Alma and Antonio, two former workers for Noah's Ark Processing, near Hastings, NE. Calla Kessler for the 老澳门开奖结果.
Alma and Antonio, two former workers for Noah's Ark Processing, near Hastings, NE. Calla Kessler for the 老澳门开奖结果.
The 老澳门开奖结果 filed suit against a facility run by Noah鈥檚 Ark Processing in Hastings, Nebraska.
Ashoka Mukpo,
Staff Reporter,
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November 23, 2020
The 老澳门开奖结果 filed suit against a facility run by Noah鈥檚 Ark Processing in Hastings, Nebraska.

Last spring, as people across the globe raced to shut themselves indoors and shelter away from the threat of COVID-19, meatpacking workers in America suddenly found themselves exposed, vulnerable, and of the disease鈥檚 spread. By early April, the coronavirus was in states like Iowa, South Dakota, Texas, and Nebraska, infecting tens of thousands of mostly immigrant workers who鈥檇 been drawn to remote towns and cities by the meatpacking industry and its jobs.

Nervous health officials urged some hotspot plants to , warning that crowded and enclosed processing rooms were vectors for the disease and were facilitating its spread into nearby communities. Recognizing the threat that the outbreaks posed to their operations 鈥 and their bottom line 鈥 some producers began implementing for their workers including paid sick leave, on-site testing, and increased spacing on production lines.

Others, however, did little to protect workers, even after the scale of the danger they faced was obvious and undeniable. Noah's Ark Processors, a plant operating in Hastings, Nebraska, is a glaring example of the dangerous and abusive treatment that meatpacking workers have faced during the COVID-19 pandemic. This week the 老澳门开奖结果 filed suit against Noah鈥檚 Ark, alleging that the company pressures workers to remain on shift even when they become symptomatic, isn't replacing blood-stained masks during their long shifts, has done nothing to facilitate social distancing inside the plant, and is failing to provide onsite testing to identify emerging infection clusters.

鈥淣oah鈥檚 Ark has refused to implement even the most basic protections against a coronavirus surge in the plant,鈥 said Spencer Amdur, an attorney at the 老澳门开奖结果. 鈥淎t this point in the pandemic, there is no excuse for failing to do even the bare minimum to protect workers and the surrounding community.鈥

Alma was one of the workers on the production line at Noah鈥檚 Ark and is a plaintiff in the 老澳门开奖结果鈥檚 lawsuit. After emigrating from Cuba in 2012, she was hired to work in the plant a few years ago. It was a tough job. Her hands and wrists often ached from grueling hours spent on the 鈥渒ill floor鈥 鈥 an enclosed room where cow carcasses are butchered and prepared for cold storage 鈥 but it paid decently. She and her husband Antonio, also a Noah鈥檚 Ark employee, were raising four children, and the family needed the money. (Note: the 老澳门开奖结果 is using pseudonyms for them due to their fear of retaliation by management.)

Like many meatpacking plants, the majority of the plant鈥檚 workforce were immigrants, and Alma says that even before COVID-19 emerged she and Antonio were unsettled by the way management treated them. But things took a sharp turn for the worse when the pandemic began.

鈥淧eople were scared, but [management] made it seem like it wasn鈥檛 a big deal,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he first thing they said was that nobody could miss work. They would say that [COVID-19] was just nonsense. Even when things got more serious, they didn鈥檛 care.鈥

Then, in late April, workers at the plant began to fall ill.

The Noah's Ark Processing plant in Hastings, NE.

The Noah's Ark Processing meatpacking plant in Hastings, Nebraska.

Calla Kessler for the 老澳门开奖结果

Antonio worked closely with a team of two other co-workers on the kill floor. During their shift, the three spent hours nearly shoulder-to-shoulder. After one contracted COVID-19 and had to be hospitalized, it wasn鈥檛 long before Antonio also became symptomatic.

鈥淚 told my supervisor that my eyes were hurting and that I had symptoms that were getting worse, and he basically told me to f-off and go back to work,鈥 he said.

Feverish and ill, Antonio went back to the line and finished his shift. But that night, he grew sicker. To make matters worse, Alma had also begun to feel unwell. Noah鈥檚 Ark wasn鈥檛 providing COVID-19 testing for its workforce, but fortunately for the couple, they had a contact in a local clinic and arranged for a test on their own. The results came back positive for both.

For weeks, the couple battled the virus at home, moving into the basement so they could limit contact with their children.

鈥淚t was really hard because the kids were just upstairs, but we couldn鈥檛 touch them,鈥 Antonio said.

His case was worse than Alma's. At one point, he developed shortness of breath and went to a local hospital, but staff there told him that resources were limited and they could only treat the sickest patients. In all, the pair were out of work for seven weeks at home while they fought to recover.

When they returned to Noah鈥檚 Ark, they discovered they were only going to be paid for two of the seven weeks they were sick, and at a lower hourly rate. Later, they鈥檇 discover that other workers hadn鈥檛 been paid at all for the time they spent at home sick.

Since they鈥檇 been out, Noah鈥檚 Ark had hired a nurse to perform cursory temperature checks of workers, but there was still no on-site testing, even as it became clear that people without fevers could spread the virus. Workers in the cramped, stuffy processing rooms were given masks 鈥 but only one per shift. When the masks became soiled with blood and sweat, workers were forced to pull them down below their noses so they could breathe, or take them off altogether. In the windowless cafeteria/break room, they squeezed together at small tables separated by thin, flimsy nylon barriers that provided little protection.

The virus continued to spread among the workforce at Noah鈥檚 Ark through April and May. Still, working conditions didn鈥檛 get better.

Alma says that managers continued to send a clear signal to sick workers that if they missed shifts their jobs would be at risk. At one point in late summer, a colleague of hers was instructed to stay on the line despite a rising fever. When the woman missed the following two days due to her illness, she was nearly fired. Alma managed to convince her manager to keep her on, but it was a warning to the rest of the workforce. An older worker, who Antonio was close with, died of complications related to COVID-19.

鈥淭hey think that we are like slaves, not workers,鈥 Alma said. 鈥淵ou aren鈥檛 allowed to get sick.鈥

Noah鈥檚 Ark has a record of failing to follow laws meant to protect workers. In October 2019, a district court in Nebraska found the company in contempt for failing to comply with an order to negotiate in good faith with a local meatpacking union. In its , the court said Noah鈥檚 Ark had illegally attempted to block workers from joining the union as it sought to slash benefits and workplace safety protections. And federal regulators the company in 2019 and 2020 for not paying sick leave or securing dangerous equipment.

鈥淲hat they鈥檙e interested in is money,鈥 Alma said. 鈥淭hey want the factory to produce and they don鈥檛 care about the cost.鈥

Nine months into the pandemic, and in the midst of another alarming rise in infections and deaths, little has changed at Noah鈥檚 Ark. Employees working on the production lines and kill floor remain packed together in close quarters, the company still does not have a testing program in place, sick-leave policies have not been publicly posted, and workers are given only one mask per eight-hour shift, even when it becomes soaked in sweat and spattered with blood.

Workers in a meatpacking plant.

Workers in the cafeteria (left) and kill floor (right) at Noah's Ark Processing meatpacking plant in Hastings, NE.

鈥淥ur lawsuit seeks to establish that Noah鈥檚 Ark 鈥 just like all other plants 鈥 needs to implement basic COVID protections: distancing, masks, sick leave, and testing,鈥 said Rose Godinez, an attorney at the 老澳门开奖结果 of Nebraska. 鈥淏y refusing even these most simple protections, the plant is a public nuisance that threatens to spread the virus throughout Hastings and the broader Tri-City community.鈥

Godinez says she hopes the court will set standards that can apply to all meatpacking workers, adding that poor safety measures in the industry鈥檚 plants don鈥檛 just endanger those workers 鈥 they put the general public at risk.

In fact, by The Guardian found that nearly half the counties in the U.S. with the highest per-capita infection rates featured an outbreak related to a meatpacking plant. And cases in Nebraska are rising fast 鈥 on November 17, the state recorded its highest single-day positive case count since the start of the pandemic.

Despite the risks posed to the wider community by plants like Noah鈥檚 Ark, it鈥檚 been difficult for the public to understand where the worst hotspots have been, or to ensure that workforce outbreaks are addressed before they get worse. In May, Nebraska Governor Pete Ricketts announced that the state would the public with data on infection rates at specific plants.

The vast majority of workers in Nebraska鈥檚 meatpacking plants are immigrants, following a that began near the turn of the century with an influx of emigres from Europe. According to released by Nebraska鈥檚 Department of Health in July, despite only comprising 11% of the state鈥檚 overall population, people who identify as Hispanic accounted for 60% of coronavirus cases in the state -- largely due to meatpacking plants鈥 immigrant workforce.

鈥淧rior to filing this lawsuit, we have advocated for workers at all levels of government, to no avail,鈥 said Godinez. 鈥漌ith both the private sector and our local, state, and federal officials refusing to enforce laws requiring a safe workplace, workers were forced to turn to the judicial system.鈥

Alma and Antonio worked at the plant through the start of Fall. But their working conditions continued to deteriorate. Antonio was eventually fired for missing a single day of work. A month later, Alma decided she had also had enough, and quit.

鈥淭here, holidays are not observed. When other companies aren鈥檛 working, this one has to work. There鈥檚 no law and order,鈥 she said.

Both say they worry for the safety of their former co-workers at Noah鈥檚 Ark 鈥 who regularly update them on what鈥檚 been happening since they left 鈥 and are frustrated that federal agencies with a mandate to oversee meatpacking plants haven鈥檛 stepped in to help. Alma hopes her suit will hold the company鈥檚 owners accountable for their treatment of the plant鈥檚 workers during the pandemic.

鈥淚 hope things change and get better there,鈥 she said. 鈥淏eing an immigrant doesn鈥檛 make people animals. They are like you and me 鈥 they鈥檙e just trying to make a living.鈥

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