As meat plant infections rise, Canada lets packers
choose when to close
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[May 01, 2020] By
Rod Nickel
WINNIPEG, Manitoba (Reuters) - In Cargill
Inc's High River, Alberta plant, supplier of more than one-third of
Canada's beef, 391 workers were sick with coronavirus when the company
suspended operations, according to provincial health officials.
But Maple Leaf Foods <MFI.TO> decided to idle a poultry plant for eight
days, in Brampton, Ontario, after just three workers were infected.
In Canada's fight against the pandemic, public health officials are
mostly leaving decisions on closing meat plants to the companies, even
though the authorities have power to do so. Alberta Health Services
(AHS), for example, could close a plant with unsafe conditions,
spokesman Tom McMillan said.
The impact of such decisions extends beyond plant walls. They are at the
heart of Alberta's two largest community outbreaks, and could foreshadow
dilemmas likely to emerge as other industries restart.
Canada's stance contrasts a more active U.S. political role with
infected plants, as close-quarters work has led workers in numerous
North American plants to fall ill or walk off the job. President Donald
Trump ordered meat plants on Tuesday to stay open, and state and local
officials earlier pushed successfully for some to close, including
Smithfield Foods' South Dakota slaughterhouse.
Jon Nash, President of Cargill Protein North America, said Cargill
reduced production at its Alberta plant on April 13 and remained open
before closing entirely a week later to avoid wasting food, and because
ranchers needed a market for cattle.
Factors outside the Cargill plant, such as crowded households and
carpooling, contributed to the spread in High River, health officials
said.
Cargill said on Wednesday that High River would resume reduced
production on May 4 after a two-week closure for cleaning and additional
safety measures.
Cargill's decision to operate as long as it did before the temporary
closure rankled some workers.
"It absolutely pisses me off," said Jamie Welsh-Rollo, a single mom who
seals meat in plastic in the High River plant, and is a United Food and
Commercial Workers Union (UFCW) shop steward. "We're looked at as
numbers."
At least eight Canadian meat plants have closed temporarily due to the
pandemic. As of Wednesday, 821 Cargill workers at High River, about 37%
of the workforce, were infected, including one death.
And Cargill is not alone. A JBS SA <JBSS3.SA> beef plant in Brooks,
Alberta slowed production but remains open after 276 infections and one
death.
CAUTION AT MAPLE LEAF
Maple Leaf, in closing its Ontario plant, considered that the city of
Brampton itself was a coronavirus hotspot and that the company was short
of face masks to supply all 340 workers, said Randy Huffman, its chief
food safety officer.
The few initial cases eventually tallied 26 after more testing.
"There were some challenging discussions," Huffman said in an interview.
"We needed to have greater confidence that the plant could operate
safely."
[to top of second column] |
A man works to sterilize meat processing and packaging equipment at
the Maple Leaf Foods plant in Toronto August 21, 2008. Canadian
health officials searched for more clues on Thursday into the source
and extent of a listeriosis food poisoning outbreak that has made
more than a dozen people sick and caused one death. The company and
health officials found listeria monocytogenes in two products made
by the company, although genetic testing has not yet determined
whether it is the same strain that caused the outbreak, associate
chief medical officer David Williams said. REUTERS/Mark Blinch/File
Photo
A deadly illness outbreak 12 years earlier due to contaminated meat in a Maple
Leaf plant factored in its response, he said.
While Maple Leaf made the decision to close, it consulted widely, Huffman said -
with an occupational health doctor, local and federal health authorities.
"I don't think leaving it up to any one entity is the best outcome."
In rare examples of Canadian authorities stepping in, British Columbia health
regions closed United Poultry on April 21 after 28 cases were found at the
Vancouver plant, and shut Superior Poultry on April 24 after two initial cases.
In High River, Welsh-Rollo feared passing the virus to her four-year-old son,
who has an auto-immune deficiency, and saw problems with Cargill's precautions.
Cargill asked health screening questions in English to workers entering the
plant, many of whom are immigrants or foreign workers, she said. The 31-year-old
plant was too cramped to make distancing measures effective, she said.
Cargill's Nash said the company has worked closely with AHS on safety protocols,
including face masks for workers.
Adrienne South, spokeswoman for Alberta's Labour Minister, said multiple
ministries helped ensure the plant's safety but added that "the Canadian Food
Inspection Agency (CFIA) is responsible for the plant."
CFIA said in a statement that it cannot suspend plant operations over
coronavirus, since its authority to stop food production over health risks is
limited to food safety concerns.
The decisions to prolong operations baffle Sylvain Charlebois, director of the
Agri-Food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University, an institute that analyzes food
and agriculture issues.
"I don't understand why it took so long (to close) at High River and I don’t
understand why Brooks is still operating," he said.
(Reporting by Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Manitoba; additional reporting by Tom
Polansek in Chicago, Allison Martell and Moira Warburton in Toronto and Kelsey
Johnson in Ottawa; Editing by Denny Thomas and Edward Tobin)
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