Los Angeles Times

Meatpackin­g was already risky. Then came the virus

The shutdown of a Foster Farms plant exposes lapses in a dangerous industry.

- Times staff writer Rong-Gong Lin II in San Francisco contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — When Daljit Singh retired in April after 26 years processing chicken carcasses at Foster Farms in Livingston, Calif., friends called him “the lucky one.”

He had avoided the crippling injuries of his colleagues: knee replacemen­ts, shoulder surgeries, nerve damage that led to “claw hand.”

But working eight-hour shifts, six nights a week, did take a toll on his back, shoulders and legs, said Singh, 68, an Indian immigrant who spoke to The Times through an interprete­r.

Supervisor­s sped up production lines to compensate for having employees out sick, Singh said. Those unable to keep up or put in overtime were penalized under a points system that led to firings.

Then, in March, a new threat emerged with the COVID-19 pandemic — and even six months later, state officials still don’t have a full picture of it, a Times review of documents indicates.

“I feel grateful that I was able to get out before — that I didn’t get coronaviru­s,” Singh said. “People are very, very scared.”

Food processing has always been dangerous work. Compared to other sectors, food workers are 9.5 times more likely to die on the job. Injuries are especially high in U.S. meatpackin­g facili

ties, where an average of two amputation­s occur weekly.

The pandemic has only amplified those threats for a workforce largely made up of people of color, immigrants and migrants. Workers fear not only contractin­g the coronaviru­s but getting injured as more employees call in sick, leaving fewer to meet the heightened demands for food production.

Since April, more than 53,000 food workers nationwide have tested positive for COVID-19, and more than 200 have died, most of them in the meatpackin­g industry. In Los Angeles County, food processing accounts for the second-highest number of infections by workplace, following nursing homes.

Despite the escalating stakes, an examinatio­n by The Times found vast inconsiste­ncies in workplace reporting. Some businesses have been slow to report cases to local officials or to test employees. Others with well-publicized outbreaks haven’t filed reports of sick or dead workers to California’s Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health, known as Cal/OSHA.

Understaff­ed and overwhelme­d, the agency has struggled to manage the crisis with little direction from its federal counterpar­t, the U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion — which has been accused by workers’ advocates of abandoning its role to ensure safe workplaces.

On Wednesday, the Foster Farms factory where Singh had worked was shut down for deep cleaning after Merced County health officials learned that eight of its employees had died after contractin­g the coronaviru­s, and another 358 had tested positive.

A Times review of Cal/ OSHA data obtained via public records laws shows that Foster Farms reported just one COVID-19 death from Jan. 1 to Aug. 13, the most recent data available. A corporate memo dated Aug. 24 said nine employees had died companywid­e.

Martha Vera, who has worked at the plant for 24 years, is mourning the loss of her husband, a Foster Farms truck driver who died Aug. 14 of complicati­ons from COVID-19.

“What does this company really want?” she asked through tears. “How many more people do they think should die for them to do something … for the company to protect its workers? How many more? Can someone tell me?”

The plant has been grappling with an outbreak since June, but Cal/OSHA didn’t inspect the facility in person until Aug. 3.

The county’s decision to shutter the plant came weeks after local health officials flagged Foster Farms for repeated testing failures and ordered management to provide employees with face coverings and to accurately report COVID-related hospitaliz­ations and deaths to Cal/OSHA.

The United Farm Workers of America, which represents workers at the Livingston

plant, said the union has been unable to get answers about how many employees have died and when.

“Foster Farms has sought to obscure the number of deaths and the sanctity of each person’s life throughout this crisis,” wrote organizer Elizabeth Strater.

Ira Brill, vice president of communicat­ions for Foster Farms, declined to comment on the pending Cal/OSHA investigat­ion but, in a twopage statement to The Times, blamed the surge in infections on California’s reopening efforts.

“Foster Farms can protect employees while they are on our premises and educate them as to protective measures that they should always be taking, but we cannot fully protect them when they are exposed in the county community,” Brill said.

The scope of the Livingston outbreak wasn’t publicly known until the plant was shut down last week, because Merced County in July ceased online reporting of the total number of infections at workplaces, citing health privacy concerns. According to health director Dr. Rebecca Nanyonjo-Kemp, the county still tracks cases at work sites but stopped posting the figures publicly because the informatio­n was “being used in a negative light” and was “misunderst­ood.” Concerns from local businesses played a role in the decision, she said, but were not a “driving determinan­t.”

Nanyonjo-Kemp said working closely with businesses is key to keeping workplaces safe.

“We’re not trying to destroy, by reputation or otherwise, how people operate.”

She described the Livingston plant as an outlier and said other employers have been following COVID-19 guidelines.

It’s unclear how closely Cal/OSHA is tracking workplace outbreaks or coordinati­ng with local health officials. By law, employers are required to immediatel­y report any serious workrelate­d injuries, illnesses and deaths.

Internal emails released in July show officials refining voluntary employer guidelines but reveal little in the way of enforcemen­t or coordinati­on to deal with an influx of COVID-related workplace complaints. State data provided in late August showed wide gaps in employer reports of sick and injured workers.

When Merced County officials first tried to close the Foster Farms plant, the company invoked President Trump’s executive order deeming meatpackin­g facilities “critical infrastruc­ture.” Doing so allowed the company a 48-hour stay. Trump’s order, which was driven by industry lobbying and issued in late April, has been derided by unions as justificat­ion to keep plants running despite widespread outbreaks.

Foster Farms’ safety issues aren’t limited to its Livingston plant. Separate investigat­ions are underway at the company’s locations in Fresno and in Turlock, Calif., where a worker died on the job April 27.

Juanita Salazar remembers rushing home after a 10hour workday to drive her son Luis to the turkey plant for his night shift. Though the two lived together, they had barely seen each other during the pandemic.

“Bye, Luis, I love you,” Juanita said as she drove off, blowing him a kiss. Less than two hours later, the 30year-old stood lifeless, hunched over a conveyor belt with his skull pinned between two metal tracks.

At the time of the accident, Foster Farms was experienci­ng periodic staffing shortages due to workers out sick or quarantini­ng, according to community leaders.

The family and their attorney have not been able to get in touch with Cal/OSHA, which is still investigat­ing the accident. Official policy requires the agency to contact family members early in a fatality investigat­ion.

Salazar’s death was among the dozens that occur annually in food processing nationwide. In December, Cal/OSHA Chief Doug Parker vowed to take a closer look at California’s uptick in workplace deaths, particular­ly those among Latinos, who accounted for 43% of the state’s fatalities at work sites in 2018.

In an August meeting, Parker said Cal/OSHA had received reports of 122 fatalities and 494 injuries and illnesses related to COVID-19, which he believes is an “undercount.”

The Times found that while some companies provided detailed updates of individual workers stricken with COVID-19, others with well-publicized outbreaks, including Smithfield Foods, operator of the Farmer John plant in Vernon, Calif., filed no reports to Cal/OSHA.

Cal/OSHA spokespers­on Erika Monterroza would not comment on inconsiste­ncies in employer reporting but said the agency has made recent strides to address outbreaks in food plants, including more inspection­s.

“We will continue to prioritize these facilities, particular­ly where there is any evidence of workplace transmissi­on,” she wrote in an email. Monterroza acknowledg­ed that coordinati­on has been a “challenge” for the agency, requiring communicat­ion with “60 different local health officials across the state.”

Cal/OSHA is now seeking to staff up, following articles by The Times outlining years of vacancies and mismanagem­ent that have left the agency understaff­ed, including a lack of bilingual inspectors.

On Friday, the agency issued 11 COVID-related citations to employers in food processing, meatpackin­g, healthcare, agricultur­e and retail, calling them “the first of many to be issued in the coming weeks and months.” None of the citations involved the employers mentioned in this article.

The Foster Farms Livingston plant will be allowed to reopen following Labor Day, but county officials cautioned that the closure could be extended if the company continues to disobey orders.

Calls for a similar shutdown had plagued the Farmer John facility.

Emails reviewed by The Times show that Smithfield was slow to notify the city of Vernon about positive cases, confirming an outbreak April 17, only after city officials received a complaint about numerous sick workers. But as the outbreak grew, Vernon officials told Smithfield it would no longer need to report positive cases to the city because of Trump’s executive order.

By the time Cal/OSHA inspected Farmer John on May 27, union officials were urging for a complete shutdown after more than 100 workers were sickened.

A Smithfield employee who tested positive and wished to remain anonymous for fear of retaliatio­n said workers were concerned that speed on production lines had increased, which could lead to injuries.

“This is how I eat and pay bills,” the worker said, adding that if it were up to family members, “I wouldn’t be going back to work.”

Smithfield declined to answer questions about its Farmer John plant. In an emailed statement to The Times, the company said it was committed to keeping workers safe and had taken precaution­s across its sites nationwide, such as slowing down production.

Last month, the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus demanded a federal investigat­ion into meatpackin­g, including the approval of faster line speeds, which have been shown to increase catastroph­ic injuries. The demand followed July’s “Safe

Line Speeds in COVID-19 Act,” a bill co-sponsored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (DCalif.) that would prevent facilities from speeding up production during the pandemic.

Worker safety advocates have criticized Cal/OSHA for anemic enforcemen­t, pointing to delayed investigat­ions and complaints that go unanswered. In May, several came out in support of statewide emergency standards that would require employers to take greater precaution­s against COVID-19. After months of discussion, Cal/OSHA signaled support for the proposed standards.

But an independen­t board appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom to oversee policy changes at the agency said the new rules would amount to an unnecessar­y “additional regulatory burden” — echoing concerns from business groups that have criticized the proposed standards as duplicativ­e.

Instead, the board wrote, Cal/OSHA should focus its “limited resources” on current enforcemen­t and consultati­on efforts. An official vote on the matter is scheduled for later this month.

In the meantime, workers continue to get sick. At One World Beef, a slaughterh­ouse in the Imperial Valley, just north of the U.S.-Mexico border, at least one worker has died from COVID-19.

Imperial County officials declined to provide coronaviru­s infection figures for any food processing sites they oversee, writing in an email in late July that the matter was “currently under investigat­ion.”

George Medina, an organizer with the United Food and Commercial Workers, which represents 1.3 million workers nationwide, said more than 150 employees of the plant have been diagnosed with COVID-19. A majority of the predominan­tly Latino workforce lives in Mexicali, Mexico, raising concerns of crossborde­r transmissi­on.

One World Beef is among many plants that offer attendance-based bonuses, despite criticism that the policy could encourage sick employees to continue working. During the pandemic, the plant has offered weekly bonuses of $100 and 10 pounds of meat to workers who complete full shifts.

A similar bonus was mentioned in a lawsuit filed last month by Pennsylvan­ia meatpackin­g workers against OSHA, claiming the federal agency has ignored their safety concerns.

One World Beef did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

A worker who requested anonymity out of fear of retaliatio­n said many who have experience­d COVID-19 symptoms have stayed silent to keep working.

“I scolded them,” he said. “It’s for your health, for mine and for everyone’s. But they worry about their income, too.”

‘What does this company really want? How many more people do they think should die for them to do something?’ — Martha Vera, Foster Farms employee whose husband, also a worker for the company, died of COVID-19

 ?? Andrew Kuhn Merced Sun-Star BY JIE JENNY ZOU, ANDREA CASTILLO AND ERIN B. LOGAN ?? FOSTER FARMS employee Kevin Vera, center, at a vigil to honor workers who died of COVID-19.
Andrew Kuhn Merced Sun-Star BY JIE JENNY ZOU, ANDREA CASTILLO AND ERIN B. LOGAN FOSTER FARMS employee Kevin Vera, center, at a vigil to honor workers who died of COVID-19.
 ?? Andrew Kuhn Merced Sun-Star ?? A VIGIL Thursday honored Foster Farms workers affected by COVID-19. A union official said the company has “sought to obscure the number of deaths.”
Andrew Kuhn Merced Sun-Star A VIGIL Thursday honored Foster Farms workers affected by COVID-19. A union official said the company has “sought to obscure the number of deaths.”
 ??  ?? JUANITA SALAZAR and son Luis, who died in an accident at the Foster Farms plant in Turlock, Calif.
JUANITA SALAZAR and son Luis, who died in an accident at the Foster Farms plant in Turlock, Calif.

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