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Business Property

Amazon gives its Seattle workers options with 'satellite' offices

Some of its 50,000 strong workforce there could be relocated to new and smaller bases



Part of the Amazon campus in Seattle... The retail behemoth now wants to bring down the number of employees operating out of Seattle base. satellite offices outside of the city would be the option.
Image Credit: AP

Seattle: Amazon.com Inc. is offering Seattle-based employees a choice of smaller offices outside the city, suggesting the COVID-19 outbreak and a new local employers tax have pushed the e-commerce giant to consider alternatives to its hometown.

In a message to employees, Amazon asked which communities near Seattle - including Tacoma and Redmond, Washington - they'd prefer. The title on the message was "office workplace options".

Amazon, which reported a total global workforce of almost 877,000 as of June 30, has been expanding beyond Seattle for years. It is building a second major office centre in suburban Virginia near Washington and has satellite locations in cities including New York, Austin and Los Angeles.

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Testy relations with city

The company has threatened to focus employment growth outside Seattle due to a rocky relationship with city officials and new taxes imposed on big employers. The message suggests Amazon could significantly shrink its presence in its hometown, where it employs about 50,000 people in a mixture of offices it owns and leases.

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In 2019, it announced it would relocate its worldwide operations division, which oversees Amazon's shipping and logistics, to nearby Bellevue where it currently employs 3,000 people.

Preceding the pandemic

Even before the pandemic, Amazon considered building more satellite offices outside the city, according to a person familiar with the matter. The company plans to expand its Bellevue offices, which it has had since 2017.

Such locations are seen as an amenity for employees tired of commuting to Seattle and as a way to reduce the company's exposure to the city's taxes targeting big employers, said the person, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters.

Two years ago, Amazon helped defeat an effort in Seattle to raise money for homeless services and affordable housing by levying a per-employee tax on large businesses. The "head tax" would have raised about $47 million a year.

The political climate has since shifted against the company after Amazon's big spending on a Seattle City Council election backfired last year. In July, the council passed a new levy that will tax large businesses on employees who make at least $150,000 per year. The tax is expected to raise more than $200 million annually and cost Amazon even more than the earlier proposal.

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