Amazon employees who called out its data centre expansion are under investigation, here is why
Amazon is reportedly investigating several employees who publicly criticised the company's growing investment in artificial intelligence data centres and called for tighter regulation of such
Amazon is reportedly investigating several employees who publicly criticised the company's growing investment in artificial intelligence data centres and called for tighter regulation of such projects in Seattle. The dispute emerged earlier this month after a group of Amazon employees testified before the Seattle City Council, raising concerns about the rapid expansion of AI infrastructure and its impact on jobs, local communities and the environment. Now, according to a new complaint filed with the Seattle Office for Civil Rights, some of those employees allege that Amazon launched an internal investigation into their actions following their public testimony. Read Full Story According to a report by CNBC, the complaint claims that three Amazon employees were separately called into Zoom meetings with a human resources representative after speaking at public hearings. During those meetings, they were informed that Amazon was investigating concerns related to their testimony.
The complaint further alleges that the employees were told the inquiry could lead to disciplinary action and, in at least one case, that the potential consequences could extend to termination. The employees also noted that they felt "intimidated and uncertain in their future employment" following the meetings. โThey also learned that Amazon was monitoring their political advocacy before the Seattle City Council and was seeking to identify additional employees who had engaged in political activities,โ notes the complaint. What is the controversy The controversy comes as Seattle is planning around how to regulate the growing number of AI data-centre projects proposed around the city. On June 9, the City Council unanimously approved a one-year moratorium on new large-scale data centres, giving officials time to study their impact and develop new regulations. The decision followed public opposition to plans for several large data-centre complexes in and around Seattle.
At the hearings leading up to the vote, Amazon employees argued that Big Tech companies are racing to build AI infrastructure at an unprecedented pace. Patrick Schloesser, a software engineer at Amazon Web Services, pointed to Amazon's reported $200 billion capital spending plans for 2026, much of which is expected to go towards AI infrastructure and data centres. "It's been reported that this year, Amazon is spending $200 billion on capital, with most of it going to data centres and AI," Schloesser said during the hearing. Referring to recent job cuts across the company, he added: "What that tells me is that Big Tech is desperate to build as much compute capacity as it can, as fast as it can." Another Amazon employee, senior software engineer Liesl Wigand, even urged local governments to take a stronger role in overseeing data-centre development. "Local governments, in collaboration with community stakeholders, should be setting the terms for data centre buildout," she said.
