Washington (AFP)

The e-commerce giant Amazon apologized at the weekend to an American elected official for denying the existence of a practice to which its employees are sometimes forced: to urinate in plastic bottles.

"We know that our drivers can and do have problems finding toilets due to traffic or sometimes rural roads, and this was especially the case with the Covid, when many public toilets were closed," said the company in a statement released Friday.

The controversy began last week, with a tweet from an elected Democrat in the House of Representatives, Mark Pocan.

"The fact that you pay your employees $ 15 an hour does not make you a 'progressive workplace'," he accused, "when you make your employees urinate in plastic bottles."

An official Amazon account then responded directly to the chosen one on the same social network: "You do not really believe in this story of pee in bottles, anyway? If it were true, no one would work for us. "

But several media had subsequently reported numerous statements by employees testifying to the existence of this practice.

The Intercept media also claimed to have obtained internal documents attesting that she was well known to company officials.

The testimonies point in particular to the lack of time to go to the toilet because of the pace of work imposed by Amazon.

"We owe Representative Pocan an apology," the company said in its statement.

"The tweet was incorrect. It did not take into account our large group of drivers, and incorrectly focused on our distribution centers," where employees can "move away from their workstations at any time" to visit in "the dozens of toilets" at their disposal.

The problem with Amazon's drivers is "old" and "widespread throughout the industry," the company continued.

"We would like to solve it. We do not know how but we will look for solutions," she promised.

The elected Mark Pocan reacted on Saturday to the apology addressed to him: "Sigh", he tweeted.

"It's not about me, it's about your employees - whom you don't treat with enough respect and dignity. Start by acknowledging the inappropriate working conditions you have created for ALL of your employees."

Amazon is in the spotlight in the United States with the vote, completed this week, on forming a warehouse union in Alabama, which would be the first in the country.

The results have not yet been announced.

© 2021 AFP