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cargill high river beef packing workers test positive

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    cargill high river beef packing workers test positive

    Another rock that will ripple the pond. JBS has shut down the Greely CO. and National Beef has closed at TAMA IA both until later in april , combined these three plants kill 10-11 thousand head per day . This as well as the pork plant that smithfield has closed in south dakota .


    CALGARY -- The union representing workers at the Cargill Meat Solutions plant in High River is calling on the company to shut its doors for two weeks after 38 employees tested positive for the COVID-19 virus.

    Tom Hesse, the president of the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 401, said the plant employs over 2,000 people who work at the plant over two daily shifts.

    "In workplaces like these, there are hundreds and hundreds of people really coagulating in one place to get the work done. Social distancing is very, very difficult in these places," Hesse said.



    Hesse said the union started to become aware of the positive cases on Thursday and the official number was confirmed by the company on Sunday. Hesse said he is not sure if that number is on the rise.

    In a letter addressed to Cargill Meat Solutions general manager Dale LaGrange, the union said the employer is not doing enough to protect employees and demanded Cargill close the facility for two weeks to conduct a comprehensive safety assessment, and guarantee all employees will be paid in full during the break.

    "We are askingCargill and the government to intervene and set up a real set of rules that are enforceable with fines to solve this problem so people can bring food to the tables of Albertans without anyone having to die," Hesse told CTV News Monday.

    The High River plant processes between 4,500 and 5,000 head of cattle per day.

    In a statement, John Nash, the North American lead for Cargill Protein, said the company will temporarily reduce shifts at the High River plant effective Monday.

    "This will allow us to minimize the impact of COVID-19 and continue to follow health department guidelines. This was a difficult decision for our team, but our values are guiding our actions," he said.
    Last edited by mcfarms; Apr 14, 2020, 07:10.

    #2
    I wonder if anyone has done the math on the down the road / future effects of this....

    I am sure feedlots like holding cattle longer than they have to....

    What are the effects on the fall run ????

    You want to see hurt....drop the fall calf price in half or ask guys to feed them until it straightens out....alot of guys wean calves to the market....just thinking out loud...

    But it could back everything up...and there is only one way shit rolls....

    Comment


      #3
      The 15 minute test should be applied here.

      It’s alarming what else is going on there aren’t they wearing masks and practicing safe hygiene? Or is this one of the places where there was no water or soap and toilet paper in the can for workers to clean up before going back out on the production line?

      Comment


        #4
        Bucket your right about $hit running downhill. When that plant in Kansas had a fire last year the price drop was ridiculous ............... can’t imagine what these closures will do to it. The prices have already dropped enough the last few months .................. it kinda sucks the fun out of it just like calving in this frigid, snowy, windy weather.

        Hopefully everything turns around soon .............🍀

        Comment


          #5
          Just need to legislate that the losses to feedlots, cow calf, backgrounders, auction markets, truckers etc, all has to be made up by the union, out of their budget and generous leadership salaries.

          If doctors, nurses, and every other healthcare worker has to go to work and deal directly with known infected people, and a huge proportion of the country can only wish they had a job to go to, then surely they can find a way to a vital industry such as packing plants functioning.

          Comment


            #6
            Cargill has actually reduced shifts so capacity will be about half of normal, to add to that they are going to process fat cattle only, no more cull cows. Olymel in Ontario having trouble too (hogs) and also a large chicken processor in the east, not to mention all the american closures.

            I had caught some cull cows yesterday to take to the auction today. I called first this morning and they said not to bring them. Awful reminiscent of the BSE fallout. This list may be the tip of the iceberg for Ag. I had thought we were fairly safe from this issue, but guess not.


            Problem is that the backlog of fat animals will cause a long term price drop even after the plants reopen. Animals keep growing, carcass weights jump, we wont be able to eat our way out of this fast enough. What will feed grains do? Find support because more animals on feed or drop like a rock because the feeders are gonna just coast the animals, or turn them out on grass?

            Sheepwheat, cull ewes have dropped in half last week, no longer a market sending them east as was primarily restaurant use. Lambs are backed up as Easter trade was non existent, gonna be tough sledding for a bit.

            Big question, what is going to happen in the grocery stores, these closures and reductions are 30 to 40% of the kill capacity. If anyone thinks the run on toilet paper was bad, just wait for the first fights over meat coming soon. Not as easy to protect your animals from "hunters" come pasture season either.

            Comment


              #7
              Socialism is great !!!!
              this in a country that had the second highest money value in the world 10 years ago
              these leftard wing nuts are gonna get what they wanted here too, unfortunately. what could possibly go wrong with a universal income program , whether you work or not .
              glad i have some bush survival skills
              talked to wife of dive shop owner in tobago last year , her mother was 85 , old , stubborn and wouldn't leave venezuela . last spring she hadn't talked to her for 3 months , didn't know if she was dead or alive , total communication breakdown. venezuela incidentally had second highest standard of living not too long ago
              https://youtu.be/8XWieVWwPzE https://youtu.be/8XWieVWwPzE

              Comment


                #8
                Sheepwheat, cull ewes have dropped in half last week, no longer a market sending them east as was primarily restaurant use. Lambs are backed up as Easter trade was non existent, gonna be tough sledding for a bit.

                Cull ewes to restaurants wow. Dog food o mince here mostly plus exported.

                Beef lamb pork chicken meat trade full steam ahead here.

                What happens here at packers is everyone is tested with temp gauge upon entering and leaving work.
                Anyone with elevated temp wether they have cv19 or not is asked to stay home for 2 weeks.

                Sledgehammer to crack a egg maybe but working.

                Comment


                  #9
                  What happens here at packers is everyone is tested with temp gauge upon entering and leaving work.
                  Anyone with elevated temp wether they have cv19 or not is asked to stay home for 2 weeks.

                  Sledgehammer to crack a egg maybe but working.[/QUOTE]


                  They are doing that here too. The slowdown is gonna take them from 4500 down to 1500 head per day. It's a big deal because this one plant is about a third of the production for the whole country. Dont know how they are gonna deal with all the contracted cattle.

                  The cull ewes for the restaurant usage is for specific markets in the large cities, not something you are gonna see on the prairies.
                  Last edited by GDR; Apr 14, 2020, 16:10.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    We have our cull ewes made into the best north African sausage you ever did have. They're worth more dead than alive! lol Makes the cull decision much easier at least.

                    When the restaurants come back online here, we are going to take a gander and see if they will be receptive to trying it on their menus.

                    Our retail stores have been really selling lamb well. which is good because without the restaurants buying much it was looking a bit bleak.

                    Commodity meats may suffer. But the local market is just kicking into high gear it seems. so far people have money to throw at lamb. We will see if that holds up or not.

                    I sure hope that these closures don't translate into big time price drops. This is a crazy, crazy time, that's for sure.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Sheepwheat View Post
                      We have our cull ewes made into the best north African sausage you ever did have. They're worth more dead than alive! lol Makes the cull decision much easier at least.

                      When the restaurants come back online here, we are going to take a gander and see if they will be receptive to trying it on their menus.

                      Our retail stores have been really selling lamb well. which is good because without the restaurants buying much it was looking a bit bleak.

                      Commodity meats may suffer. But the local market is just kicking into high gear it seems. so far people have money to throw at lamb. We will see if that holds up or not.

                      I sure hope that these closures don't translate into big time price drops. This is a crazy, crazy time, that's for sure.
                      Since you have the ability to bypass the bottleneck that is now the packing plants, you will win on both ends. There will be shortages in the stores, leading to more hoarding and higher prices. And lower farmgate prices for commodity livestock. Your system gets to actually take advantage of those higher prices and demand, without being affected by lower farmgate prices. Until of course all of your fellow Agriviller's decide to do the same. How many sheep can SF3 run on 10,000 acres of prime dirt?

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Here is another example of excess government regulation that drove all of the small packing plants out of business and left just a few giant packing plants. Bigger is not always better.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by jimmy View Post
                          Here is another example of excess government regulation that drove all of the small packing plants out of business and left just a few giant packing plants. Bigger is not always better.
                          I've made references in the past to the superhuman efforts made during WWII by all sides in comparison. Look at Germany's manufacturing towards the end of the war, went from massive factories which were easily bombed and all aspects taken out of production, to dispersing manufacturing to small, local, in home type manufacturing to protect their supply chains, losing a few % of production at a time was much better than 100%. Less efficiency, but much less vulnerable. Same is true here, but I don't know how we turn back time, unless we are willing to also turn back all the regulations which only favoured those big enough to afford to implement them. Plus, all the small town butchers mysteriously burned down in recent years.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                            Since you have the ability to bypass the bottleneck that is now the packing plants, you will win on both ends. There will be shortages in the stores, leading to more hoarding and higher prices. And lower farmgate prices for commodity livestock. Your system gets to actually take advantage of those higher prices and demand, without being affected by lower farmgate prices. Until of course all of your fellow Agriviller's decide to do the same. How many sheep can SF3 run on 10,000 acres of prime dirt?
                            Lol. It is a pile of work that’s for sure, and it is a slow market. You don’t sell a hundred lambs at once and get the cash all up front, you carry expensive inventory; the end goal is a more stable monthly income. It is a whole lot of fun. It is challenging, and it fits our family right now. Above all I love the darn sheep. They are just a funny, funny animal! I don’t have the fortitude for grain farming anymore. Kudos to those who do. I respect those folks a lot, because it takes a lot of gut power to do it. I lost that gut power!

                            Sf3 with his 10 000 acres. In that blessed country where it seems you could graze 11 months of the year, with proper grazing, I would think he could run 20 to 60 000 ewes. Lol.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by AlbertaFarmer5 View Post
                              Until of course all of your fellow Agriviller's decide to do the same. How many sheep can SF3 run on 10,000 acres of prime dirt?
                              The only sheep SF3 will be counting are the ones when he's having trouble falling asleep.

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