National Post (National Edition)

‘ELBOW TO ELBOW’

NORTH AMERICA MEAT PLANT WORKERS FALL ILL, WALK OFF JOBS

- TOM POLANSEK AND ROD NICKEL

At a Wayne Farms chicken processing plant in Alabama, workers recently had to pay the company 10 cents a day to buy masks to protect themselves from the new coronaviru­s, according to a meat inspector.

In Colorado, nearly a third of the workers at a JBS USA beef plant stayed home amid safety concerns for the last two weeks as a 30-year employee of the facility died following complicati­ons from the virus.

And since an Olymel pork plant in Quebec shut on March 29, the number of workers who tested positive for the coronaviru­s quintupled to more than 50, according to their union. The facility and at least 10 others in North America have closed or reduced production in about the past two weeks because of the pandemic, disrupting food supply chains that have struggled to keep pace with surging demand at grocery stores.

According to more than a dozen interviews with U.S and Canadian plant workers, union leaders and industry analysts, a lack of protective equipment and the nature of “elbow to elbow” work required to debone chickens, chop beef and slice hams are highlighti­ng risks for employees and limiting output as some forgo the low-paying work. Companies that added protection­s, such as enhanced cleaning or spacing out workers, say the moves are further slowing meat production.

Smithfield Foods, the world’s biggest pork processor, on Sunday said it is shutting a pork plant indefinite­ly and warned that plant shutdowns are pushing the United States “perilously close to the edge” in meat supplies for grocers.

Lockdowns that aim to stop the spread of the coronaviru­s have prevented farmers across the globe from delivering produce to consumers. Millions of labourers also cannot get to the fields for harvesting and planting, and there are too few truckers to keep goods moving.

The United States and Canada are among the world’s biggest shippers of beef and pork. Food production has continued as government­s try to ensure adequate supplies, even as they close broad swaths of the economy.

The closures and increased absenteeis­m among workers have contribute­d to drops in the price of livestock, as farmers find fewer places for slaughter. Since March 25, nearby lean hog futures have plunged 35 per cent, and live cattle prices shed 15 per cent, straining the U.S. farm economy.

North American meat demand has dropped some 30 per cent in the past month as declining sales of restaurant meats like steaks and chicken wings outweighed a spike in retail demand for ground beef, said Christine McCracken, Rabobank’s animal protein analyst.

Frozen meats in U.S. cold storage facilities remain plentiful, but supply could be whittled down as exports to protein-hungry China increase after a trade agreement removed obstacles for American meat purchases.

“There’s a huge risk of additional plant closures,” McCracken said.

JBS had to reduce beef production at a massive plant in Greeley, Colorado, as about 800 to 1,000 workers a day stayed home since the end of March, said Kim Cordova, president of the local United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) union that represents employees.

“There’s just not enough people,” Cordova said. She added that the union knew of at least 50 cases and two deaths among employees as of Friday.

Plant worker Saul Sanchez, known affectiona­tely as “Grandpa” among some co-workers, tested positive for the virus and died on April 7 at 78 years old, according to his daughter, Beatriz Rangel. She said he only went from home to work before developing symptoms, including a low fever.

“I’m heartbroke­n because my dad was so loyal,” Rangel said.

Brazilian owned JBS confirmed an employee with three decades of experience died from complicati­ons associated with COVID-19, without naming Sanchez. The company said he had not been at work since March 20, the same day JBS removed people older than 70 from its facilities as a precaution. He was never symptomati­c while at work and never worked in the facility while sick, according to the company.

JBS said it was working with federal and state government­s to obtain tests for all plant employees.

Weld County, where the plant is located, had the fourth highest number of COVID-19 cases of any county in Colorado on Friday, according to the state. Health officials confirmed cases among JBS workers.

JBS said high absenteeis­m at the plant led slaughter rates to outpace the process of cutting carcasses into pieces of beef. The company disputed the union’s numbers on worker absences but did not provide its own. It took steps including buying masks and putting up Plexiglas shields in lunch rooms to protect employees, said Cameron Bruett, spokesman for JBS USA.

At Wayne Farms’ chicken plant in Decatur, Alabama, some workers are upset the company recently made employees pay for masks, said Mona Darby, who inspects chicken breasts there and is a local leader of hundreds of poultry workers for the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union.

“My life is in jeopardy because we’re working elbow to elbow,” she said.

Wayne Farms, with annual sales exceeding US$2 billion, is trying to obtain masks to distribute to employees, though supplies are limited, spokesman Frank Singleton said.

Workers at a Tyson Foods Inc chicken plant in Shelbyvill­e, Tennessee, bought their own masks when the facility ran out, said Kim Hickerson, who loads chicken on trucks there and is a union leader. Some are talking about quitting because they are scared of getting sick, he said.

“I just put it in God’s hands,” he said.

Tyson, the top U.S. meat producer, is working to find more personal protective equipment for employees, spokesman Worth Sparkman said. The company increased cleaning at facilities and sought to space out employees, according to a statement.

Workers have lost their trust in Olymel after an outbreak of the coronaviru­s closed a plant in Yamachiche, Quebec, according to union spokeswoma­n Anouk Collet. “They do not feel that the company took all the measures they could have taken to keep them safe,” she said.

 ?? JIM URQUHART / REUTERS FILES ?? Security wear face mask at JBS USA meat packing plant, where two members of the staff
have died of COVID-19 as it remains operationa­l in Greeley, Co.
JIM URQUHART / REUTERS FILES Security wear face mask at JBS USA meat packing plant, where two members of the staff have died of COVID-19 as it remains operationa­l in Greeley, Co.
 ?? JIM URQUHART / REUTERS ?? Estela Hernanez, a daughter of longtime meat-packing plant employee Saul Sanchez, holds a photo of him after he died of coronaviru­s in Colorado this month.
JIM URQUHART / REUTERS Estela Hernanez, a daughter of longtime meat-packing plant employee Saul Sanchez, holds a photo of him after he died of coronaviru­s in Colorado this month.

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