Amazon drivers, including Iraq vet, sue over poor working conditions, saying they peed, defecated in bottles to avoid discipline
Three Amazon delivery drivers in Colorado sued the e-commerce giant last week alleging the company subjected them to such strict monitoring that they were forced to skip bathroom breaks or risk being disciplined.
The workers, one of whom is an Iraq War veteran, said they were forced to urinate in bottles or even defecate in dog waste bags they kept inside their delivery trucks in violation of Colorado labor laws, the 16-page complaint filed in Denver District Court on May 22 shows.
“This case is about one of the wealthiest and most powerful companies in the world, Amazon, maintaining work policies that require its delivery drivers … to restrain themselves from using the bathroom at risk of serious health consequences,” the complaint states.
“Amazon operates this scheme through harsh work quotas and elaborate tracking and workplace surveillance technology that make it impossible for Amazon delivery drivers to fulfill basic human needs while on the job.”
Colorado law requires employers to allow all staffers to take paid rest breaks for every four hours of work, and the three drivers claimed that Amazon’s “pace-of-work policies” denied them these breaks.
“I fought for this country in Iraq, but I had an easier time going to the bathroom in a combat zone than I did while working for Amazon,” driver Ryan Schilling said.
The complaint claims that trash cans in Amazon fulfillment centers “are frequently overflowing with bottles full of urine that drivers have thrown away at the end of their shifts.”