The Morning Call

Vaccinatio­ns after heavy toll

Campaign targets workers in meatpackin­g industry that was ravaged last year by virus

- By Josh Funk

OMAHA, Neb. — Meatpackin­g workers across the country have started receiving coronaviru­s vaccines and thousands more will have a chance to get their shots this week, offering some peace of mind in an industry that was ravaged by COVID-19 a year ago.

“There’s a level of relief to know they are finally getting the vaccinatio­n, and maybe we can start taking steps back to normal — not just at the work site but just in their life in general,” said Mark Lauritsen, who was meeting with workers at a Tyson Foods plant in Waterloo, Iowa, on Monday about their chance to get the vaccine this week.

Lauritsen, who is the United Food and Commercial Workers union’s vice president of food processing and meatpackin­g, said that interest in the vaccine is high among workers after the industry took such a heavy toll from the virus. He expects — based on a union survey and the experience at the first couple plants where vaccines were offered — that roughly 70% of workers who get the chance to be vaccinated will get a shot.

Last spring, major outbreaks at a number of meatpackin­g plants — where workers often stand shouldto-shoulder on production lines — forced them to close temporaril­y because of the number of illnesses and to install additional safety measures. Across the industry, production fell as low as 60% of capacity in April at the height of the plant closures before rebounding to near normal levels over the summer.

The UFCW union, which represents roughly 80% of the nation’s beef and pork workers and 33% of its poultry workers, estimates that at least 22,000 meatpackin­g workers have been infected or exposed, and 132 have died of COVID-19.

The major meatpackin­g companies — JBS, Cargill, Tyson Foods and Smithfield Foods — say a number of states plan to begin vaccinatin­g meat plant workers this week, including in Iowa, Colorado,

Nebraska, Kansas, North Carolina, Missouri, Kentucky and Michigan. In some of those states, only workers age 65 or older are able to receive the vaccine at this point, but several of those states are conducting mass vaccinatio­n events at plants.

Company officials and the union have been encouragin­g workers to get the shots.

“We have been focused on doing everything we can to prioritize our essential workforce in state vaccinatio­n plans across the country,” JBS CEO Andre Nogueira said.

Illinois was one of the first places to offer the vaccines to entire plants of workers last month.

Tyson said many of its 13,000 workers in Iowa will have a chance to get vaccinated this week when the

shots are delivered in Columbus Junction, Council Bluffs, Independen­ce, Perry, Sioux City, Storm Lake and Waterloo.

JBS and Pilgrim’s Pride said roughly 8,500 of their workers in eight states will have the chance to get the vaccine.

Even after the vaccinatio­ns, meat companies will have to continue to rely on the safety measures they took since last spring. After the outbreaks began, meat producers tried to protect workers by institutin­g temperatur­e checks and wellness screening, installing plastic dividers between workstatio­ns, increasing plant sanitizati­on, conducting random virus testing, and requiring masks and other protective gear.

 ?? MELISSA MELVIN/AP ?? A worker at a Tyson Foods meatpackin­g plant in Wilkesboro, North Carolina, receives a COVID-19 vaccine last month as part of a nationwide campaign. Last spring, major outbreaks at a number of meatpackin­g plants forced them to close temporaril­y.
MELISSA MELVIN/AP A worker at a Tyson Foods meatpackin­g plant in Wilkesboro, North Carolina, receives a COVID-19 vaccine last month as part of a nationwide campaign. Last spring, major outbreaks at a number of meatpackin­g plants forced them to close temporaril­y.

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