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文章

2022年7月26日

作者:
Linda Qiu, New York Times (USA)

USA: Justice Department sues poultry processors over allegations of unlawful labour practices

"Justice Department sues poultry processors over unlawful labour practices", 25 Jul 2022

The Justice Department filed a lawsuit on Monday against three large poultry processors along with a proposed deal meant to end what it described as a decades-long scheme to deceive workers and suppress wages.

...For at least 20 years, the processors Cargill, Sanderson Farms and Wayne Farms and a data company called Webber, Meng, Sahl unlawfully shared information about employee compensation to suppress wages and stifle competition, according to the civil antitrust lawsuit, which was filed in Federal District Court for the District of Maryland. The data shared was so detailed that processors assembled a nationwide map showing company budgets and wages at individual plants.

The three processors, along with 18 others listed in the lawsuit as unnamed co-conspirators, employ more than 90 percent of poultry processing workers in the country, according to the lawsuit.

The Justice Department also filed a consent decree that, if approved by a federal court, would bar the companies from sharing such information and require them to pay $84.8 million to workers harmed by the scheme.

...Slaughterhouses are among the most dangerous workplaces nationwide, with some of the highest rates of occupational injuries and illness, according to Human Rights Watch. Workers at meatpacking facilities often work long hours for low pay, among blood and viscera and standing elbow to elbow...

Prosecutors also accused Sanderson Farms and Wayne Farms, two of the 10 largest chicken processors in the country, of further abuses against poultry farmers.

Growers contracted with the two companies are paid based on performance relative to others under what is called a poultry “tournament” system. This method leads to wide variation in income, and chicken farmers and labor rights advocates have criticized it as abusive and opaque.

The lawsuit accused Sanderson and Wayne of failing to disclose crucial information to farmers — such as the number of chicks a farmer could expect to receive and the chicks’ breed and age — that would allow them to assess financial risk. This omission violated a century-old law regulating the meatpacking industry...