Keeping America's Food Supply Strong Starts with Worker Safety
- Marc Perrone, President, United Food and Commercial Workers
International Union -
Our country's food supply is facing an unprecedented
threat from the coronavirus outbreak and hundreds of thousands of
American workers in meatpacking and food processing plants are seeing
new cases each week. As America's largest food and retail union, we are
hearing from our 250,000 workers in meatpacking plants every day about
how concerned they are for their safety and the danger facing our food
supply chain.
Make
no mistake, the threat to these workers and our food supply is real,
and without prioritizing worker safety, this collective threat will
only worsen.
To date, we have already documented the tragic deaths of
21 of our meatpacking members and seen 5,000 workers infected or
exposed. As we have all seen, more than 20 plants have shut down to
slow the spread of the virus in South Dakota, Wisconsin, Iowa,
Pennsylvania, Missouri, Indiana and Minnesota.
Elected leaders in states across the country -- both
Republicans and Democrats -- have failed to act quickly enough to
address the urgent safety issues plaguing these plants and putting
these workers and our food supply at risk.
President Trump's new executive order invokes the
Defense Production Act to keep all meatpacking plants open and prevent
any further food supply shortages. But the new White House policy does
not mandate any of the strong worker safety standards needed to protect
these plants and employees from additional outbreaks of the virus.
What the president and far too many of our elected
leaders fail to recognize is that the way these meatpacking plants are
set up requires hundreds of workers to stand in close proximity to one
another for hours on end -- making physical distancing nearly
impossible. Without strong and enforceable safety measures and
protections, these plants
are essentially stationary cruise ships, facing the exact same safety
issues and just as likely to become coronavirus hot spots.
To be clear, shutting plants down is not something
anyone wants. U.S. meatpacking plant closures have already led to a 25
per cent reduction in pork slaughter capacity and a 10 per cent reduction
in beef slaughter capacity. Our meatpacking workers want to work, but
we cannot ignore the dangerous safety issues that exist.
The most critical step to protecting America's food supply is to put safety first for these workers and plants.
State governors claim to share our concern for our
country's food supply and worker safety. Every state must put their
commitment to safety into action by passing executive orders that
define clear and enforceable worker safety standards in every
meatpacking plant in the nation.
Strong state action to increase safety at meatpacking
plants must include the enforcement of six-foot social and physical
distancing to the greatest extent possible and worker access to the
highest level of personal protective equipment (PPE) for when physical
distancing is not possible.
States must also ensure that daily testing is available
for workers and their families, and employers must provide full paid
sick leave so that sick workers are able to stay home and never have to
choose between their health and a paycheck. States must fully enforce
recent CDC [Centers for Disease Control] guidelines on meatpacking and work with federal inspectors
to
provide constant monitoring of these plants to ensure safety measures
are put into place immediately.
In the face of this unprecedented public health crisis,
business and elected leaders must step up and work together with United
Food and Commercial Workers and our local unions across the country to
ensure that these essential workers have the essential protections they
need. Presidential executive orders that fail to prioritize worker
safety
will do nothing to protect our nation's food supply at a time when we
need it most.
We are already seeing beef shortages in fast food
restaurants and limits on meat purchases at grocery stores. Forcing
meatpacking plants to reopen without strong safeguards in place will
backfire and only further worsen the crisis our country is facing.
Americans need strong and swift action from our
country's leaders to put safety first at these meatpacking plants.
Truly protecting our food supply begins and ends with protecting our
nation's workers. This is the only way we can weather this storm and
ensure all Americans have the food they need during this deadly crisis.
This article was published in
Number 33 - May 12, 2020
Article Link:
Keeping America's Food Supply Strong Starts with Worker Safety >
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
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