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Tag: jbs

  • Workers at Greeley’s JBS meatpacking plant vote to authorize strike

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    Workers at Greeley’s JBS meatpacking plant have voted to authorize an unfair labor practices strike, according to a Wednesday morning announcement.

    The strike stems from what union representation says is “illegal conduct at the bargaining table and inside the plant,” according to a press release from United Food and Commercial Workers Local 7, which represents 22,000 union workers across Colorado and Wyoming, including those at JBS. Ninety-nine percent of unionized workers at the plant voted in favor of the strike.

    The union did not give specifics on when the strike is expected to start, but told Denver7 it is expecting virtually all employees to take part in it, adding “workers are prepared to strike until JBS ceases unfair labor practices.”

    “This vote reflects the seriousness of this moment,” Kim Cordova, president of UFCW Local 7, said. “JBS can either return to the bargaining table prepared to negotiate in good faith and immediately cease its Unfair Labor Practices, or it can face the consequences of its own decisions.”

    The union alleges that over the course of an eight-month bargaining process, JBS intimidated and retaliated against workers and threatened to “withhold a proposed bonus and lump sum pension payment if workers exercise their democratic right to strike.”

    Denver7 spoke with Matt Shechter, the union’s labor and employment litigator, who claims JBS is charging workers for lost or damaged personal protective equipment that is required by law.

    He also claims there is a “wage theft problem” and JBS is endangering the lives of those who work at the plant by making “chain speeds” on the line of work faster while also cutting back on workers’ hours.

    “The vote yesterday was an incredible act of democracy,” Shechter said. “Virtually all workers [at JBS] are immigrants and this is the first time many have ever voted in their entire lives.”

    A JBS spokesperson said in an email that the company “presented a comprehensive offer that reflects the national agreement reached with UFCW International” that was accepted by other large JBS facilities in the country.

    “This agreement includes meaningful wage increases and a pension plan, providing both near-term and long-term financial security for team members, in addition to other strong benefits,” JBS Spokesperson Nikki Richardson wrote in an email. “Workers at our other locations have already agreed to these terms and are benefiting from these improvements today.”

    According to Shechter, those wage increases are $0.90 over the next two years, which he says represents a 4% increase and claims is below the rise in inflation.

    Approximately 3,800 workers are employed at JBS in Greeley, according to the UFCW Local 7 release. The company is headquartered in Greeley and has operations in the U.S., Australia, the United Kingdom, Mexico, Canada, Europe and New Zealand, according to the company’s website. JBS is the top producer in the world of beef and chicken, according to the company website, and is the largest employer in Weld County, according to the Northern Colorado Economic Alliance.

    This is a developing story that will be updated. Denver7 has reached out to UFCW Local 7 and JBS for more information.

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  • Plant closure will lead to hundreds of layoffs in Riverside

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    The meat processing company JBS is closing a packing facility in Riverside and will lay off 374 employees, according to a notice from the California Employment Development Department.

    The closure comes as a limited cattle supply has led to record-high beef prices this year.

    The Riverside facility, operated by JBS subsidiary Swift Beef Co., prepares meat for sale in U.S. grocery stores but does not slaughter animals, JBS spokesperson Nikki Richardson said.

    The affected employees will be given opportunities at other JBS plants, including relocation support, Richardson said. Employees who choose not to relocate will be given a 60-day notice period before their employment ends.

    The price of beef has soared in recent months as ranchers have cut their herds due to a drought across pastureland and a parasite known as screwworm, which forced a halt to U.S. imports of Mexican cattle. Last month, meat processing giant Tyson Foods closed one if its largest beef-processing facilities in Nebraska.

    JBS said production handled at the Riverside plant will be transferred to other company facilities without interrupting customer supply or service.

    The transition is expected to be complete by early next year, the company said.

    “JBS is committed to supporting impacted team members through this transition,” Richardson said in a statement. “The company remains focused on delivering high-quality products and dependable service while strengthening its operational footprint to meet evolving market demands.”

    The Riverside plant closure is part of a broader company strategy to optimize and simplify its operations. Shares of JBS were down less than 1% in midday trading Monday and have remained flat this year, rising about 2% since January.

    The company, which has a U.S. headquarters in Greeley, Colo., also has facilities and offices throughout Europe and Australia.

    The landscape is shifting in California’s oil industry as well, with Valero Energy Corp. planning to shut down a major refinery in the state by spring 2026.

    Last year, Chevron moved its headquarters from San Ramon, Calif., to Houston, citing challenging business regulations in the Golden State. This year, the last factory that turned sugar beets into sugar in California shut down, leading to the elimination of hundreds of jobs in the Imperial Valley.

    According to a Chapman University economic forecast released this month, California’s job growth totaled just 2% from the second quarter of 2022 to the second quarter this year, ranking it 48th among all states.

    The state lost jobs consecutively from June to September. Also, next year the state is expected to add 62,000 jobs.

    California also experienced a net population outflow of more than 1 million residents from 2021 to 2023, with the top five destinations being states with zero or very low state income taxes: Texas, Arizona, Nevada, Idaho and Florida, the report noted.

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    Caroline Petrow-Cohen

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