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(Washington, DC) – Today, the nation’s largest meatpacking worker
union announced its support for an effort to ban meatpacking
corporations from owning livestock. The United Food and Commercial
Workers International Union (UFCW) supports a key provision of the
Farm Bill (S.2302) that would preserve the structure that keeps food
production a stable industry in America’s heartland and protect jobs
for hundreds of thousands of workers in the U.S.
A handful of
meatpacking corporations dominate the beef and pork
industries. Meatpacking companies have used the changing landscape
to own as much livestock as possible. As a result, farmers have
lost business. In the pork industry, when meatpackers own the hogs
from birth to slaughter they can move livestock and production to
wherever they can find the cheapest land and labor.
Workers,
communities and the environment have paid the price for these
disruptions. Giant hog feedlots with lagoons of hog waste sprung up
overnight and overwhelmed the environment and water tables in parts
of the country where hog production didn’t exist thirty years ago.
Giant processing plants were built near the feedlots to employ a
workforce that is beholden to the industry. Workers at processing
plants located in places like Iowa and South Dakota lost their jobs
when plants were shuttered and never reopened.
Left unchecked and
unregulated, every meatpacking producer will attempt to operate the
same way – moving livestock and production to maximize profits, no
matter how many jobs and local economies are destroyed in the
process. UFCW's experience is that meatpacking corporations which
own livestock push down wage and benefits levels for all workers in
the industry.
U.S. Senators are
considering a provision, Section 10207. Prohibition on Packers
Owning, Feeding, or Controlling Livestock as part of the 2007
Farm Bill. This provision would preserve the open market approach
to meat production and protect workers and communities from further
disruption and exploitation at the hands of giant meatpacking
companies. The UFCW joins more than 200 organizations, including
the National Farmers’ Union, in supporting the ban on packer
ownership of livestock.
In a full-page
ad in today’s issue of Roll Call, UFCW members pointed out that
when meatpacking companies own all levels of production, the
stability of processing jobs are at risk.
The UFCW
represents more than 250,000 workers in the meat packing and food
processing industries, including workers at Hormel, Tyson, Cargill
and Smithfield Foods. |