East Bay Times

Meat firms slammed for COVID response

U.S. House study says industry didn’t do enough to slow spread

- By Josh Funk

OMAHA, NEB. >> At least 59,000 meatpackin­g workers caught COVID-19 and 269 workers died when the virus tore through the industry last year, which is significan­tly more than previously thought, according to a new U.S. House report released Wednesday.

The meatpackin­g industry was one of the early epicenters of the coronaviru­s pandemic, with workers standing shoulder-to-shoulder along production lines. The U.S. House Select Subcommitt­ee on the Coronaviru­s Crisis, which examined internal documents from five of the biggest meatpackin­g companies, said companies could have done more to protect their workers.

The new estimate of infections in the industry is nearly three times higher than the 22,400 that the United Food and Commercial Workers Union has said were infected or exposed. And the true number could be even higher because the companies’ data didn’t generally include coronaviru­s cases confirmed by outside testing or self reported by employees.

At the height of the outbreaks in the spring of 2020, U.S. meatpackin­g production fell to about 60% of normal as several major plants were forced to temporaril­y close for deep cleaning and safety upgrades or operated at slower speeds because of worker shortages. The report said companies were slow to take protective steps such as distributi­ng protective equipment and installing barriers between work stations.

“Instead of addressing the clear indication­s that workers were contractin­g the coronaviru­s at alarming rates due to conditions in meatpackin­g facilities, meatpackin­g companies prioritize­d profits and production over worker safety, continuing to employ practices that led to crowded facilities in which the virus spread easily,” the report said.

Martin Rosas, who represents a UFCW chapter based in Kansas with over 17,000 members in three states, said the union pressed companies for better protection­s.

“The harsh reality is that many of the companies were slow to act in the early days of the outbreak, and whatever progress that was achieved was due to the union demanding action,” Rosas said.

The report is based on documents from JBS, Tyson Foods, Smithfield Foods, Cargill and National Beef. Together they control over 80% of the beef market and over 60% of the pork market nationwide.

The North American Meat Institute trade group defended the industry’s response to the pandemic. And Cargill, Tyson, Smithfield and JBS released statements Wednesday saying they worked aggressive­ly to meet federal health and safety standards and took additional measures to protect their employees, such as conducting widespread testing and urging employees to get vaccinated.

“The health and safety of our team members always comes first and our response since the onset of the pandemic has demonstrat­ed that commitment,

with an investment of more than $760 million to date. We have taken aggressive action to keep the virus out of our facilities and adopted hundreds of safety measures that often outpaced federal guidance and industry standards,” JBS spokeswoma­n Nikki Richardson said.

The companies expressed regret at the toll the virus has taken.

“Even one illness or loss of life to COVID-19 is one too many, which is why we’ve taken progressiv­e action from the start of the pandemic to protect the health and safety of our workers,” Tyson spokesman Gary Mickelson said.

The report said infection rates were especially high at some meatpackin­g plants between the spring of 2020 and early 2021. At a JBS plant in Hyrum, Utah, 54% of the workforce contracted the virus. Nearly 50% of workers at a Tyson plant in Amarillo, Texas, were infected. And 44% of employees at National Beef’s plant in Tama, Iowa, caught COVID-19.

The report said internal documents show Smithfield aggressive­ly pushed back against government safety recommenda­tions after experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention inspected

its pork plant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, after a major outbreak. A few days earlier, Smithfield’s CEO told the CEO of National Beef in an email that “Employees are afraid to come to work.”

Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin said the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion needs to do more to protect meatpackin­g workers.

“Some of these companies are treating the workers in the plants not much better than the animals that go through them,” Raskin said.

Debbie Berkowitz, with Georgetown University’s Kalmanovit­z Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor, said the industry was slow to respond and federal regulators didn’t force companies to act.

“When the pandemic hit, of course it was going to hit meatpackin­g plants really hard and really fast,” said Berkowitz, a former OSHA official who testified Wednesday. “What was the industry’s response — not to protect workers and mitigate the spread of COVID-19, not to separate workers 6 feet apart, which was the earlier guidance that came out in late February — but to just keep on going.”

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? At least 59,000meatpac­king workers became ill and 269 workers died of COVID last year, more than estimated.
MICHAEL CONROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES At least 59,000meatpac­king workers became ill and 269 workers died of COVID last year, more than estimated.

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