The Capital

Fired Tyson boss says virus office pool was morale boost

- By Ryan J. Foley

IOWA CITY, Iowa — One of the Tyson Foods managers fired for betting on how many workers would contract COVID- 19 at an Iowa pork plant said the office pool was spontaneou­s fun and intended to boost morale.

Don Merschbroc­k, former night manager at the plant inWaterloo, Iowa, said he was speaking in an attempt to show that the seven fired supervisor­s are “not the evil people” that Tyson has portrayed.

“We really want to clear our names,” he told Associated Press. “We actually worked very hard and took care of our team members well.”

Tyson announced the terminatio­n soft he Waterloo managers Dec .16, weeks after the betting allegation surfaced in wrongful death lawsuits filedby the families off our workers who died of COVID- 19.

Tyson said an investigat­ion led by former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder found sufficient evidence to terminate those involved, saying their actions violated the company’s values of respect and integrity. The company had asked Holder’s law firm to investigat­e the allegation after a public backlash threatened to damage its brand and demoralize its workers.

The Springdale, Arkansas- based company, one of the world’s largest meat producers, did not release Holder’s findings, and fired managersha­ve complained that they were let go without explanatio­n.

Merschbroc­k released a statement and elaborated in an interview that he was more willing to speak than the other firedmanag­ers, since he isn’t a named defendant in the lawsuits.

He said managers conducted the office pool last spring within minutes following mass testing of the plant’s roughly 2,800 workers.

County officials said last May that more than 1,000 workers tested positive for the virus, which hospitaliz­ed several and killed at least six. They have blasted Tyson for not initially providing workers adequate protective gear and for idling the plant only after the outbreak had ripped through the city.

Lawyers for the estates of four dead workers have portrayed the betting pool as indicative of the company’s callous attitude toward health and safety. They have alleged that managers downplayed the severity of the virus, at times allowing or encouragin­g employees towork while sick.

Tyson has said the plant, its largest for pork and able to process 20,000 hogs daily, was designated as critical infrastruc­ture by the federal government in March and that its leaders worked to “safely continue operations to secure the national food supply.”

Merschbroc­k, who had been with Tyson for a decade, saidmanage­rswere given the “impossible task” of maintainin­g production while implementi­ng virus safety precaution­s.

The office pool involved roughly $ 50 cash, which went to the winner who picked the correct percentage of workers testing positive for the virus, Merschbroc­k said.

 ?? BRANDONPOL­LOCK/ THECOURIER ?? Tyson’sworkers file in fora tourof safetymeas­ures put into place inMay after the plant in Waterloo, Iowa, had to shut downdue to a virus outbreak.
BRANDONPOL­LOCK/ THECOURIER Tyson’sworkers file in fora tourof safetymeas­ures put into place inMay after the plant in Waterloo, Iowa, had to shut downdue to a virus outbreak.

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