The Guardian (USA)

US company agrees to fine for hiring children to clean slaughterh­ouses

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A Tennessee-based sanitation company has agreed to pay more than half a million dollars after a federal investigat­ion found it illegally hired at least two dozen children to clean dangerous meat processing facilities in Iowa and Virginia.

The US labor department announced on Monday that Fayette Janitorial Service LLC entered into a consent judgment, in which the company agrees to nearly $650,000 in civil penalties and the court-ordered mandate that it no longer employ minors. The February filing indicated federal investigat­ors believed at least four children had still been working at one Iowa slaughterh­ouse as of 12 December.

US law prohibits companies from employing people younger than 18 to work in meat processing plants because of the hazards in that industry.

The labor department alleged that Fayette used 15 underage workers at a Perdue Farms plant in Accomac, Virginia, and at least nine at Seaboard Triumph

Foods in Sioux City, Iowa. The work included sanitizing dangerous equipment like head splitters, jaw pullers and meat bandsaws in hazardous conditions where animals are killed and rendered.

One 14-year-old was severely injured while cleaning the drumstick packing line belt at the plant in Virginia, the investigat­ion alleged.

Perdue Farms and Seaboard Triumph Foods said in February they terminated their contracts with Fayette.

The agreement stipulates that Fayette will hire a third-party consultant to monitor the company’s compliance with child labor laws for at least three years, as well as to facilitate trainings. The company must also establish a hotline for individual­s to report concerns about child labor abuses.

A spokespers­on for Fayette told the Associated Press in February that the company was cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion and has a “zero-tolerance policy for minor labor”.

The labor department has called attention to a growing list of child labor violations across the country, including the fatal mangling of a 16-yearold working at a Mississipp­i poultry plant, the death of a 16-year-old after an accident at a sawmill in Wisconsin, and last year’s report of more than 100 children illegally employed by Packers Sanitation Services Inc, or PSSI, across 13 meatpackin­g plants. PSSI paid over $1.5m in civil penalties.

The labor department’s latest statistics indicate the number of children being employed illegally in the US has increased 88% since 2019.

 ?? Photograph: LM Otero/AP ?? Children were employed to sanitize head splitters, jaw pullers and meat bandsaws.
Photograph: LM Otero/AP Children were employed to sanitize head splitters, jaw pullers and meat bandsaws.

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