Press Releases
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: JANUARY 31, 2008
UFCW fights proposal
threatening health and safety of poultry workers, consumers
USDA’s plan to eliminate maximum line speeds will put workers and consumers
at risk of workplace injuries and food-borne illnesses
Washington, D.C. – The United Food
and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW) will join consumer
advocates at public meetings on February 5-6 to oppose the U.S. Department
of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service’s (USDA FSIS) proposal to
water down workplace safety and food inspection regulations at the nation’s
poultry slaughter establishments. The proposal, entitled "Public
Health-Based Slaughter Inspection System" (PHBSIS), will remove maximum line
speed regulations and further subject poultry workers to dangerous workplace
conditions. The proposed system also increases the risk of food-borne
illnesses by weakening the on-line poultry inspection process.
The dangerous work conditions faced by workers in the
poultry industry have been documented by academics, the media and the U.S.
Government Accountability Office, and line speeds have been linked to
musculoskeletal disorders and debilitating injuries—including lacerations
and amputations. Poultry workers often face physically demanding, repetitive
work, during which they stand for long periods of time in production lines
that move very quickly while wielding knives or other cutting instruments.
They often work in extreme temperatures and make up to 40,000 repetitive
cutting motions per shift. Worker safety will play no role under the PHBSIS
proposal, and the new system will allow poultry slaughter establishments to
run their lines with no maximum line speed—guaranteeing a rise in workplace
injuries.
Line speeds have also been linked to food contamination,
and the new proposal may put consumers at risk of food-borne illnesses by
removing on-line FSIS inspectors who are trained to inspect bird carcasses
for contaminated material—including fecal matter. Under the new system,
poultry slaughter establishments will be allowed to monitor the poultry
carcass inspection process themselves.
"Over 100 years ago, Upton Sinclair wrote The Jungle
in an effort to shed light on the unhealthy and dangerous working conditions
in meat packing plants, and it is amazing that the poultry industry would be
allowed to turn back the clock and dismantle our last line of defense
against workplace injuries and food-borne illnesses," said Mark Lauritsen,
UFCW International Vice President and Director of the Food Processing,
Packing and Manufacturing Division. "We urge members of Congress to join the
UFCW in opposing this misguided proposal in order to protect the health and
safety of our workers and families."
For more than 100 years, the UFCW has been fighting to
improve the working conditions of food workers and the safety of our food,
and currently represents more than 250,000 workers in the packing and
processing industries. In addition to protecting the rights of food workers,
the UFCW is also a founding member of the Safe Food Coalition which consists
of consumer groups, groups representing victims of food-borne illnesses, and
watchdog groups that are dedicated to reducing the incidence of food-borne
illnesses in the United States.
The USDA FSIS meetings will take place on February 5-6 at
8:45 a.m. at the Key Bridge Marriott at 1401 Lee Highway in Arlington, Va.
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