USA TODAY US Edition

Plants pressured feds to stay open

Industry wrote draft similar to Trump’s order

- Sky Chadde, Kyle Bagenstose and Rachel Axon

Even as thousands of their employees fell ill with COVID-19, meatpackin­g executives pressured federal regulators to help keep their plants open, according to a trove of emails obtained by USA TODAY.

The emails show how a major meatpackin­g trade group, the North American Meat Institute, provided the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e with a draft version of an executive order that would allow plants to remain open. A week later, President Donald Trump signed an order with similar language, which caused confusion over whether local health authoritie­s could close plants during COVID-19 outbreaks.

The companies and their trade organizati­ons tried to thwart health department­s’ orders to close plants by asking the USDA to intervene.

“The industry ran to the White House as meat and poultry workers all across the country were getting sick and dying to say, ‘Let us stay open and have USDA intimidate health department­s, so they can’t close us down because our profits are more important than workers’ health and communitie­s’ health,’ ” said Debbie Berkowitz, who spent six years as chief of staff and senior policy adviser at the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion and is director of the National Employment Law Project’s worker health and safety program.

The emails were obtained through a Freedom of

Informatio­n Act request by Public Citizen and American Oversight and shared with USA TODAY and the Midwest Center for Investigat­ive Reporting. ProPublica, which also requested the emails from the USDA, first reported on the contents Monday afternoon.

Adam Pulver, a Public Citizen attorney, said the “degree of collaborat­ion” between Trump administra­tion officials and industry in the emails is “astounding.”

“As outbreaks continue to emerge in meatpackin­g plants, it is stunning to see the cavalier attitude officials took to the health and safety of workers in the early part of the pandemic,” he said.

Julie Ann Potts, president and CEO of the North American Meat Institute, said her group and many other trade organizati­ons “routinely suggest legislativ­e language.”

“The Meat Institute was working with numerous federal agencies to help obtain PPE (personal protective equipment) and testing for employees, to ensure meat and poultry could be diverted from food service channels to meet retail demand, and to serve as a liaison between the government and the industry on many other issues during the crisis,” she said in a statement.

A White House spokespers­on said to contact the USDA, which did not respond to a request for comment Monday.

At least 39,000 positive COVID-19 cases have been tied to meatpackin­g plants, and at least 184 workers have died, according to the Midwest Center for Investigat­ive Reporting.

The draft executive order the Meat Institute gave the USDA in April includes language that would have directly ordered plants to “continue their operations to the fullest extent possible.”

The order Trump signed April 28, did not include that language. Trump granted Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue the authority to use the Defense Production Act to keep meatpackin­g plants open. Some companies interprete­d that as the federal government helping them acquire protective gear.

Other language in the draft is similar to what was published a week later.

The draft order reads, “Since then, we have seen some of these operations reduce their capacity and output due to issues related to COVID- 19.”

The president’s executive order reads, “However, outbreaks of COVID-19 among workers at some processing facilities have led to the reduction in some of those facilities’ production capacity.”

An industry approachin­g a federal agency with a draft regulation or other policy isn’t unusual, said James Brudney, a professor at Fordham Law School and former chief counsel of the U.S. Senate Subcommitt­ee on Labor.

But proposed regulation­s are vetted in a more public setting than executive orders. It is strange, he said, how quickly the draft executive order seemed to move without input from other stakeholde­rs in and outside government.

“Wealthy interest groups lobby decision makers in Washington all the time,” he said. “They might get a draft from industry, but it wouldn’t just sail through because there would be other parties involved. That seems not to have happened here.”

Requests from Smithfield

Officials at Smithfield Foods, among the largest U.S. meatpacker­s, sent frequent emails in May to USDA officials asking for help to reopen its plants.

Smithfield closed its Sioux Falls, South Dakota, plant April 12 after more than 350 employees tested positive for COVID-19.

Three weeks later, Smithfield’s Vice President of Government Affairs Michael Skahill asked the USDA for a direct order to reopen the plant. The request was sent in an email May 4 to USDA Undersecre­tary for Food Safety Mindy Brashears and Chief of Staff to the Secretary of Agricultur­e Joby Young.

Skahill told Brashears and Young in a separate email that the company was in compliance with CDC and OSHA guidelines for operating a plant safely.

Brashears responded that the USDA received notice the plant was in compliance and said it could reopen.

“Is this essentiall­y an order to reopen?” Skahill asked.

“We expect you to re-open as soon as possible,” Brashears replied.

On May 6, Brashears emailed other Smithfield executives that the USDA expected the plant to resume operations “immediatel­y.”

The Sioux Falls plant reopened the next day.

Brashears and Young didn’t respond to an email requesting comment Monday. Smithfield spokeswoma­n Keira Lombardo emailed the following response Tuesday:

“We are a leading American agricultur­e company. Considerin­g that fact, why wouldn’t we engage with the United States Department of Agricultur­e amid an unpreceden­ted pandemic?”

About 1,300 workers at the Sioux Falls plant have tested positive for COVID-19, and four have died. On Sept. 10, the U.S. Department of Labor fined Smithfield about $13,000 for failing to protect workers.

Smithfield asked the USDA for help reopening another plant in Illinois.

On April 24, the Kane County Health Department ordered the plant to close to improve safety measures. According to the Chicago Tribune, there had been several complaints about the plant before it was ordered closed.

On May 6, the same day the USDA ordered Smithfield’s Sioux Falls plant reopened, the company asked the USDA to “referee” its talks with the Health Department.

It’s unclear from the emails what happened, but on May 8, a Smithfield executive emailed Brashears and other USDA officials: “Thank you for all your support today with the Smithfield St. Charles Kane County issue. I think we have a resolution that will allow us to process next week and put protein on America’s table.”

The plant employs about 300 people, and three workers have died there, according to WBEZ Chicago.

Lawrence Gostin, a Georgetown professor and director of the World Health Organizati­on Collaborat­ing Center on National and Global Health Law, said having a government body intervene on behalf of a company is “outrageous.”

“To have government regulatory agencies intervene in a public health matter on behalf of a business interest is appalling,” he said. “As a result, people die. It’s not just an ethical breach or something that’s a sterile issue of good governance, which it is. It also costs people’s lives, and that’s unforgivab­le.”

Line speeds increased

Emails show that the National Chicken Council, which represents poultry plants, appealed to high-level USDA officials to remove limits on how fast plants run their cutting lines.

In April, before dozens of plants closed because of COVID-19, the USDA allowed 15 plants – more than the agency had ever approved in a single month – to operate at faster line speeds. At least six of the plants with waivers have had COVID-19 outbreaks.

Speeding up the lines where workers cut chicken typically leads to more crowding, according to a Government Accountabi­lity Report in 2016, a dangerous situation when confrontin­g COVID-19.

In late April, the Chicken Council emailed Brashears to ask for help on another matter: overturnin­g a local agency’s decision to test all workers at a few plants. The names of the health department and the plants are redacted in the emails.

If all workers were tested, many would come back positive and the plants would not be able to operate for at least a week, according to the email.

The health department “is requiring 100% testing of all employees regardless if they are symptomati­c or not. This is a decision that we have been unable to change,” the email reads.

Chicken Council spokesman Tom Super told USA TODAY the council fought the agency’s decision to test all workers because the CDC has never recommende­d that measure.

Industry leader Tyson Foods tested all of its workers at several plants over the summer.

“The message to workers and the communitie­s is, ‘We’re throwing you under the bus, and we don’t really care about containing this disease,’ ” Berkowitz said about the contents of the emails. “It sends a green light to the industry, ‘Just continue the way you’re doing it.’ ”

This story is a collaborat­ion between USA TODAY and the Midwest Center for Investigat­ive Reporting. The center is an independen­t, nonprofit newsroom based in Illinois offering investigat­ive and enterprise coverage of agribusine­ss, Big Ag and related issues. Gannett funds a fellowship at the center for expanded coverage of agribusine­ss and its impact on communitie­s.

 ?? USDA RECORDS ?? The meat industry sent a draft executive order to the USDA. A week later, President Trump ordered the secretary of agricultur­e to take “all appropriat­e action” to maintain operations.
USDA RECORDS The meat industry sent a draft executive order to the USDA. A week later, President Trump ordered the secretary of agricultur­e to take “all appropriat­e action” to maintain operations.
 ?? USDA RECORDS USDA RECORDS ?? In early May, Smithfield foods sought a federal order to reopen its pork plant in Sioux Falls, N.D. In this email exchange between company and USDA officials, the company gets what it wanted.
On April 3, the North American Meat Institute asked Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue to help get the word out: Fear of COVID-19 is not a reason to quit your meatpackin­g job.
USDA RECORDS USDA RECORDS In early May, Smithfield foods sought a federal order to reopen its pork plant in Sioux Falls, N.D. In this email exchange between company and USDA officials, the company gets what it wanted. On April 3, the North American Meat Institute asked Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue to help get the word out: Fear of COVID-19 is not a reason to quit your meatpackin­g job.
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