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04-16-2020 06:04 PM
Not only is this inconscionable, but also it's bound to have a drastic effect on supply.
The essential workers supplying housebound Americans with beef, pork and poultry during the coronavirus pandemic are getting sick and even dying as the virus spreads through plants and communities.
A Smithfield pork processing plant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, has become the site of the worst coronavirus outbreak in the U.S., with more than 600 confirmed cases in a workforce of 3,700. But the facility is not alone in having a dangerous number of infections:
The spread of the coronavirus has clearly made a hazardous job even more dangerous.
Laborers at poultry and meat processing plants tend to work right alongside one another, at a time when public health experts advise everyone to stay at least six feet apart. An employee at a poultry plant in Texas that has already recorded multiple COVID-19 cases recently told HuffPost that she and her colleagues were working shoulder to shoulder just like before the pandemic.
Employees in many plants are predominantly people of color or immigrants, doing hard labor for low pay. The average wage for a worker who cuts or trims meat or poultry was $13.36 per hour in 2018, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Workers report a much higher injury rate than the rest of the private sector, and advocates say the hazards are almost certainly worse than the numbers suggest.
Marc Perrone, president of the United Food and Commercial Workers union, which represents 250,000 meatpacking and food processing workers around the country, told HuffPost that one of his biggest concerns is members who get sick in rural areas where the health care system is not as robust. He said the union has been trying to work with employers to make the conditions safer during the pandemic.
“Can you move people six feet apart? Sure you could, but that’s going to slow things down,” he said. “The most proactive thing they can do is really check and make sure people, if they have any symptoms or they’re feeling sick, you send them home with pay.”
Noting how physically taxing the work is, he added, “The challenge is you can’t just replace these people.”
Oxfam America, Human Rights Watch and other worker groups sent a letter to poultry producers on Thursday saying that the rash of outbreaks calls for immediate protections inside plants. They demanded at least two weeks of paid leave for workers who are sick, quarantined, or caring for a family member, as well as “pandemic premium pay” of at least time-and-a-half for all hours worked.
Wherever six feet of separation between workers is not possible, the groups called on the producers to install plastic physical barriers. They also said producers should slow down line speeds if necessary and add more workers to allow for adequate breaks.
“Poultry workers are essential workers, now and always, and they deserve these basic protections,” the groups wrote.
Many companies have given workers some kind of additional pay, but often far less than the double-time or time-and-a-half workers and advocates have asked for. According to the UFCW, Cargill instituted a 15% bonus for the pandemic.
Sanderson Farms, the third-largest poultry producer in the U.S., has offered workers a $1-per-hour bonus, as HuffPost reported earlier this month. But workers are only eligible for that extra pay if they log perfect attendance for the week, according to an internal memo from the company.
Those who are out sick during the pandemic with COVID-19 or flu-like symptoms are eligible for paid leave, but only if they have a doctor’s note documenting the illness. That may not be easy for an immigrant worker to obtain, especially during a pandemic when many doctors have moved to online consultations.
Source: HuffPost
04-16-2020 06:11 PM - edited 04-16-2020 06:14 PM
@suzyQ3 so sad ...so many affected ..we pray for everyone. by the way, I had read sometime ago that China purchased Smithfield Hams. in addition, I read where there were thousand of dead pigs thrown into the ocean due to disease. thousands! I wonder if there is any connectionn to the Smithfield plant. Here is the news release:
04-16-2020 06:15 PM
Heaven help us if grocery store workers get infected at the same rate. Shut down the stores! Everybody’s on their own!
04-16-2020 06:17 PM
@tobes wrote:@suzyQ3 so sad ...so many affected ..we pray for everyone. by the way, I had read sometime ago that China purchased Smithfield Hams. in addition, I read where there were thousand of dead pigs thrown into the ocean due to disease. thousands! I wonder if there is any connectionn to the Smithfield plant. Here is the news release:
Then known as Shuanghui Group, WH Group purchased Smithfield Foods in 2013 for $4.72 billion. It was the largest Chinese acquisition of an American company to date.Subsidiary: Carroll's Foods, Smithfield Hog Pro...Parent: WH GroupPerson: Joseph W.Luter II
@tobes Depending on where the pigs died, it would be cheaper to dig a pit and throw them in than transport them to an ocean.
Do you have a source for that information?
04-16-2020 06:18 PM
@tobes wrote:@suzyQ3 so sad ...so many affected ..we pray for everyone. by the way, I had read sometime ago that China purchased Smithfield Hams. in addition, I read where there were thousand of dead pigs thrown into the ocean due to disease. thousands! I wonder if there is any connectionn to the Smithfield plant. Here is the news release:
Then known as Shuanghui Group, WH Group purchased Smithfield Foods in 2013 for $4.72 billion. It was the largest Chinese acquisition of an American company to date.Subsidiary: Carroll's Foods, Smithfield Hog Pro...Parent: WH GroupPerson: Joseph W.Luter II
It is tragic, @tobes, As for Smithfield, it is a wholly-owned subsidiary of WH Group in China.
Also "Smithfield Foods is a Virginia-based company and is the world's largest pork processor and hog producer; it produces a variety of brand name meats and partnered with a Chinese company long before the COVID-19 pandemic. ... No Smithfield products come from animals raised, processed or packaged in China.”
04-16-2020 06:34 PM
@esmerelda @suzyQ3 esme....here is an article interesting some were fround in Wuhan province.....we will never know what caused this but some think maybe Swine Flu
and China does provide some pork products to the United States.....
https://www.scmp.com/news/china-insider/article/1294411/floating-dead-pigs-resurface-china-rivers
04-16-2020 06:35 PM
🙁
04-16-2020 06:39 PM
I have to wonder WHY this is happening? Is it possible that the disease is spreading rapdily there due to unsanitary conditions in our slaughter houses and meat processing facilities ? Where is the FDA ? Although the Government has told us the disease is not spread by animals I worry that no one really knows how it is spread. The entire thing sounds very scary. I certainly would avoid any pork for the forseeable future. Just not worth the risk.
04-16-2020 06:46 PM
@tobes wrote:@esmerelda @suzyQ3 esme....here is an article interesting some were fround in Wuhan province.....we will never know what caused this but some think maybe Swine Flu
and China does provide some pork products to the United States.....
https://www.scmp.com/news/china-insider/article/1294411/floating-dead-pigs-resurface-china-rivers
@tobes, that article is from 2013. and Smithfield does not import meat from China.
04-16-2020 06:47 PM - edited 04-16-2020 06:59 PM
@esmerelda @suzyQ3 Here is an article that disputes hogs/pigs/pork is slaughtered in U.S. then sent back to china to be packaged and returned to the U.S. I believe this settles one report that may be in error. Just the other side of the story but China does own Smithfield. I first heard about the discarded pigs on "This Morning With Maria Bartiromo" Several months ago, before COVID9. Over the last few years I have not included beef or pork and pork products in my diet on a regular basis. Really only because I have lost my apetite for it...I find I do not like the taste of it. I do enjoy fish and try to find other ways to include protein in my diet.
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