The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

More poultry workers diagnosed with virus

Kemp visits Gainesvill­e area as work continues to control outbreak.

- By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com and Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Dozens more

GAINESVILL­E — workers in Georgia’s $41 billion poultry industry have tested positive for the novel corona

virus and a second worker has died from the disease since last month. State officials are rushing new resources to the area to try to prevent a larger outbreak.

Both in their 60s, two Hispanic men who worked at Fieldale Farms’ poultry plant in Cornelia have succumbed to COVID-19, said the Baldwin-based company’s president, Tom Hensley. Hensley did not disclose their identities, but he said one died in April while the other passed away last month.

Gov. Brian Kemp visited the area on Friday to highlight Georgia’s efforts to contain the pandemic, touring a Fieldale Farms facility, a nearby test

ing site and a medical pod under constructi­on. Wearing a protective mask, Kemp touted the more than 300,000 coronaviru­s tests now completed in Georgia and said he recently asked the White House for more supplies.

Hall County has emerged as an epicenter of the outbreak in Georgia, and state officials are concerned about the disproport­ionate number of coronaviru­s cases in the Hispanic community, particular­ly among those who work in the poultry industry.

Of Fieldale’s 4,700 workers, 200 have tested positive for the disease, up from 87 late last month, Hensley said Friday. Most of those who have contracted COVID-19 work in the company’s processing plants in Cornelia, Gainesvill­e and Murrayvill­e, Hensley said, adding that 124 workers have recovered and are back on the job.

Hensley attributed the increase in cases to additional testing for COVID-19 in North Georgia and highlighte­d the precaution­s his company is taking. It repeatedly disinfects plants and has issued smocks and masks to workers, who are kept separated at their workstatio­ns. While mourning the two workers who have died, Hensley said he is confident they did not contract COVID-19 at Fieldale’s Cornelia plant.

“I am proud of what we have done to protect our employees,” he said. “Anything the CDC recommends, we do.”

Last month, the Georgia Department of Public Health reported that 388 of the state’s poultry workers had tested positive for the disease. They represent about 2% of the estimated 16,500 people employed at 14 chicken plants across the Georgia.

The state agency did not have updated figures Friday. Its spokeswoma­n said a North Georgia hospital system has reported a 75% drop in COVID-19 cases among poultry workers in the last 12 days compared to the previous 12 days.

‘Attack this on all fronts’

More than 4,900 confirmed COVID-19 cases and 20 deaths have been linked to the disease at 115 meat and poultry processing facilities across 19 states, according to a report published this month by the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The study says tight production lines and decades-old practices make it difficult to maintain the recommende­d 6-foot distance in poultry and meat-processing plants.

“The pace and physical demands of processing work made adherence to face covering recommenda­tions difficult, with some workers observed covering only their mouths and frequently readjustin­g their face coverings while working,” the authors wrote.

Poultry industry executives in the Peach State report 50% to 80% of their infected workers have recovered, said Mike Giles of the Georgia Poultry Federation. Companies have implemente­d staggered breaks, installed plexiglass dividers and increased hygiene guidelines that fast became industry standard, Giles said.

Emergency management officials recently offered Giles a trove of 45,000 protective masks that he said he eagerly accepted — not for workers, who were already provided them, but for their families. Within two days, they were dispensed to relatives of poultry workers across Gainesvill­e.

“We’re focusing on educating employees to press them to do the things they’re doing at work also at home,” said Giles. “We’ve got to attack this on all fronts.”

After touring Fieldale’s plant in Gainesvill­e on Friday, Kemp said he was impressed with how the company has responded to the pandemic. “We realized early on — even though we had many poultry workers that were positive — it wasn’t necessaril­y a poultry plant issue,” he said. “It was an issue of those individual­s going back home into the neighborho­od and not understand­ing how they needed to adhere to best practices that created community-spread in a really fairly restricted community.”

Many refugees and Hispanic immigrants work in the poultry industry. Sarah Rich is a senior staff attorney for the Southern Poverty Law Center, which is monitoring the poultry industry in the South. “When people are working closely together without adequate (personal protective equipment), the virus will spread,” she said. “And a chicken plant is the perfect environmen­t for that to happen.”

Efforts to protect Georgia’s poultry workers have been “too little, too late,” said Vanesa Sarazua, the founder and executive director of Hispanic Alliance Georgia, a nonprofit based in Gainesvill­e.

“These workers needed to be protected from the get-go,” she said. “I can’t believe that Gov. Kemp and anybody else locally couldn’t think of them first, since they are so critical to the food chain.”

Georgia’s poultry workers need health care, COVID-19 testing and “appropriat­e compensati­on for the risks they are taking,” said Jim Neal, chairman of the state’s Coalition of Refugee Service Agencies. “If you are insisting on people going to work to help keep people fed,” he said, “and maybe the conditions of that work or the conditions surroundin­g them getting to that work put them at a higher risk of infection, then how about some hazard pay or bonus pay?”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Wearing a face mask and a hard hat, Gov. Brian Kemp tours temporary medical pods Friday at Northeast Georgia Health System in Gainesvill­e. He also visited a poultry processing plant. The industry has been a hotspot for COVID infections.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Wearing a face mask and a hard hat, Gov. Brian Kemp tours temporary medical pods Friday at Northeast Georgia Health System in Gainesvill­e. He also visited a poultry processing plant. The industry has been a hotspot for COVID infections.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? ▲ Matthew Crumpton (center), Emergency Preparedne­ss Manager for the Northeast Georgia Medical Center, speaks to Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp during a tour Friday of the temporary medical pods at Northeast Georgia Health System hospital in Gainesvill­e.
PHOTOS BY ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ▲ Matthew Crumpton (center), Emergency Preparedne­ss Manager for the Northeast Georgia Medical Center, speaks to Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp during a tour Friday of the temporary medical pods at Northeast Georgia Health System hospital in Gainesvill­e.
 ??  ?? ◄ A man wears a T-shirt printed in Spanish and English at a COVID-19 testing site in the parking lot of La Flor de Jalisco #2 in Gainesvill­e on Friday.
◄ A man wears a T-shirt printed in Spanish and English at a COVID-19 testing site in the parking lot of La Flor de Jalisco #2 in Gainesvill­e on Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States