Chattanooga Times Free Press

Worker advocates file discrimina­tion complaint against meat plants

- BY DAVID PITT

Several worker advocacy organizati­ons have filed a civil rights complaint with the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e alleging that meat processing companies Tyson and JBS have engaged in racial discrimina­tion during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The complaint filed last week alleges the companies adopted polices that violate a section of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which protects individual­s from racial discrimina­tion by recipients of federal financial assistance.

Tyson has received more than $109 million from USDA programs this year and JBS more than $45 million, the complaint said. As recipients of federal taxpayer dollars they are required to comply with federal laws.

“When they took that money, they knew at that point that they would be held accountabl­e to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, but they continued to violate that act,” said Joe Henry, director of Forward Latino, one of the groups filing the complaint. Others include the Food Chain Workers Alliance, HEAL Food Alliance, American Friends Service Committee of Iowa and the Idaho Organizati­on of Resource Councils.

Coronaviru­s infections were first reported in meatpackin­g plants in March and since then at least 32,151 COVID-19 cases have been confirmed among workers in 291 plants and at least 122 meatpackin­g workers have died, the complaint said.

A CDC report released last week found 87% of those coronaviru­s cases occurred among racial and ethnic minorities even though they make up 61% of the worker population.

After the outbreaks were uncovered, meatpackin­g plants began providing workers with face coverings, installed shields between work stations and implemente­d new procedures for distancing during breaks, but they declined to adopt other U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommenda­tions for keeping people at least 6 feet apart. The companies also declined to initiate slower speeds on production lines or add shifts to enable social distancing, the complaint said.

The complaint alleges the operating procedures have a disparate impact on Black, Latino, and Asian workers, who make up a large share of production workers at the companies’ plants, representi­ng a pattern or practice of racial discrimina­tion.

Tyson spokesman Worth Sparkman said in an email the company’s top priority is the health and safety of all workers, their families and the communitie­s where plants are located.

“We’ve transforme­d the way our plants operate to protect our team members, implementi­ng measures such as symptom screening before every shift,” he said.

JBS did not immediatel­y reply to messages and a USDA spokesman declined to comment.

The complaint goes to the USDA through an administra­tive procedure and it will be up to Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue to decide how it’s resolved. The procedure could result in an agreement between the worker groups, the USDA and the companies or it could take years to get to a final resolution if there’s no agreement, said Dave O’Brien, a civil rights attorney in Cedar Rapids who handled such complaints in the Obama administra­tion’s Labor Department.

The complaint asks the Civil Rights Division of the USDA to investigat­e and remedy the discrimina­tion and for the agency to suspended or terminate funding to the companies if they do not comply with federal laws.

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL ?? Vehicles sit in a near-empty parking lot outside the Tyson Foods plant in Waterloo, Iowa. The complaint alleges the companies adopted polices that reject U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance on distancing and protective gear on meat processing lines. The complaint says the operating procedures have a discrimina­tory impact on mostly Black, Latino and Asian workers.
AP PHOTO/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL Vehicles sit in a near-empty parking lot outside the Tyson Foods plant in Waterloo, Iowa. The complaint alleges the companies adopted polices that reject U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance on distancing and protective gear on meat processing lines. The complaint says the operating procedures have a discrimina­tory impact on mostly Black, Latino and Asian workers.

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