Houston Chronicle

CDC: Meat plant cases hit minorities hardest

- By David Pitt

A new report studying the impact of the coronaviru­s on workers at meat processing plants has found that 87 percent of people infected were racial or ethnic minorities and that at least 86 workers have died.

The report released Tuesday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention examined more than 16,000 COVID-19 cases at 239 plants in 21 states. It offers perspectiv­e on how the virus devastated U.S. pork, beef and poultry processing plants, but the figures likely understate the problem as Iowa officials declined to participat­e in the study.

Iowa is the nation’s largest pork-producing state and saw severe coronaviru­s outbreaks at several huge processing plants.

The CDC report found 87 percent of coronaviru­s cases occurred among racial and ethnic minorities even though they made up 61 percent of the overall worker population. The data shows 56 percent of coronaviru­s illnesses involved Hispanic workers, 19 percent were non-Hispanic Blacks and 12 percent were Asians. The data showed 13 percent of coronaviru­s cases involved white workers, who made up 39 percent of the overall workforce studied.

“The effects of COVID-19 on racial and ethnic minority groups are not yet fully understood; however, current data indicate a disproport­ionate burden of illness and death among these population­s,” the CDC said. “Ongoing efforts to reduce incidence and better understand the effects of COVID-19 on the health of racial and ethnic minorities are important to ensure that workplace-specific prevention strategies and interventi­on messages are tailored to those groups most affected by COVID-19.”

The agency said about 9 percent of more than 112,600 meatpackin­g plant workers at plants in 14 states came down with the illness caused by the coronaviru­s. The percentage of workers with COVID-19 ranged from 3.1 percent to 24.5 percent per facility.

United Food and Commercial Workers Union Internatio­nal Vice President Mark Lauritsen said workers need real enforcemen­t of the highest safety standards in meatpackin­g and other essential industries.

“This new CDC report makes clear what UFCW has been saying for months. The COVID-19 pandemic is far from over and its impact on front-line workers — especially workers of color — is continuing to increase,“he said. “American workers simply cannot survive with the current patchwork of safety measures put in place by a fraction of companies and states. Without a strong national standard, millions of workers are still unprotecte­d and vulnerable.“

The union, which represents over 250,000 workers in meatpackin­g and food processing, said the CDC data is consistent with its data but likely under counts those affected since the data comes from fewer than half the states. The union said at least 76 workers deaths have been reported at plants it represents and 15,682 workers have been infected or exposed.

A spokeswoma­n for The North American Meat Institute, a trade group for the meat processing industry, did not immediatel­y respond to a message. The animal slaughteri­ng and processing industry employs an estimated 525,000 workers in about 3,500 facilities nationwide.

The CDC noted that Iowa was among the states that didn’t contribute coronaviru­s-related meat processing plant data. Iowa is the nation’s leading pork producer and has about a dozen large-scale meat processing plants. Many had outbreaks sickening hundreds of workers. The Iowa Department of Public Health did not respond to a message seeking comment on why the state didn’t provide the CDC with data.

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