Guymon Daily Herald

Meat plant cleaning service fined $1.5M for hiring minors

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MINNEAPOLI­S — One of the country’s largest cleaning services for food processing companies employed more than 100 children in dangerous jobs at 13 meatpackin­g plants across the country, the U.S. Department of Labor said Friday as it announced over $1.5 million in civil penalties.

The investigat­ion into Packers Sanitation Services Inc., or PSSI, began last summer. Department officials searched three meatpackin­g plants owned by JBS USA and Turkey Valley Farms in Nebraska and Minnesota, and found 31 underage workers as young as 13. They also searched PSSI’s headquarte­rs in Kieler, Wisconsin. Underage workers were found at plants in eight states.

The department went on to review records for 55 locations where PSSI provided cleaning services and found even more violations, involving children ages 13 to 17. The agency obtained a temporary restrainin­g order in November and a permanent injunction in December, when PSSI entered into a consent judgment that committed the company to no longer employ minors illegally.

Over the past three years, children were found to be using caustic cleaning chemicals and cleaning “dangerous power-driven equipment, like skull-splitters and razor-sharp bone saws,” Jessica Looman, principal deputy administra­tor of the department’s Wage and Hour Division, told reporters.

At least three of those minors, including a 13-year-old, suffered burns from the chemicals used for cleaning at the JBS plant in Grand Island, Nebraska, officials said.

Some of the children worked overnight shifts and were also enrolled in schools during the day, department spokeswoma­n Rhonda Burke said in an email.

The fine PSSI paid on Thursday, $15,138 for each minor, is the maximum allowed under federal law. But investigat­ors believe the company actually employed many more than the 102 children they verified. Under the consent judgment, Looman said, PSSI must identify and remove them from dangerous work.

“Make no mistake, this is no clerical error, or actions of rogue individual­s or bad managers,” Looman said. “These findings represent a systemic failure across PSSI’s entire organizati­on to ensure that children were not working in violation of the law. PSSI’s systems in many cases flagged that these children were too young to work, and yet they were still employed at these facilities.”

The company’s vice president of marketing, Gina Swenson, said in a statement Friday that the company has “a zerotolera­nce policy against employing anyone under the age of 18.”

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