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Jilly_in_VA

(9,965 posts)
Tue Nov 16, 2021, 01:00 PM Nov 2021

Historic failure': pandemic tragedies in the meatpacking industry were decades in the making

Early in the pandemic, Covid outbreaks were rampant in America’s meatpacking plants – the factories that kill, cut and package animals.

But the chairman of one of biggest meat companies in the US, Tyson, argued that these factories should stay open to feed Americans.

“It is as essential as healthcare,” John Tyson wrote in several newspaper ads. Days later President Donald Trump issued an executive order to keep meat plants running.

The following month, 49 meatpacking workers died of Covid.

The message was clear: Americans needed meat, and workers needed to risk their lives to provide it. And Osha – the labor department agency that is supposed to protect workers – could seemingly do little to protect them.

In a factory in Greeley, Colorado, owned by meat conglomerate JBS, at least six workers died early in the pandemic. Osha is supposed to investigate every workplace fatality reported to them, but it took months for them to send an investigator.

When Osha finally showed up to investigate, it found JBS failed to make its workplace free of “hazards that were causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm”. The penalty: a proposed fine of $13,494.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/nov/16/meatpacking-industry-covid-outbreaks-workers
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It's still The Jungle out there.

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Historic failure': pandemic tragedies in the meatpacking industry were decades in the making (Original Post) Jilly_in_VA Nov 2021 OP
We need to move away from centralized food sources pandr32 Nov 2021 #1

pandr32

(11,579 posts)
1. We need to move away from centralized food sources
Tue Nov 16, 2021, 01:38 PM
Nov 2021

Many efforts have been made to strengthen community sourcing, but they don't seem enough. I think the Farm to Table was one of the better ones. Still, with fast-food chains and large supermarket chains still controlling the market the Big Food suppliers are still stomping out competitors.
It seems strange to me. On one hand we have all these 'States rights' and anti-central government loudmouths when it comes to anything government, yet on the other hand we have corporate monstrosities that span the nation and beyond with little accountability or concern regarding their destructive, predatory all-for-me business model.

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