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(Washington, DC) –
The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union
(UFCW) is deeply concerned that the state of Indiana is not
forthcoming with accurate information about the location of the
worksite in which workers have been diagnosed with a rare
neurological illness.
According to local
news reports, the Indiana Department of Health is refusing to
identify the name or location of the facility citing privacy
concerns. This is in stark contrast to the actions of state
health officials, UFCW representatives and company officials in
Minnesota where the work-related disease was first discovered.
It appears that only
three meatpacking plants in the United States use an
air-compression system to harvest brains from pork --- QPP in
Austin, Minnesota, Hormel in Fremont, Nebraska and Indiana
Packers in Delphi, Indiana. Investigators from the National
Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) have
identified Indiana Packers as the site of the new cases of yet
unnamed the inflammatory neurological condition.
UFCW Local 700 President Joe Chorpenning said, “One
can assume that Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels and his state
government doesn’t care about regular working people that would
hide information that might protect workers from neurological
illness."
When workers became
stricken with the mysterious neurological illness in Austin, QPP
immediately contacted the UFCW about working together to
identify any risks to workers in their plant. The UFCW knows
that QPP and Hormel stopped that production line immediately
upon discovery of the illness.
No cases have been
found in Nebraska. In Minnesota, NIOSH has determined there are
12 confirmed cases among the workforce at QPP. |