Leaked messages show Amazon will force a ‘voluntary resignation’ on employees failing to relocate near their team ‘hubs’::undefined

137 points

Sounds like the solution is to say, “Yes,” then never show up onsite. Make them fire you, so you’re entitled to unemployment benefits and any severance.

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101 points

You don’t even have to say yes. Just refuse to relocate it, and when they say you have to resign, just don’t.

But if 50% resign because they think they have to, that’s 50% less unemployment Amazon has to pay

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62 points

No. The solution is to call their bullshitnout.

A company can’t hire you to work from one location (regardless if it’s WFH or not,) and then unilaterally decide to have you relocate.

“You can apply internally” or anything else that is a new contract doesn’t matter. They’re changing the terms of employment, and they can’t do that unilaterally.

The choices are to agree with their new terms, accept the “out” of taking another position in your area, or reject them. They can use what ever semantics they want, but it’s still a layoff.

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26 points
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A company can’t hire you to work from one location (regardless if it’s WFH or not,) and then unilaterally decide to have you relocate.

In the use US, with at-will employment, they absolutely can. Terminating someone for not relocating is absolutely legal. And, barring contract or law to the contrary, severance is not required.

This state of things are what happens when you remove unions from the workforce, and why companies like Amazon absolutely flip their shit when union talk starts.

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19 points

Well, yes. But then they trigger unemployment. The can’t here is that they’re trying to avoid that.

In the us, you have to pay unemployment if they’re not terminated for cause. And refusing to locate is not an “acceptable” cause, so it comes to be an at-will termination (ie “we’re firing you because we can.”)

Also, the jobs they’re talking about usually come with severance packages. It’s not the warehouse gig workers

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0 points

Did you not see the end of their post?

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7 points
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36 points

You know how a lot of job applications say something like “Have you ever been fired?”. That is a pretty strong filter.

Constructive dismissal isn’t the same thing as being fired for cause, regardless of whether Amazon tries to lie about it.

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16 points
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You just say “no. And then explain the actual situation in the interview.

And no engineering job I’ve ever applied for has had me fill out an “application”. That’s not a thing. And if some place weirdly has it, then send your resume somewhere else.

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6 points

You just say “no. And then explain the actual situation in the interview.

Exactly this. theres no reason to shoot yourself in the foot for something you had no control over

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2 points

And no engineering job I’ve ever applied for has had me fill out an “application”. That’s not a thing. And if some place weirdly has it, then send your resume somewhere else.

You mean you’ve never filled out one of those web forms asking like how many years of experience you have with X technology, what is your expected salary, when is your earliest start date, etc? When job hunting earlier this year I’ve found those to be incredibly common.

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7 points

Have you ever been fired?

Lie. They lie to you, you lie to them. They’re not the government. The worst they can do is fire you if they ever found out, which they won’t.

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-9 points

That’s job abandonment and would disqualify from unemployment benefits.

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86 points

Voluntary resignation = termination. You should still qualify for unemployment.

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16 points

Forced voluntary resignation no less. Definitely sounds like termination to me.

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13 points
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The specific term, for anyone wondering (or who may be facing this) is “constructive dismissal”. If your employer significantly changes the terms of employment (hours, location, job duties, etc) to make you quit, it is legally viewed similar to firing.

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69 points

I WFH permanantly , for a company named after a river. They can’t do that to me , why? Because I live in Europe were we have unions and collective bargaining. That’s the only difference , and it makes a big difference.

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16 points

We really need a remote workers union in the US

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2 points
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1 point

Is there a Canadian (or ideally an international) org similar to this? Remote work is global. I’ve worked with two fully remote companies in the past three years and my colleages are literally everywhere. I’ve seen mass layoffs personally, followed by onboarding thousands of contractors in the Philippines and Southeast Asia. We all know remote workers in less developed regions are training the AI being deployed. and moderating our content. Etc etc.

Would love to see this labor movement go global. Remote work is connected and networked, inherently. I don’t know if I’ll see a global workers movement in my lifetime but I fucking hope I do (I’m pretty old).

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11 points
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9 points
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5 points

You say this but there’s a reason our tech salaries are way way higher than most other countries.

An Amazon tech worker on average will make 250 to 450k total comp a year.

Anyone working for these big companies in the engineering fields is easily making 300k a year and up after rsu. Those salaries dont exist in Europe. Some companies offer close in the UK etc but… That’s why people stay in the us.

Also if we don’t like our salary we just go hop to another place for a raise.

The us sucks for people without an in demand skill like basic laborers or unskilled workers. It’s amazing for folks in a market with demand.

(Source I hire and work in both regions. And have looked for ways to move to the eu region.)

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4 points
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I honestly enjoy your contribution. Perfectly showcases the disregard for people who are judged to not contribute enough to be deserving of a humane quality of living despite performing tasks that need to be done.

A very american look on people.

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3 points

There is no such thing as an unskilled worker. All jobs require skill that you learn before or during the job. Most of these skills do not command high salaries but I prefer underpaid laborer or lower working class to unskilled.

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61 points

I understand the value of working in an office, but I wish our society would choose to pursue improving the quality of our lives instead of increasing productive capacity. It’s never enough. These companies always want more.

We can do our jobs just fine, even great, at home. But they want to squeeze everything out of their workers.

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45 points

It’s not about the benefits of going to an office. It’s all about corporate realestate. Companies and rich people have a lot of money invested in office buildings and they are all losing value.

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21 points

There are also huge swathes of middle managers who cannot justify the existence of their job if all the peasants are free to work from wherever. Who’s gonna judge you for being 3 minutes late and not in dress code as you sit and type?

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2 points

Middle managers have absolutely zero say in such kind of decisions. They often find out a day before everyone else to prepare to share the news to their reports.

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12 points

I think for a lot of engineers, their productivity would be much higher at home. In the office you have way more distractions and time wasters, like coworkers, physical meetings, etc. Even if employees at home are scrolling social media, they’re going to procrastinate in office too, just in a different way, whether that’s just sitting and doing nothing or going out for lunch on a really long break.

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7 points

Yeah this is the part I don’t get. We are always arguing about whether productivity is highest with wfh or wfo. But we never discuss what maximizes people’s happiness. Which seems more important to me, why are we doing any of this anyway? Capitalism I guess.

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3 points

I work at an NGO and you could argue that they are ‘one of the good ones’. They work us into the ground from the goodness in their hearts. The motivation at C-suite is that they want to get as much work done as possible because it seems important. If your job helps to save lives then you want to be really efficient. Profit companies have different goals but the motivation to improve efficiency remains.

Technology enables it. As productive as my company is today I know that we are well behind where we could be. Recent developments in AI have set a brand new horizon to reach towards. These forces aren’t going away anytime soon. It makes you want to move faster.

We need to incentivize companies to put more money into people. I think this is something that government has the power to do. There is definitely a way to make sure a company hires two people, pays them salary of two people, and they do the job of one person by working 25 hours a week.

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4 points

I understand the value of working in an office

I don’t, but I’m also a sysadmin. Offices are my hell.

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4 points

What I learned from some of my colleagues when we moved to WFH, is that some people want to get away from their kids and working from an office is a blessing for them.

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1 point

It’s never enough. These companies always want more.

The entire system is designed to demand more every year. If they don’t show year-over-year increases in revenue then stock investors dump the stocks, the company loses value, and it’s considered a failing company, even if the revenue and performance is already enough to sustain a billion people for a thousand years. Enough is not enough, the system demands more.

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58 points

Amazon started enforcing its so-called “return-to-hub” policy in recent weeks, according to an internal email and Slack messages obtained by Insider. Hubs are the central locations assigned to each individual team — employees will have to work out of those hubs instead of any office nearest to their current city.

Amazon assigned offices for most individual employees, but not the whole team. Some employees told Insider that made office work pointless because many still had to use video calls to connect with their teammates spread across the country.

Why does Amazon even bother to do this? Why force their employees back to office if they’ll going to work remotely with their distributed team anyway? Why not save money on office space by letting those employees to work from their home?

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33 points
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Why not save money on office space by letting those employees to work from their home?

Because they can’t control them at home.

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12 points

I’ve never felt more under control by the company I worked for than when my team was all on a Slack channel even though we were all WFH.

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2 points

Just curious, how does being in a Slack channel feel more like being controlled than being in an office?

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25 points

They bought a ton of real estate over the years.

Then places like Seattle were literally falling a part without the added cash cow of commuters stuck in bumper to bumper traffic for 16 hours of a workday.

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4 points

And that commercial real estate is the backing for a LOT of corporate debt. I imagine they’re afraid of the collateral against which that debt was borrowed collapsing in value.

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2 points

Why is that a concern for amazon?

They already know wfh is as good or even better for productivity. This doesn’t see like a move in their best interest

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8 points

My guess is taxes.

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5 points
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3 points

My employer is trying to do this too and using the same logic. I’ll just have to report to an office to video chat my team. Luckily my boss and I are in agreement and until they somehow force both of us, I won’t be doing it. I will, however, be updating my resume.

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1 point

You’re a 1 on a sheet, if you stand in the way of resource allocation then they can find another 1. Welcome to the delightful world of big business.

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