out about workplace safety issues related to the outbreak.

Enesha Yurchak, 35, is a certified medical technician and paramedic, according to the complaint. She started work at Amazon’s Salem facility in 2018, serving as an onsite medical representative. The facility had about 1,000 employees before the outbreak and Amazon said last month it had added 100 to meet rising demand.

In her complaint, filed in Multnomah County Circuit Court, Yurchak alleges Amazon wasn’t appropriately cleaning safety harnesses employees wear while moving freight. She said Amazon’s procedures increased risk of coronavirus exposure, but Yurchak alleged her supervisor insisted she follow those procedures and wash the harnesses anyway.

Separately, Yurchak said she had symptoms of COVID-19 beginning in early March. She was on leave from March 18 to April 14, according to the complaint. The litigation indicates Yurchak was unable to obtain testing but believes she was infected with the coronavirus.

Yurchak said her supervisor argued with her upon her return and she became ill afterwards, waking up the next morning with a fever and sore throat.

Later that next day, the complaint alleges Amazon fired her for “insubordination.” Yurchak seeks lost wages, attorney costs and unspecified “punitive damages.”

Amazon did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment on the litigation.

The Seattle-based online retailer has continued shipping packages through the coronavirus outbreak and has attracted a number of complaints from workers who allege the company isn’t taking appropriate safety precautions.

On Monday, Amazon Vice President Tim Bray said he quit in protest of “a vein of toxicity running through the company culture” in its response to the coronavirus outbreak.

Amazon has taken steps to contain the outbreak within its workforce, though. The company said last week it has spent “hundreds of millions” of dollars to develop its own coronavirus testing capacity. Amazon’s Troutdale warehouse is among the first places the company is piloting that testing program.

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©2020 The Oregonian (Portland, Ore.)

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