General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhen Amazon expands, these communities pay the price
Last year, with little warning, a new Amazon delivery station brought the rumble of semi-trailer trucks and delivery vans to Chicagos Gage Park neighborhood.
The warehouse, located within 1,500 feet of five schools, is in a residential area where more than half the people within a mile have low incomes and nearly 90% are Hispanic.
The neighborhood is one of hundreds across the US where Amazons dramatic expansion has set in motion huge commercial operations. Residents near the new warehouses say they face increased air pollution from trucks and vans, more dangerous streets for kids walking or biking and other quality-of-life issues such as clogged traffic and near-constant noise.
Like Gage Park, the majority of these neighborhoods are home to a greater number of residents of color and people with low-incomes than the typical neighborhood in the same urban area, according to a Consumer Reports (CR) investigation.
José Mendez, who has lived in Gage Park for 18 years, says his 5am commute now involves battling semis for space on a nearby residential street. His wife has called Amazon to complain, but the trucks still come past.
Uriel Estrada, a college student who lives with his family a few blocks from the warehouse, says having Amazon in the neighborhood isnt all bad packages arrive much faster than before. Still, he says, the noise and traffic are distracting. In my house, you can feel it shake because theres a bunch of trucks passing by, he says.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/dec/09/when-amazon-expands-these-communities-pay-the-price
inthewind21
(4,616 posts)Uriel Estrada, a college student who lives with his family a few blocks from the warehouse, says having Amazon in the neighborhood isnt all bad packages arrive much faster than before. Still, he says, the noise and traffic are distracting. In my house, you can feel it shake because theres a bunch of trucks passing by, he says.
MineralMan
(146,296 posts)So, that could be very good for that neighborhood.
They just opened up a new distribution center in my suburb of the Twin Cities. They are hiring there, too. It's right near another suburb, but one with few available jobs. I'm betting some people are working who weren't working, and Amazon pays pretty well.
That truck noise is the sound of a recovering economy. Jobs. Income.
Jilly_in_VA
(9,966 posts)Amazon took over the site of a defunct mall. It had no real close residential neighborhoods and is just off an interstate bypass, so it was a fortuitous site, really. Still, there were people who complained. ~SMDH~ I guess on the grounds that some people just don't like Amazon.