x
Breaking News
More () »

Poultry factory workers wear diapers, denied bathroom breaks: report

On the Pilgrim’s Pride website, “prioritize the team over yourself” is one of the poultry producer’s core values.
Chicken factory image from TMW

On the Pilgrim’s Pride website, “prioritize the team over yourself” is one of the poultry producer’s core values.

But in something out of Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle, Bloomberg notes, an Oxfam America report suggests that “value” is really a humiliating issue for already marginalized workers in the US poultry industry (which the report notes is enjoying record profits): a denial of bathroom breaks, leading to workers urinating and defecating themselves on the processing line, keeping their fluid intake at dangerously low levels, and wearing diapers on the job.

Workers from Pilgrim’s, as well as Tyson Foods, Perdue, and Sanderson Farms—the four companies that make up 60% of the US poultry market, per a press release — are specifically called out in the “No Relief” report, compiled over three years via hundreds of interviews with current and ex-workers, medical experts, and advocacy groups.

“It’s not just their dignity that suffers: They are in danger of serious health problems,” the report reads.

Per the report, supervisors poke fun at, threaten, or turn a blind eye to bathroom break requests, imposing strict time limits and forcing workers to wait more than an hour in some cases.

Not only would these allegations be violations of OSHA “sanitary standards,” such practices would also pose serious health risks, including UTIs (especially for women), kidney infections, and pressure on the bladder and urethra that could prove fatal.

Snopes.com has listed the reports as controversial, and says “While the investigation of such claims fell under the jurisdiction of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the agency was estimated to inspect less than one percent of all workplaces in 2013.”

While Sanderson’s CFO wouldn’t comment on the report when contacted by Bloomberg, the other three companies all issued outraged statements noting they’ll be checking up on the veracity.

“Poultry workers are some of the most vulnerable people in our country—most are minorities and immigrants, some are recently resettled refugees,” says a National Employment Law Project fellow. “Poultry companies know they can get away with [these] practices, because these workers are too fearful to speak up.”

This article originally appeared on Newser: US Poultry Workers Wear Diapers: Report

More From Newser:

Couple Was on FaceTime Call as Tornado Killed Wife
US Poultry Workers Wear Diapers: Report
Good Samaritans Rescue Carlie Trent, Hold Uncle at Gunpoint

Story from Newser, via Tribune Media. 

Before You Leave, Check This Out