Workers at Amazon’s new Staten Island warehouse are getting hurt at three times the rate of other warehouse workers nationwide, according to a report out Wednesday.

Employees at the year-old, four-story facility, where merchandise is sorted into yellow bins on conveyor belts, feel pressure to work “harder and faster,” resulting in a higher-than-average injury rate, according to the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health, a workers’ rights group.

About 18% of the 2,500 workers there reported sustaining an injury on the job compared with just 5.2% of overall warehouse workers who are injured on the job, NYCOSH reports, citing data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The group, which is composed of labor unions, interviewed 145 Amazon employees at the Staten Island facility between January and May, finding that 66% of them feel pain from their jobs.

Amazon decried the report as “self-serving” because it was produced by a union-led organization.

The same labor groups were largely responsible for derailing Amazon’s plan to open a second headquarters in the Big Apple this year.

“This report includes a biased and unreliable survey, which supposedly surveyed less than 3% of our Staten Island workforce,” Amazon said in a statement.