fukk Amazon. Workers pee in bottles to save time

Ya' Cousin Cleon

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According to troubling new allegations, workers in Amazon’s UK warehouses pee in bottles to avoid being penalized for taking bathroom breaks. The claims come from author and investigator Jared Bloodworth, who says he worked undercover as a warehouse worker for six months while writing a new book about low-wage work in the UK.

“For those of us who worked on the top floor, the closest toilets were down four flights of stairs,” Bloodworth told The Sun. “People just peed in bottles because they lived in fear of being disciplined over ‘idle time’ and losing their jobs just because they needed the [bathroom].”

Workers in Amazon’s cavernous warehouses, called fulfillment centers, spend long hours traveling great distances to pick and package items. But as has been previously reported, workers risk being fired because of a punitive tracking system that measures how long it takes them to fulfill orders. According to Bloodworth, workers walk roughly 10 miles in an average day, taking minimal breaks for shifts that last about 10 hours. In the four-story warehouse where he worked, Bloodworth said it could take 10 minutes to walk to the restrooms, both located a quarter mile away on the ground floor, so workers used a “toilet bottle” system.

Business Insider cited a separate survey of Amazon workers released in April, who similarly feel overworked. “For picking, the target is around 100 units per hour which means we have to pick 100 units within 60 minutes from anywhere across one floor of the Fulfilment Centre,” a worker reports in the survey. “This for normal days. And during peak time its 120 to 140 units per hour, which is near on impossible.”

Amazon denied Bloodworth’s allegations.

“Amazon provides a safe and positive workplace for thousands of people across the UK with competitive pay and benefits from day one,” Amazon responded in a statement to Business Insider. “We have not been provided with confirmation that the people who completed the survey worked at Amazon and we don’t recognize these allegations as an accurate portrayal of activities in our buildings.”

We reached out to Amazon for further comment and will update if we hear back.
 

EBK String

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I worked in one of those fulfillment centers and shyt is the closes thing to slavery, they work you 12 hours days 5 days a week or 10 hour days 6 days week during holiday seasons. Luckily I had a technical position so all I did was fukk around on the coli.
 

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According to troubling new allegations, workers in Amazon’s UK warehouses pee in bottles to avoid being penalized for taking bathroom breaks. The claims come from author and investigator Jared Bloodworth, who says he worked undercover as a warehouse worker for six months while writing a new book about low-wage work in the UK.

“For those of us who worked on the top floor, the closest toilets were down four flights of stairs,” Bloodworth told The Sun. “People just peed in bottles because they lived in fear of being disciplined over ‘idle time’ and losing their jobs just because they needed the [bathroom].”

Workers in Amazon’s cavernous warehouses, called fulfillment centers, spend long hours traveling great distances to pick and package items. But as has been previously reported, workers risk being fired because of a punitive tracking system that measures how long it takes them to fulfill orders. According to Bloodworth, workers walk roughly 10 miles in an average day, taking minimal breaks for shifts that last about 10 hours. In the four-story warehouse where he worked, Bloodworth said it could take 10 minutes to walk to the restrooms, both located a quarter mile away on the ground floor, so workers used a “toilet bottle” system.

Business Insider cited a separate survey of Amazon workers released in April, who similarly feel overworked. “For picking, the target is around 100 units per hour which means we have to pick 100 units within 60 minutes from anywhere across one floor of the Fulfilment Centre,” a worker reports in the survey. “This for normal days. And during peak time its 120 to 140 units per hour, which is near on impossible.”

Amazon denied Bloodworth’s allegations.

“Amazon provides a safe and positive workplace for thousands of people across the UK with competitive pay and benefits from day one,” Amazon responded in a statement to Business Insider. “We have not been provided with confirmation that the people who completed the survey worked at Amazon and we don’t recognize these allegations as an accurate portrayal of activities in our buildings.”

We reached out to Amazon for further comment and will update if we hear back.
100 per hour :gucci: That's averaging over 1 per minute.
 
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