(Today we have another guest post from Becky at http://www.interstellarorchard.com/. She is a young, female full-time RVer who has to work to support herself and last year she worked at Amazon.com in the CamperForce in their warehouses at the holidays. This is a blog she posted last year about how she got the job. Because there are so many of us who need work like this I asked her if I could repeat her post here. She graciously agreed and so here it is. Remember, all this information is for LAST YEARS season.)  
A few days ago I applied to work at an Amazon distribution center for the 2012 holiday season. I think most Vandwellers and RVers have heard about Amazon’s CamperForce before, but since one of my goals is to encourage more people to go full-timing (but think they can’t afford it) I decided to do a write up on what I found while I was researching the opportunity this past week. (Disclaimer: I work at Amazon right now, but none of this is official. This is just what I have learned from research, my time on the job, and from talking to others. It is truthful to the best of my knowledge, but any of it could change at any point, keep that in mind.)

WHAT IT IS:

There are three Amazon distribution centers in the US that hire RVers to work manual labor around the busy holiday season. The pay is better than just about any other work camping gig out there, and there is good reason for that.There are five advertised positions, all of which require standing on your feet for your entire shift. Some positions are more physically demanding than others, but every blog and first hand account I’ve read says that it is hard work.  Here are the position descriptions, as pulled from workamper.com’s page for AmazonWorkForce (http://www.workamper.com/featuredEmployersFolders/153589/):

  1. Receiving: As part of our receiving team, you will be receiving and checking inventory from our suppliers. You will need to be able to lift, bend, stoop and squat frequently.
  2. Stowing: You will walk 2-4 miles a day, and will lift, bend, stoop and squat frequently. Ability to read a hand-held scanner and climbing stairs up to 30% of the time is necessary. Our stowing team safely shelves the millions of items that come through each Amazon facility.
  3. Sortation: You might be using a hand-held reader to guide you in taking items from chutes and putting them into boxes, packaging items into a variety of shipping containers.
  4. Shipping: You could be standing scanning and packaging single items for shipment or palletizing boxes and loading trucks.
  5. Picking: You will walk 5-10 miles a day and will lift, bend, stoop and squat frequently. Ability to read a hand-held scanner and climbing stairs up to 30% of the time is necessary. Our picking team picks millions of items into totes and transfers the totes to a conveyor.

JOB REQUIREMENTS:
Besides being able to meet the physical demands of the job, you’ll need proof of graduation from high school or a copy of your GED. If you haven’t graduated from high school or gotten your GED, Amazon does have a program set up to help people achieve this. You can e-mail the CamperForce reps at the e-mail listed at the end of this article for more information. All applicants also need to pass a drug test.
Solo campers are as welcome as couples, but at least one person needs to work full-time hours. The second person may work part-time, or not be employed at Amazon at all. Hours are discussed more in a later section.
LOCATIONS:
There are three locations: Campbellsville, KY, Coffeyville, KS, and Fernley, NV. Here are the blurbs about the three locations, again pulled from Amazon’s info page:

  1. Campbellsville, KY: Campbellsville is located in the heart of Central Kentucky, nestled between the Cumberland Plateau and the Appalachian Mountains and offering the best of both regions. According to Amazon, there are 7 campgrounds available for Campbellsville workers for the 2012 season. The nearest is right across the street, the farthest is 16 miles out. First hand accounts say that the ones that are farther out tend to have more level sites and more space between sites. Most sites are 50 amp and full hook up, those without sewer will get a honey wagon service.
  2. Coffeyville, KS: which is located near the Verdigris River in southeast Kansas, about 75 miles north of Tulsa, OK, and 60 miles west of Joplin, MO.  According to Amazon, there are 7 campgrounds available for Coffeyville workers for the 2012 season. The nearest is right across the street, the farthest is 18(?) miles out. Most sites are 50 amp and full hook up, those without sewer will get a honey wagon service.
  3. Fernley, NV: Living in the Reno area, you have an opportunity to engage in a wide variety of activities and hobbies. According to Amazon, there are 4 campgrounds available for Fernley workers for the 2012 season. First hand accounts make it sound like on average they’re all farther away from the site than the other two locations. Most sites are 50 amp and full hook up, those without sewer will get a honey wagon service.

 
WEATHER:
I checked weather.com for climate information for the three sites, since I live in a three-season travel trailer and cold weather could make for a miserable experience. As you can see from the chart I made, below freezing temps can be expected overnight at all three sites particularly during the second half of the season, and there is a possibility of it getting really cold. According to first hand accounts snow does fall occasionally, but probably due to the record warm winter in many parts of the US last year, no one reported snow fall at any of the sites during employment (Campbellsville got about 2″ on the 24th of December). While Coffeyville is on average dryer than Campbellsville, there are reports that the campgrounds closer to the distribution center don’t drain well, and there have been issues with mud and flooding in the past.

HOURS AND PAY:

Traditionally, the period of employment is from the beginning of October, through December 23rd. Yes, you do get out before Christmas. Sometimes some people will get out a few days before December 23rd, but CamperForce representatives will tell you to expect to work through that date. A limited number of work campers will start before October, and new hires will be starting on a weekly basis all the way up through the middle of November, so whether you’re available starting in September or not until November you have options.

A full day is 10 workings hours. Work weeks are 4 days on, 3 days off (at least until peak season starts, then all bets seem to be off). Most shifts have all 3 days off in a row, but the ‘donut’ shift works Mon, Tues, Thurs, and Fri. Two 15 minute paid breaks and one 30 minute unpaid lunch are provided. There are two shifts: daytime and nighttime.

Wages are the same as they were last year:

  • Campbellsville: $9.90/hour, $10.50 per hour if working nights or weekends. From blogs and forums that I have read, it sounds like overtime becomes mandatory for those working Outbound jobs when the season picks up at the end of November, but remains optional for Inbound.
  • Coffeyville: $10.50/hour, $11.00 if working nights or weekends. All accounts that I have read for Coffeyville make it sound like overtime becomes mandatory for Inbound and Outbound when the season picks up, and is up to 10 hours per week.
  • Fernley: $11.50 per hour, $12.25 if working nights or weekends. Overtime was suppose to be mandatory for Inbound and Outbound, but it sounded like last year there were more people hired for the Fernley site than available hours, and a lot of people ended up not working the full 40 hours per week and overtime was scarce. That says nothing about how this year will go however.

BENEFITS:

  • All campground costs (electric, water, and honey wagon services where sewer hook ups aren’t provided) are billed directly to Amazon during your employment, from two days before your start date to one day after. It sounded like at Fernley last year folks staying at certain campgrounds had to pay their own electric bill, but Amazon’s page up at workamper.com does say “All campground costs” this year. If in doubt, ask them during the hiring process, but that would explain why Fernley workers make so much more per hour than the other two sites.
  • At all locations, you get a 10% discount on things ordered online, up to the first $1,000 spent. Which equates to a maximum of $100 off if you do the math.
  • There is a $0.50/hour bonus for the Fernley site for completing the season, and a $1.00/hour bonus for the Campbellsville and Coffeyville sites for completing the season. Reading between the lines here you can surmise that many people who start will not finish the season.
  • While not listed as a benefit, it sounds like some swag is handed out as part of the CamperForce experience. A lanyard and t-shirt seem like a given if you make it through the season, and there are reports of periodic small gift card handouts and the like when shifts meet their quota.
  • Meals on site are also occasionally provided by Amazon, the frequency again seems to vary widely. There is also a $50 referral bonus for every person/couple you refer to the CamperForce program who gets hired.

REALITY CHECK:

  • There are quotas to meet, both per individual and by group and shift. How strict your supervisors will be about meeting those quotas varies widely and seems to play a big part in how people rated their CamperForce experience.
  • You will be working alongside permanent Amazon employees, and people who were hired through other temp programs. In an ideal world all employees would treat each other with dignity and respect, but this is not an ideal world.
  • No cameras, and thereby phones and the like, are allowed on site. This is strictly enforced.
  • You must be not only punched in, but at your station by the start of your shift, or by the end of your lunch. This means that you actually need to arrive to work a good deal early to get to your station on time, and don’t have time during your half hour lunch to leave the premises.
  • You will be on your feet a lot. Every account I have read has considered a pair of high-quality tennis shoes to be a must, most also buy gel inserts for their shoes. You’re probably looking at $50 + for such a thing if you don’t already own a pair.

THE HIRING PROCESS: 

You can get started by going here: http://www.amazonfulfillmentcareers.com/programs/camper-force/ or by e-mailing a CamperForce rep at seasonal-camper@amazon.com. That is also the e-mail any questions should be sent to. It was noted in the Workamper Rendezvous video that a resume is not strictly necessary for employment but I should think it would increase your chances to have one.  It sounds like you’ll receive an application and possibly some other paperwork to fill out from there that should either be faxed or e-mailed back to Amazon. Once that is done the applications are reviewed and the most likely candidates are contacted to set up a phone interview. The phone interview lasts 10 – 15 minutes, and at the end of the interview if the job seems like a good fit for you and Amazon you’ll be offered a position under the condition that you meet the job requirements as listed above.

If you accept, you’ll get additional information from Amazon about the site you’ll be at, and the contact list for the campgrounds at that site. Amazon will not reserve a site for you they just pay for it, so it’s up to you to contact the campground you’re most interested in at set up a reservation. This should be done as soon as possible for the best selection of sites.

SITE CONTACT NUMBERS:

Campbellsville, KY: (270) 849-2604
Coffeyville, KS: (620) 464-2665
Fernley, NV: (775) 575-8045

And that covers it!

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Editors note: Be sure to read her summary of her experience at Amazon here:

http://www.interstellarorchard.com/2013/01/08/final-camperforce-review/

And these posts she wrote during her time there:

http://www.interstellarorchard.com/2012/10/11/camperforce-what-to-expect-the-first-few-days/

http://www.interstellarorchard.com/2012/11/19/peak-kick-off-at-amazon/

http://www.interstellarorchard.com/2012/11/29/adventures-in-cooking-amazon-update/

http://www.interstellarorchard.com/2012/12/10/figuring-the-pay-at-amazon/

Finally, let me (Bob) say I know several other Vandwellers who have worked for Amazon, and they all say it is hard, but profitable work! I have a friend who worked in their Fernley (Reno) location and lived in his van. He did NOT get his job through the CamperForce program, he got hired through a temp agency in Fernley, NV. That means he didn’t get a campsite, but since he was in a van, he just parked in the WalMart parking lot the whole time. He said a Sheriff’s Deputy checked him out and as soon as he found out he worked for Amazon the Deputy told him he was okay to park there. In fact he  gave my friend his card and told him if anyone gave him a problem they should call the Deputy and he would take care of it.

You may be asking yourself why not work for WorkForce and get a free RV campsite? The reason is Amazon strongly discourages workcampers from drawing unemployment. It is my understanding that if you do, they will not rehire you the next year. But if they hire you through a temp agency, you can draw unemployment. My friend was drawing unemployment from his time with Amazon when I visited with him.

Let me emphasize that my information is all second-hand so do your own research before making your final decision.