Sanderson Farms Slaughterhouse Worker Tests Positive for COVID-19

U.S. chicken company Sanderson Farms Inc said on Monday that a slaughterhouse worker was infected with the new coronavirus, the first publicly confirmed positive test of a worker in a U.S. meat plant.

B9482B5C-DE3B-4FB3-B982560D8BE645E3.jpg
B9482B5C-DE3B-4FB3-B982560D8BE645E3.jpg

CHICAGO, March 23 (Reuters) - U.S. chicken company Sanderson Farms Inc said on Monday that a slaughterhouse worker was infected with the new coronavirus, the first publicly confirmed positive test of a worker in a U.S. meat plant, though the plant is not closing.

Farmers and traders have been worried that slaughterhouses could shut if workers or government inspectors fall ill. Closures would remove markets for farmers to sell their livestock and threaten to tighten meat supplies as consumers are stocking up due to concerns about the pandemic.

Sanderson said the infected worker was an employee at its McComb, Mississippi, processing plant and that the person’s work area was contained to one small processing table. The plant processes 1.3 million birds a week, about 9.5% of the company’s total capacity, according to Sanderson’s website.

The company sent home the infected employee, along with six others, with pay to isolate themselves, according to a statement. It said the company also thoroughly cleaned the affected work area and other facilities.

“Recognizing that very few of Sanderson Farms’ employees can do their jobs remotely, the company’s processing and production sites are continuously evaluating staffing needs, as well as on-site health and safety measures to manage through this pandemic,” the statement said.

Sanderson has increased its production of chicken for grocery stores to refill refrigerated meat cases emptied by shoppers unnerved by the virus.

Meat companies like Tyson Foods Inc have also been shifting supplies of chicken, beef and pork to supermarkets from restaurants and checking the temperatures of slaughterhouse workers to make sure they are not sick.

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
From improved telehealth services to reimagined small-town hospitals, the National Rural Health Association is working to help folks in farm country tap into more and better medical care options.
The rural economy is slowly improving after being crashed by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.
Reps. Dusty Johnson and Jim Costa on Tuesday introduced the Safer Highways and Increased Performance for Interstate Trucking (SHIP IT) Act to expand the trucking workforce and offer flexibility in times of need.
Read Next
As the Strait closure enters its tenth week, supply chain gridlock and policy hurdles suggest high input costs will persist through the 2027 planting season, according to Josh Linville, vice president of fertilizer with StoneX.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App