As meat packing plants across Iowa experience outbreaks of the coroanvirus, local officials have stepped up to demand more while Gov. Kim Reynolds has largely communicated with business leaders.
At a coronavirus briefing in Black Hawk County on Friday, Waterloo Mayor Quentin Hart emphasized the importance of public safety and the well-being of workers while calling out Reynolds and Tyson Foods for their inaction in response to a COVID-19 outbreak at a Tyson Fresh Meats plant in Waterloo.
โSome people are very upset with me and there are others thatโre happy because theyโre able to see that in the midst of the worst pandemic crisis in our lives, that I am using strong measures to protect the public,โ he said. โIโm choosing to prefer safety of the people over a few thousand dollars worth of revenue.โ
He said having places like dog parks and golf courses in Waterloo closed is even more important now that the city is in a region rated 10 on the stateโs metric.
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On Thursday, Reynolds ordered a halt to all social gatherings in Northeast Iowa, but stopped short of closing any businesses not already covered by her Public Health Emergency Declaration.
This is despite the newest outbreaks occurring in meatpacking plants across the state.
Reporters at press conferences have pressed the Governor several times over where she’s getting her information on meat packing plant safety.
โI think employers are doing the right thing,” Reynolds said at her Thursday press conference. “They need to continue to do the right thing. Weโre going to continue to work with them and be a partner. As I said just a few minutes ago, we are all in this together. And we want to make sure individuals need to take individual responsibility.โ
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“As I reach out and talk to these businesses, especially at some of our larger companies, you know we ask โdo you have everything you need, what are you doing to protect the employees?โ And they have a vested interest, also, in taking care of their workforce to make sure they can continue to be up and running,” she continued.
When asked specifically if she’s spoken with workers or groups representing them, Reynolds turns it back to her conversations with management.
โIโve really focused on, like, the H.R. or โฆ the plant manager so that we can understand what the needs are. So we can, first of all, make sure that the employees are safe and that theyโre working in a safe environment,” Reynolds said.
Waterloo Rep. Ras Smith said it’s not enough to take a business’s word when it comes to worker conditions.
โIโve been a manager at a warehouse before and I know that if leadership really wants to know about employee safety, you speak with the employees. Iโve done this,” he said.
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On Wednesday morning, Hart and Rep. Timi Brown-Powers sent an email to Reynolds and the Iowa Department of Public Health asking that Tyson Fresh Meats be closed so the facility could be cleaned and workers tested.
โThe email, in its essence, was not about food security. Because right now I donโt have any questions about its safety,โ Hart said. โBut it had everything to do, in regards to the safety of the men and women working in the plant and those they come in contact with.โ
Hart said he appreciated the hard job Reynolds has now, and the increased tests sent to the area, but that itโs important not to forget about the employees who are scared to go to work because their company doesnโt provide enough safety measures.
He wasnโt alone.
Smith especially focused on how COVID-19 has affected people of color and those living in a lower socio-economic status.
โWe have to understand the demographics of the individuals that are typically employed in these places,โ Smith said. โWhen you have that coupled with an outbreak and you donโt have resources, we donโt have a primary care physician, thatโs when this thing compounds and exponentially impacts our community.โ
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Sen. Bill Dotzler took the podium at the briefing and read testimony from Tyson Fresh Meats employees about the conditions they had to work in, the lack of safety measures and instances of people working while sick.
Black Hawk County Supervisor, and Chairman of the Black Hawk County Board of Supervisors, Chris Schwartz read from a letter calling for Tyson Fresh Meats to close voluntarily or for the governor to issue the order to shut it down. The letter was signed by 19 elected officials in the county.
โAnd we really just implore Tyson to be a good actor and become a good partner in this because right now itโs not been the case,โ Schwartz said. โThis is not just to pick on one company in our community, but thatโs where the most serious crisis is right now.โ
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He said Black Hawk County is staying in touch with other large manufacturing operations and pressing them to take up safety precautions to avoid getting to the point Tyson is at.
โThis is about the lives of our people and about a virus that doesnโt discriminate about who it impacts,โ Hart said. โBut we are our brothersโ and sistersโ keepers. This is one time in history where we cannot fight with each other, point fingers or pass the buck. If we engage in this behavior we will all lose, but if we fight together against the true enemy, the virus itself and unsafe business practices, then we have a better chance to come out on top.โ
by Nikoel Hytrek
Posted 4/20/20
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