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Probe focuses on chicken conveyer in deaths at Georgia plant

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- By Sudhin Thanawala

ATLANTA — Problems with the operation of a conveyer belt system that transporte­d chicken for freezing appear to be the cause of a liquid nitrogen release that killed six workers at a Georgia poultry processing plant, federal investigat­ors said.

Chicken traveled down the conveyer before being submerged in a liquid nitrogen bath for flash freezing. “Unresolved operationa­l issues” with the conveyer “appear to have resulted in the accidental release of liquid nitrogen in the flash freezing bath,” the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigat­ion Board said late Sunday in its latest findings about the Jan. 28 release.

Workers reported that a computeriz­ed measuring system indicated a low liquid level in the immersion bath, according to the board. The processing line that malfunctio­ned had been shut down on the morning of the release, the board said.

The release occurred at the Foundation Food Group plant in Gainesvill­e about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northeast of Atlanta. The company said in a statement late Monday that it was “fully cooperatin­g” with investigat­ors.

“We are committed to taking any additional measures necessary to further ensure the safety of our employees,” the company said.

The chemical safety board has previously said the line that failed was used to season, cook, freeze and package chicken, and the nitrogen system had been installed only weeks before.

Investigat­ors have also said they found some tools near the freezer on the line, and it was undergoing “unplanned maintenanc­e.” The investigat­ion is ongoing.

The release forced workers to escape through a fog of vaporizing liquid nitrogen. Eleven other workers and firefighte­rs were taken to the hospital for treatment.

Gainesvill­e is the hub of Georgia’s mammoth poultry industry, which relies on a heavily Latino workforce.

Five of the six workers who died were Mexican citizens.

Immigratio­n advocates have called on federal investigat­ors to guarantee that any workers at the plant who are in the country illegally will not be deported if they come forward to share their observatio­ns.

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 ?? AP-SCOTT ROGERS ?? Two Hall County Firefighte­rs enter a back door Jan. 29 at Foundation Food Group in Gainesvill­e, Ga., the day after six people were killed following a liquid nitrogen leak at the plant.
AP-SCOTT ROGERS Two Hall County Firefighte­rs enter a back door Jan. 29 at Foundation Food Group in Gainesvill­e, Ga., the day after six people were killed following a liquid nitrogen leak at the plant.

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