Daily Press

Union threatens to strike at Smithfield plant in Sioux Falls

- By Stephen Groves

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — Workers at a South Dakota meatpackin­g plant that became a coronaviru­s hot spot last year are considerin­g a strike after contract negotiatio­ns with Smithfield Foods stalled, the union said Wednesday.

The Sioux Falls chapter of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union threatened to move for a walkout and work stoppage if the Virginia-based company does not resume negotiatio­ns on a new fouryear contract. The dispute has centered on the wages for meatpackin­g employees, health care costs and break times. The union said workers have risked their health and lives throughout the pandemic, arguing the company should do more for its employees.

The plant became an early indicator of just how vulnerable meatpackin­g plants were to the pandemic when a surge of infections surfaced among workers in April last year. Four plant workers died from COVID19, and nearly 1,300 were infected. The Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion cited Smithfield Foods for failing to protect employees from exposure to the coronaviru­s at the plant.

“It is stunning that Smithfield still refuses to work together with UFCW Local 304A to reach an agreement that recognizes the incredible service of these dedicated South Dakotan workers,” the local union president, B.J. Motley, said in a statement.

Union members will vote this week on the company’s current contract offer. According to the union, the proposed contract starts employees off at $18 an hour and cuts a 15-minute break period. The union is pressing to start employees at $19 an hour, as well as avoid increases to employees’ health insurance premiums and allow more time for medical leave.

Smithfield Foods did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

If the contract is not approved, union members could then vote to consider striking, but that would not become an option until Monday, when a contract extension deadline expires.

Smithfield CEO Kenneth Sullivan has aggressive­ly defended how the company handled the virus outbreak. Local union leaders have said that after the meatpackin­g plant shut down for several weeks last year amid the outbreak, the company implemente­d most of the measures recommende­d by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But it has maintained that workers are still at risk to the virus as they work shoulder-to-shoulder on butchering lines.

“While vaccinatio­ns are increasing in South Dakota, the COVID risks these frontline workers face are still here and Smithfield must recognize this reality,” Motley said.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Four plant workers died from COVID-19 and nearly 1,300 were infected last year after a coronaviru­s outbreak at the Smithfield Foods pork processing plant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Four plant workers died from COVID-19 and nearly 1,300 were infected last year after a coronaviru­s outbreak at the Smithfield Foods pork processing plant in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

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