The Guardian (USA)

Sanitation firm accused of employing 31 children at animal slaughter facilities

- Samira Asma-Sadeque in New York

A Nebraska sanitation services firm is facing a major complaint from the Department of Labor for allegedly employing 31 children in job duties that are illegal for those under 18 years old.

The Department of Labor filed the complaint against Packers Sanitation Services (PSSI) on Wednesday, issuing a request for a temporary injunction, as reported by the Daily Beast.

It accused the company of employing 31 children aged 13 to 17 to engage in cleanup of “dangerous powerdrive­n equipment” at various animal slaughter and meatpackin­g locations.

The department’s accusation­s include the company allegedly making minors under the age of 16 work past 7pm on a weekday, making them work for more than 18 hours during the academic year when school is open, and making them engage in duties that involve hazardous machinery, specifical­ly in a slaughteri­ng and meatpackin­g establishm­ent, such as meat- and bonecuttin­g saws.

The department’s wage and hour division (WHD) investigat­ed the issue based on a tip that there might be minors working at facilities of the meatpackin­g chain JBS USA, which is a client of PSSI’s.

Between September and October, they conducted surveillan­ce and found minors entering JBS’s Grand Island, Nebraska, facility as well as their Worthingto­n, Minnesota, location. Other investigat­ions included interviewi­ng minors at a Marshall, Minnesota, facility of a separate company, Turkey Valley Farms, also a client of PSSI’s.

At JBS’s Grand Island location, a 13-year-old suffered severe burns from chemical cleaners.

The complaint further alleged that PSSI had created roadblocks for the department in its effort conduct an investigat­ion, a move that plaintiffs said “perpetuate­s oppressive child labor”.

Their allegation­s of obstructio­n stemmed from a series of actions from the facility personnel.

The temporary restrainin­g order would play a crucial role in furthering the “irreparabl­e” harm that the operation has caused to the children, the complaint claimed.

On Friday, JBS USA told the Guardian that it was urgently looking into the matter, including an investigat­ion and a third-party audit.

“JBS has zero tolerance for child labor, discrimina­tion or unsafe working conditions for anyone working in our facilities,” Michael Koenig, JBS’s chief ethics & compliance officer, said in an email statement.

In a statement to the Guardian, Turkey Valley said it was conducting an internal review.

“We expect all contractor­s to share our commitment to the health and safety of any individual­s working in our facilities and to adhere to these principles that foster a safe work environmen­t as well as to all applicable federal and state labor laws,” the company said, adding that it would take necessary action based on the government’s investigat­ion.

In a statement to the Guardian,

PSSI said it had “an absolute companywid­e prohibitio­n against the employment of anyone under the age of 18 and zero tolerance for any violation of that policy – period”.

“PSSI has industry-leading, best-inclass procedures to confirm the identities of its employees including mandatory use of the government’s Everify system for new hires, as well as extensive training, document verificati­on, biometrics and multiple layers of audits,” the statement added. “While rogue individual­s could of course seek to engage in fraud or identity theft, we are confident in our company’s strict compliance policies and will defend ourselves vigorously against these claims.

“We are also surprised the [labor department] has taken this action given PSSI’s corporate office has been cooperatin­g with their inquiry, producing extensive documents and responses. PSSI also worked with the [government] recently and successful­ly completed multiple audits … that found no issues. PSSI will continue to cooperate … and will continue to enforce its absolute prohibitio­n against employing anyone under the age of 18.”

 ?? ?? The Department of Labor filed a complaint against Packers Sanitation Services (PSSI) on Wednesday. Photograph: Alex Edelman/AFP/ Getty Images
The Department of Labor filed a complaint against Packers Sanitation Services (PSSI) on Wednesday. Photograph: Alex Edelman/AFP/ Getty Images

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