Boston Sunday Globe

CEO of pot firm visits Mass. site

Follows Trulieve worker death probe Unionizati­on effort also underway

- By Dan Adams GLOBE STAFF

Kim Rivers, the chief executive of Florida-based marijuana conglomera­te Trulieve, traveled to Massachuse­tts and met with workers Friday afternoon at the company’s Framingham dispensary — a visit that comes after the death of a worker at Trulieve’s Holyoke production facility and amid a campaign to unionize workers at the firm’s four locations in the state.

Trulieve faces multiple investigat­ions over the January death of Lorna McMurrey, 27, who collapsed at the company’s cultivatio­n and processing facility in Holyoke while filling prerolled joints with ground marijuana. She died at a hospital several days later.

Federal workplace safety officials later said the cause was “occupation­al asthma due to exposure to ground cannabis” dust, and that other employees faced similar conditions — but also determined that Trulieve had not failed to protect its workers.

Rivers refused to answer questions about the Holyoke tragedy from a Globe reporter at the Framingham marijuana store Friday, and Trulieve managers immediatel­y asked the reporter to leave. Rivers later exited hurriedly through a side door and drove away in a chauffeure­d SUV.

Later Friday, a Trulieve spokesman said the trip was part of Rivers’s “normal duties.”

“Kim’s visit is exactly what a good CEO does and it’s what she will continue to do: travel to, meet with, and listen to employees,” he said.

An investigat­ion into McMurrey’s death by the US Department of Labor’s Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion led to a fine of more than $32,000 for failing to train workers about the danger and not keeping records of hazardous materials at the production center. Trulieve is contesting the investigat­ion’s findings.

The company is also being investigat­ed by the state Department of Public Health and the Cannabis Control Commission, which said earlier this month that it had already begun a probe of the Holyoke facility in response to worker complaints the fall before McMurrey died.

Trulieve on Thursday released what it called a rebuttal to “false reporting” about the tragedy. In it, a spokesman said N95 masks were available to workers at its Holyoke facility, and the plant was equipped with an industrial air-filtering system. He also said that managers offered McMurrey the day off with pay after

she initially complained of not feeling well, and that she opted to continue working.

“When Ms. McMurrey began to appear to be in distress, Trulieve followed appropriat­e protocols,” the company said. “A manager promptly called 911.”

The firm also asserted that three workers trained in CPR attempted to revive McMurrey, and denied reports in other publicatio­ns that emergency medical workers had been delayed by security staff at the plant when they arrived to help.

“Our thoughts are with the McMurrey family for their loss,” the statement concluded. “Trulieve will continue to operate its facilities in a manner that fully protects the health and safety of all employees. We are confident we did so in January and will continue to do so going forward.”

Dave Bruneau, McMurrey’s stepfather, was not available for comment on the company’s version of events. He previously told the Globe that McMurrey had asked if she could borrow respirator­s from his workplace in the weeks before she collapsed at work, and said he wanted investigat­ors to determine whether Trulieve bears any responsibi­lity for her death.

Employee concerns about the tragedy are now fueling a drive by two chapters of the United Food and Commercial Workers union to organize Trulieve workers at the Holyoke facility as well the company’s retail shops in Framingham, Northampto­n, and Worcester.

Aidan Coffey, the organizing director for UFCW Local 1445, said many workers learned of McMurrey’s death before it became public in September and that the tragedy helped catalyze support for unionizati­on.

“You can draw a direct line from what happened in Holyoke and when Trulieve workers started talking about organizing,” he said. “The death of a worker is very concerning to them, and it’s definitely a big part of the motivation behind the conversati­ons about the union.”

The UFCW alleged a series of violations by Trulieve in filings to the National Labor Relations Board this past week, claiming that the company fired a worker at its Framingham store in retaliatio­n for supporting unionizati­on and that managers have been inappropri­ately interrogat­ing, surveillin­g, and discouragi­ng employees who are interested in joining.

“They’ve unleashed quite a union-busting campaign,” Coffey said.

A spokesman for Trulieve strongly denied those allegation­s.

“We have not officially received any charges filed by the UFCW with the NLRB,” he said in a statement. “If or when we are notified that charges have been filed, we will respond to them promptly. However, the employee in question was let go as a result of his unacceptab­le workplace behavior toward his fellow workers . . . . Any other suggestion is false.”

Coffey said the union plans to lobby for a new law in Massachuse­tts requiring licensed marijuana companies to sign labor peace agreements that would allow their employees to meet with organizers and vote on whether to unionize without company interferen­ce. Several other states in the Northeast that have legalized marijuana, including Connecticu­t, already impose such a requiremen­t.

 ?? ?? Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers’s visit to the state was part of her “normal duties,” a spokesman said. The company faces investigat­ions over a worker death in Mass.
Trulieve CEO Kim Rivers’s visit to the state was part of her “normal duties,” a spokesman said. The company faces investigat­ions over a worker death in Mass.
 ?? BARRY CHIN/GLOBE STAFF ?? CEO Kim Rivers left Trulieve’s facility in Framingham on Friday without answering questions about a worker death.
BARRY CHIN/GLOBE STAFF CEO Kim Rivers left Trulieve’s facility in Framingham on Friday without answering questions about a worker death.

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