Join us.

We’re working to create a just society and preserve a healthy environment for future generations. Donate today to help.

Donate

Tweaks to Bad Chicken Processing Rule Leave Workers and Consumers in the Lurch; Rule Hurtles Out of the White House Door at Record Speed

We’ve received the bad news from impeccable sources that the much-criticized USDA poultry processing rule has passed White House review at record speed—20 days, count ‘em!—and will be released late this afternoon.  As usual, the process of OIRA review was shrouded in secrecy, with affected stakeholders filing in and out of the White House to talk about a rule they had never seen to taciturn OIRA officials who had long since cut a deal with USDA.  Of course, the late afternoon release is designed to forestall criticism in the same news cycle that will report the White House spin on the rule.  But we know enough about it to make some basic observations.

Our sources informed us that the rule will allow companies to have processing lines that run at the speed of 140 birds per minute—that’s 2.3 chickens every single second, although it’s also the current USDA maximum, allowing USDA to claim that the new rule doesn’t make matters any worse. 

OSHA, which was deeply involved in negotiations with USDA, clearly views this outcome as a great victory because it reduces by 35 birds/minute the original and outlandish USDA proposal that line speeds increase to 175 birds/minute.  But saving workers from the furthest reach of bad conditions without beginning to address their documented daily misery is incremental change, not victory. The plain truth is that study after study, including a recent NIOSH report, have documented severe ergonomic injuries at line speeds significantly below 140 birds/minute.  OSHA didn’t review those studies dispassionately in a rulemaking that would honor its mission of protecting workers from harm.  Instead, it played a numbers game with USDA under the watchful eye of White House staffers, leaving an already bad working situation to fester.

The final rule contains a requirement that chicken processing plants put up a poster informing workers that they have the right to report ergonomic injuries.  The plant operators must accept such reports and make them available for OSHA scrutiny.  This requirement is also a modest improvement on the status quo: some plants allow workers suffering shooting pains in their arms and hands to visit with a nurse, but fire them if they go see a doctor.  But does anyone really think that this requirement will be honored by such ruthless employers or that this cowed, unorganized work force will be courageous enough to make such reports?  Only systematic and vigorous enforcement will produce such results.  We’ll be watching to see if OSHA can muster some.

Also as a result of this rule, federal inspectors will be pulled off the processing lines, breaking a key link in the thin chain of ensuring food safety that has already failed us too many times, most notably in the Foster Farms fiasco. Rather than having skilled, independent inspectors watching operations in the plant, the rule shifts inspection to company employees who are sensitive to production quotas and job stability. In addition there is an  absence of minimum standards for preventing Salmonella and Campylobacter contamination that continues to threaten millions of consumers. 

The rule was with OIRA for 20 days — the blink of an eye by OIRA standards, and the speed with which it shot through may be the best indication that it does not address the many concerns that prominent consumer groups, public health advocates, labor unions, worker safety advocates, and the National Council of La Raza raised in public comments to the USDA. Why La Raza?  Thirty-four percent of poultry processing workers are Hispanics, working for wages a bit better than the minimum wage in among the harshest conditions anywhere in American industry. If the rule modernized anything in a good way, OIRA’s typical practice would be to open it up to a months-long drubbing by industry.

CPR has amply documented the achingly slow pace of OIRA’s review of a range of rules aimed at protecting workers, consumers and the environment. In the past, rules to enact key provisions of the Food Modernization and Safety Act of 2010 have been stuck at OIRA long past the prescribed 90-day review period, and thousands of Americans continue to get sick from food-borne illnesses that are easily preventable. The Obama Administration has allowed exactly one OSHA health standard to emerge from the OIRA process: a proposed rule to protect people whose work exposes them to silica dust.  It has been 15 years in the making. 

Like the Bush Administration before it, the Obama White House claims the OIRA process is used to strengthen rules; history demonstrates otherwise. This shameful exercise in non-review is more of the same. We will be looking through the rule when it is posted in the Federal Register, but we’re willing to bet that it has a lot more in store for industry than for workers and consumers.

Editors' note: the rule has yet to be released.  Please keep an eye on CPRBlog for further analysis as soon as the rule’s text is available

Showing 2,887 results

Rena Steinzor | July 30, 2014

Tweaks to Bad Chicken Processing Rule Leave Workers and Consumers in the Lurch; Rule Hurtles Out of the White House Door at Record Speed

We’ve received the bad news from impeccable sources that the much-criticized USDA poultry processing rule has passed White House review at record speed—20 days, count ‘em!—and will be released late this afternoon.  As usual, the process of OIRA review was shrouded in secrecy, with affected stakeholders filing in and out of the White House to […]

Rena Steinzor | July 28, 2014

Silly “Secret Science” Scheme Slithers to the Senate

It must be something of a game for them.  That’s really the only explanation I can come up with for why the antiregulatory members of Congress seem so intent on competing with each other to see who can introduce the most outlandish, over-the-top anti-EPA bill.  If it is a game, then its best competitors would […]

James Goodwin | July 28, 2014

The GAO’s Scathing Report on the SBA Office of Advocacy: 15 Big Revelations

As I noted here last week, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) published a report that delivered a scathing review of the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Office of Advocacy.  The GAO report’s general objective was to assess whether and to what extent the SBA Office of Advocacy is fulfilling its core mission of serving as a […]

James Goodwin | July 22, 2014

CPR’s Persistent Watchdogging of Embattled SBA Office of Advocacy Prompts Scathing GAO Report

Earlier today, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) published a scathing report, criticizing the regulatory work and research conducted by the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Office of Advocacy.  For the past several years, CPR has worked to bring much-needed attention from policymakers, the press, and the public interest community to the SBA Office of Advocacy, which […]

Erin Kesler | July 15, 2014

CPR Scholars Support ‘Hide no Harm’ Bill to Hold Corporate Officers Accountable for Negligence

New legislation introduced by Senator Blumenthal (D-CT) and co-sponsored by Sens. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) and Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) would ensure that corporate executives who knowingly market life-threatening products or continue unsafe business practices are held criminally responsible when people die or are injured.   Under the Hide No Harm Act, key corporate managers will be required […]

Anne Havemann | July 15, 2014

Citizen Enforcement: Preventing Sediment Pollution One Construction Site at a Time

I will never look at a construction site the same way again. Certain types of pollution—mostly sediment, nitrogen, and phosphorus—run into the Chesapeake Bay and fuel algal blooms, creating dead zones where crabs, oysters and other Bay life cannot survive. Indeed, the Chesapeake is on track to have an above-average dead zone this year. Construction […]

Catherine O'Neill | July 14, 2014

Give Them an Inch … And They’ll Take Twenty Years

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has gone to exceeding lengths to defer to states’ efforts to bring their water quality standards into the twenty-first century.  But the state of Washington has shown the perils of this deferential posture, if the goals of the Clean Water Act (CWA) are ever to be reached for our nation’s […]

Matt Shudtz | July 11, 2014

USDA Submits Poultry Rule to OMB: The Facts

Yesterday, USDA submitted its draft final rule on poultry slaughter “modernization” to OMB for formal review.  This rule, as regular readers of CPR Blog will remember, would remove USDA inspectors from poultry slaughtering facilities, transfer some of their food safety and quality control duties to plant employees, and allow the plants to increase their line […]

Erin Kesler | July 11, 2014

CPR President Rena Steinzor Testifies at House Hearing on Federal vs. State Environmental Policy and Constitutional Considerations

Today, CPR President Rena Steinzor testifes at a House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on the Environment and the Economy Hearing entitled, “Constitutional Considerations: States vs. Federal Environmental Implementation Policy.” According to her testimony: As I understand the situation, the Subcommittee’s leadership called this hearing in part to explore the contradiction between the notion that legislation to reauthorize […]