Jamaica Gleaner

Worker shortage looms in heavy meatpackin­g

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When Martha Kebede’s adult sons immigrated from Ethiopia and reunited with her in South Dakota this year, they had few work opportunit­ies.

Lacking English skills, the brothers took jobs at Smithfield Foods’ Sioux Falls pork plant, gruelling and increasing­ly risky work, as the coronaviru­s sickened thousands of meatpackin­g workers nationwide. One day, half the workers on a slicing line vanished; later, the brothers tested positive for the COVID-19 virus.

“It was very, very sad,”Kebede said. “The boys teared up seeing everyone.”

The brothers – who declined to be identified for fear of workplace retaliatio­n – are among roughly 175,000 immigrants in US meatpackin­g jobs. The industry has historical­ly relied on foreign-born workers – from people in the country illegally to refugees – for some of America’s most dangerous jobs.

Now, that reliance and uncertaint­y about a virus that’s killed at least 20 workers and temporaril­y shuttered several plants fuel concerns about possible labour shortages to meet demand for beef, pork and chicken.

Companies struggling to hire before the pandemic are spending millions on fresh incentives. Their hiring capability hinges on unemployme­nt, industry changes, employees’ feelings about safety, and President Donald Trump’s aggressive and erratic immigratio­n policies.

 ?? AP ?? In this May 23, 2020 photo, Paulina and Marcos Francisco pose for a photo in front of their house in Sioux City, Iowa. They bought the home after years of working in a meatpackin­g plant and other food-processing jobs.
AP In this May 23, 2020 photo, Paulina and Marcos Francisco pose for a photo in front of their house in Sioux City, Iowa. They bought the home after years of working in a meatpackin­g plant and other food-processing jobs.

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