The US slaughterhouse industry is starting to attract a lot of concern from the trade unions movement in Britain. There's concern about the rising levels of industrial accidents and poor working conditions- both of which appear to be getting worse.
I've been doing some reading on the topic, and here's a typical piece-
I'd be interested in hearing from any US readers as to whether this topic is attracting any attention in America, and whether these stories are considered to be reliable.
I've been doing some reading on the topic, and here's a typical piece-
Many of America's 150,000 slaughterhouse workers are immigrants, mostly Latinos. They labor long hours for between $6.00 and $9.25 per hour. SInce 1994, OSHA inspections at the slaughterhouses have decreased by 43%. The skeleton crew of 1,200 cannot possibly inspect all these plants and enforce the safety codes. The accident rate in these slaughterhouses is held to be about 36% nation-wide--many times the national industrial average. The cumulative injury rate is similarly high for things like carpal tunnel syndrome and artheritus for packing workers who cut and bone the slabs of meat on the conveyor line. Bush lowered the OSHA standards for safety conditions in the packinghouses and Tom Norton, a Republican Senator whose wife was an executive at ConAgra, successfully pushed through legislation limiting indemnities for dismemberment injuries and fines for safety and health violations in the meat plants. This has encouraged more abuses by the big packers and lower wages. Government indifferance has also greatly encouraged the hiring of illegals. Despite INS raids and arrests, the illegal proportion of the workforce in these remote rural slaughterhouses grows because they are beyond the "long arm" of union organizing drives, OSHA inspections, and the INS raids. Accident rates amoung illegals are higher than that of native born Americans who are more likely to press for their legal rights in the event of an injury. Illegals are often sent back to Mexico after some rudamentary medical treatment.
I'd be interested in hearing from any US readers as to whether this topic is attracting any attention in America, and whether these stories are considered to be reliable.
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