The Denver Post

Processing plants to keep operating

Despite virus outbreaks, work deemed “critical”

- By Jill Colvin Andy Cross, The Denver Post

President Donald Trump took executive action Tuesday to order meat processing plants to stay open amid concerns over growing coronaviru­s cases and the impact on the nation’s food supply.

The order uses the Defense Production Act to classify meat processing as critical infrastruc­ture to try to prevent a shortage of chicken, pork and other meat on supermarke­t shelves. Unions fired back, saying the White House was jeopardizi­ng lives and prioritizi­ng cold cuts over workers’ health.

More than 20 meatpackin­g plants have closed temporaril­y under pressure from local authoritie­s and their own workers because of the virus, including two of the nation’s largest, one in Iowa and one in South Dakota. Others have slowed production as workers have fallen ill or stayed home to avoid getting sick.

“Such closures threaten the continued functionin­g of the national meat and poultry supply chain, underminin­g

critical infrastruc­ture during the national emergency,” the order states.

The United Food and Commercial Workers Internatio­nal Union, which represents 1.3 million food and retail workers, said Tuesday that 20 food-processing and meatpackin­g union workers in the U.S. have died of the virus. An estimated 6,500 are sick or have been exposed while working near someone who tested positive, the union says.

As a result, industry leaders have warned that consumers could see meat shortages in a matter of days. Tyson Foods Inc., one of the world’s largest food companies, ran a full-page advertisem­ent in The New York Times and other newspapers Sunday warning, “The food supply chain is breaking.”

“As pork, beef and chicken plants are being forced to close, even for short periods of time, millions of pounds of meat will disappear from the supply chain,” it read.

Tyson suspended operations at its pork plant in Waterloo, Iowa after a slew of infections, and Smithfield Foods halted production at its plant in Sioux Falls,

South Dakota, after an outbreak infected 853 workers there.

The 15 largest pork-packing plants account for 60% of all pork processed in the U.S., and the country has already seen a 25% reduction in pork slaughter capacity, according to UFCW.

A senior White House official said the administra­tion was trying to prevent a situation in which a “vast majority” of the nation’s meat processing plants might have temporaril­y closed operations, reducing the availabili­ty of meat in supermarke­ts by as much as 80%.

The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the order before its release, said the White House was also working with the Labor Department to provide enhanced safety guidance for meatpackin­g workers. That will include trying to minimize the risk to workers who may be prone to serious complicati­ons from the virus, including strongly recommendi­ng those over the age of 65 and with preexistin­g conditions stay home.

The order, which was developed in consultati­on with industry leaders including Tyson and Smithfield, is designed, in part, to provide companies with additional liability protection­s in case workers get sick.

Trump on Tuesday said the order would address what he described as a “legal roadblock.” It will “solve any liability problems where they had certain liability problems and we’ll be in very good shape.”

Stuart Appelbaum, president of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, said the administra­tion should have acted earlier to put safety measures in place.

“We only wish that this administra­tion cared as much about the lives of working people as it does about meat, pork and poultry products,” he said.

And Kim Cordova, president of UFCW Local 7, which represents 3,000 workers at the JBS meat processing plant in Greeley, said the order “will only ensure that more workers get sick, jeopardizi­ng lives, family’s income, communitie­s, and of course, the country’s food supply chain.”

The administra­tion is working with companies to help them secure protective equipment, like face shields and masks, and ramp up testing, the official said. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion have issued extensive guidelines on steps companies and workers should take.

 ??  ?? Guillermo Rivera welds a frock hook at each meat processing station at the JBS beef plant in Greeley on Thursday. Each station also includes a new sheet-metal partition. More than 100 plant employees have tested positive for COVID-19, and four plant employees and one corporate employee have died of the disease.
Guillermo Rivera welds a frock hook at each meat processing station at the JBS beef plant in Greeley on Thursday. Each station also includes a new sheet-metal partition. More than 100 plant employees have tested positive for COVID-19, and four plant employees and one corporate employee have died of the disease.

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