Toronto Star

A COVID-19 outbreak at Olymel, an Alberta pork processing plant, has grown to nearly 80 cases.

Union wants work halted temporaril­y after report of 80 COVID-19 cases

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RED DEER, ALTA.—A company that operates a pork processing plant in central Alberta says a COVID-19 outbreak at the facility has grown to nearly 80 cases this weekend.

Richard Vigneault, a spokespers­on for Olymel, says there was an outbreak at the company’s plant in Red Deer in November, but it wasn’t until Jan. 20 that there was a significan­t rise in infections.

Vigneault says one person has died and employees were informed of the death on Jan. 28, but he says the company is still waiting on a report on the case and he won’t be commenting further on it now.

The union representi­ng the 1,850 workers at the plant wrote a letter Friday to the facility’s manager, requesting Olymel temporaril­y shut down the plant for two weeks and pay workers during the time off.

Vigneault says Olymel has implemente­d measures to prevent the virus from spreading with help from provincial health officials, occupation­al health and safety officials and the union.

He says the company is very sorry to all the staff who have been affected.

“The fact is, no company can prevent an outbreak of some form or another during this pandemic,” Vigneault said in an interview Sunday from Montreal. “We’re doing all the sanitary measures to bring this under control.”

United Food and Commercial Workers Local 401 president Thomas Hesse and secretaryt­reasurer Richelle Stewart said in their letter Friday that they want the company to treat the hazard the same as it did during an outbreak last March at its plant in Yamachiche, Que. Olymel announced March 29 it would temporaril­y close its hog slaughter and cutting plant in Yamachiche for 14 days after nine plant employees tested positive for COVID-19. The plant resumed operations on April 14.

Vigneault said he wouldn’t comment on the union’s requests Sunday.

Alberta Health Services said in an email that public health inspectors have been visiting the Red Deer site to review Olymel’s COVID-19 mitigation measures and safety protocols.

The email notes that preventive measures to enhance the safety of employees at the facility were previously undertaken by Olymel early on in the pandemic.

“Olymel has robust processes in place to limit the spread of illness within their facility and has strict protocols in place regarding physical distancing, PPE, disinfecti­on and other safety measures to support physical distancing of staff,” the AHS email said.

The email also noted AHS began another round of on-site prevalence testing for COVID-19 on Thursday to help identify anyone who may have the virus but be asymptomat­ic.

Meanwhile, a beef processing plant in High River, Alta., that experience­d a large outbreak last year is now dealing with another, smaller outbreak.

Cargill said Sunday that six employees at the facility have recently tested positive for COVID-19, and that they are now in isolation and receiving appropriat­e medical care. Other employees who have been identified as having close contact are also being tested.

“We also continue to work closely with health officials to ensure effective prevention, cleaning and quarantine protocols are followed within our facilities and beyond,” Cargill spokespers­on Daniel Sullivan said in an email.

The plant, south of Calgary, shut down for two weeks in April because of an outbreak that initially affected 350 of its 2,200 workers. Eventually nearly half the workers contracted the novel coronaviru­s and two employees died.

 ?? OLYMEL ?? Richard Vigneault, a spokespers­on for Olymel, says there was an outbreak at the company's plant in Red Deer in November, but it wasn't until Jan. 20 that there was a significan­t rise in infections.
OLYMEL Richard Vigneault, a spokespers­on for Olymel, says there was an outbreak at the company's plant in Red Deer in November, but it wasn't until Jan. 20 that there was a significan­t rise in infections.

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