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Pork line speeds to slow after today

Pork line speeds to slow after today
rfdtv.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rfdtv.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Scott-brown , A-university-of-missouri , Swine-inspection , ஸ்காட்-பழுப்பு , பன்றி-ஆய்வு ,

Lawmakers Ask Biden Administration to Help Hog Farmers

Lawmakers Ask Biden Administration to Help Hog Farmers
agnews890.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from agnews890.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Minnesota , United-states , Iowa , Jen-sorenson , Jim-hagedorn , Chuck-grassley , Steve-meyer , Department-of-agriculture , National-pork-producers-council , Iowa-republican-senator-chuck-grassley , Minnesota-republican-representative-jim , Swine-inspection

Union Asks USDA not to Appeal Court Decision - AG INFORMATION NETWORK OF THE WEST


Union Asks USDA not to Appeal Court Decision
Tuesday Jun 1st, 2021
United Food and Commercial Workers International is asking the USDA to respect a court decision that said the previous administration unlawfully allowed packing plants to ignore limits on pork line speeds.
The court held that USDA acted unlawfully when it refused to consider the impact of eliminating line speeds on worker health and safety in its “New Swine Inspection System” issued a few months before the pandemic began to spread.
Mark Lauritsen is the national head of UFCW’s meatpacking operations.
Lauritsen: “If COVID did anything it should have taught us that if the workers in meatpacking plants aren’t safe the entire food supply chain is not safe and if they're not safe in those places it jeopardizes the hog producer who will then have no place to sell their hogs. It jeopardizes the retailer who will have no product to sell. So what we want to do is work with USDA, work with all the stakeholders involved to make sure that those plants are absolutely as safe as possible so the entire food supply chain stays intact and doesn't suffer like it did last year at this time.”

Maura-bennett , Mark-lauritsen , Workers-international , Court-decision , Union-asks , National-pork-producers-council , Appeal-court , Commercial-workers-international , Swine-inspection , New-swine-inspection-system , ம-ura-ரா-பென்னட் , தொழிலாளர்கள்-சர்வதேச

Union Asks USDA not to Appeal Court Decision - AG INFORMATION NETWORK OF THE WEST


Union Asks USDA not to Appeal Court Decision
Tuesday Jun 1st, 2021
United Food and Commercial Workers International is asking the USDA to respect a court decision that said the previous administration unlawfully allowed packing plants to ignore limits on pork line speeds.
The court held that USDA acted unlawfully when it refused to consider the impact of eliminating line speeds on worker health and safety in its “New Swine Inspection System” issued a few months before the pandemic began to spread.
Mark Lauritsen is the national head of UFCW’s meatpacking operations.
Lauritsen: “If COVID did anything it should have taught us that if the workers in meatpacking plants aren’t safe the entire food supply chain is not safe and if they're not safe in those places it jeopardizes the hog producer who will then have no place to sell their hogs. It jeopardizes the retailer who will have no product to sell. So what we want to do is work with USDA, work with all the stakeholders involved to make sure that those plants are absolutely as safe as possible so the entire food supply chain stays intact and doesn't suffer like it did last year at this time.”

Maura-bennett , Mark-lauritsen , Workers-international , Court-decision , Union-asks , National-pork-producers-council , Appeal-court , Commercial-workers-international , Swine-inspection , New-swine-inspection-system , ம-ura-ரா-பென்னட் , தொழிலாளர்கள்-சர்வதேச

Pork self-inspection flawed


Article content
The United States Center for Food Safety has found twice as many food safety violations at pork-packing plants where employees rather than government staff inspect carcasses.
The self-inspection system was begun in 2020 under former U.S. President Donald Trump who campaigned to reduce government regulation.
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Pork self-inspection flawed Back to video
New data shows that in the years leading up to the Trump administration’s approval of new inspection rules for swine slaughter plants, those establishments that piloted the system – which relies on company employees conducting inspections instead of government inspectors – had significantly more regulatory violations for feacal and digestive matter on carcasses than traditional plants, the Center For Food Safety reported.

United-states , Donald-trump , United-states-center , Humane-farming-association , United-states-department-of-agriculture , Food-safety , Center-for-food-safety , Swine-inspection , Water-watch , United-states-department , ஒன்றுபட்டது-மாநிலங்களில் , டொனால்ட்-துருப்பு