The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service (USDA/FSIS) proposed a rule on Feb. 1 to alter inspection procedures for hog slaughter plants by revoking the existing cap on maximum line speeds and transferring key inspection tasks from USDA inspectors to private plant workers. These changes to current practices raise numerous concerns for worker health and safety, all of which the agency fails to address in the proposal.
Because of these concerns, Center for Progressive Reform (CPR) Member Scholars Martha McCluskey, Tom McGarity, Sid Shapiro, Rena Steinzor, and I sent comments to the agency on April 30, urging it to go back to the drawing board and account for the considerable worker health and safety risks its proposal creates before moving forward.
Meatpacking workers endure some of the most dangerous working conditions in the nation. Workers are exposed to cold, wet, noisy, and slippery conditions. Because these jobs require thousands of forceful repetitive motions per shift, musculoskeletal disorders like carpal tunnel and shoulder injuries are rampant across the industry. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, meatpacking workers experience injuries at a rate of 4.3 injuries per 100 workers, compared to the national average of 2.8 injuries per 100 workers.
Despite the awful working conditions, USDA is proposing to revoke the existing cap that dictates the maximum speed at which plants can operate their lines, exposing workers to a greater risk of injuries, including amputations and disabling musculoskeletal disorders. When workers are hurt on the job, they're forced to rely on a failing workers' compensation system that pays a small portion of their wages. In other words, when workers inside meatpacking plants are injured, they're left strapped with the physical pain from their injuries, plus emotional stress and medical bills. The workers most at risk from this proposal are low-paid, non-unionized Hispanic immigrants and other minorities living in rural communities. As we explain in our letter, a proposal that fosters this level of inequity and injustice is cruel, and frankly, beneath the civil servants of USDA and FSIS.
Another concern is that the proposal would remove many USDA inspectors from the plants and transfer their responsibilities to plant employees. Yet the agency does nothing to provide plant workers with protection from retaliation for reporting tainted products. Workers who are discouraged from reporting concerns may fear doing so because they don't want to lose their jobs or experience hostility from their supervisors. For undocumented immigrants, they have the added stress of their employer threatening to call the Department of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The proposal also fails to mandate that the plants provide specific training to workers to ensure they are capable and competent to carry out these new inspection tasks.
Our letter calls on USDA/FSIS to account for all effects of its rulemaking, rather than looking solely at industry savings while ignoring the very real impact of this rule on workers. Regulations that seek to assist the swine slaughter industry with maximizing its profits and that seek to achieve a very modest cut to agency costs – as this rule proposes to do – certainly should not and must not come at the expense of worker safety and health, food safety, animal welfare, or the environment.
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Katie Tracy | May 1, 2018
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's Food Safety and Inspection Service (USDA/FSIS) proposed a rule on Feb. 1 to alter inspection procedures for hog slaughter plants by revoking the existing cap on maximum line speeds and transferring key inspection tasks from USDA inspectors to private plant workers. These changes to current practices raise numerous concerns for […]
Daniel Farber | April 30, 2018
“They sat at the Agency and said, ‘What can we do to reimagine authority under the statutes to regulate an area that we are unsure that we can but we’re going to do so anyway?'” When he said those words, Scott Pruitt was talking about the Obama administration. But it seems to be a pretty […]
Laurie Ristino | April 25, 2018
Last week, the House Agriculture Committee passed a pock-marked, micro-legislated Farm Bill along strict party lines. It’s a shameful goody bag of legislative delights for a few that comes at the expense of the majority of the American people. Some lowlights: The bill holds our hungriest Americans hostage by conditioning SNAP benefits (food stamps) on […]
Katie Tracy | April 25, 2018
On Saturday, April 28, CPR will observe Workers' Memorial Day by remembering fallen workers whose lives were taken from this world too soon and by renewing our pledge to fight for all working people. Every day in this country, 14 workers leave for work, never to return home. One worker is killed on the job […]
James Goodwin | April 24, 2018
Tomorrow, anti-environmental members of the House Natural Resources Committee will hold a hearing provocatively titled, “The Weaponization of the National Environmental Policy Act and the Implications of Environmental Lawfare” – yet another in a long line of conservatives’ attempts to justify myriad legislative attacks against this bedrock environmental law. As more than 100 CPR Member […]
Elena Franco | April 18, 2018
This post is part of a series about climate change and the increasing risk of floods releasing toxic chemicals from industrial facilities. As Hurricane Harvey lingered over Texas in 2017, it created a wall of water that swallowed much of Houston. Catastrophic flooding over a wide swath of southern Texas left towns, cities, and the […]
Daniel Farber | April 13, 2018
An MIT professor has a great idea for a molten metal battery that could outperform lithium batteries. Of course, like many great ideas, this one might not pan out. But even if it does pan out technically, Grist explains one reason why it might never get to the commercial stage: Ultimately, the thing that makes […]
James Goodwin | April 12, 2018
This morning, CPR Member Scholar and George Washington University Law Professor Emily Hammond is set to testify before the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Regulatory Reform, Commercial, and Antitrust Law at a hearing that will look at two highly flawed bills. While their particulars differ, each is conspicuously (if a bit clumsily) designed to rig […]
Matthew Freeman | April 11, 2018
CPR’s Member Scholars and staff are off to a fast start on the op-ed front in 2018. We list them all on our op-ed page, but here’s a quick roundup of pieces they’ve placed so far. Member Scholar Alejandro Camacho joins his UC-Irvine colleague Michael Robinson-Dorn in a piece published by The Conversation. In “Turning power […]