The plight of meat processors across the nation boiled over Monday in Cold Spring, where workers protested what they say are dangerous working conditions that leave them with two choices — continue to risk contracting a potentially deadly disease or be fired.
As of Monday, state health workers had confirmed 194 COVID-19 cases among workers at the Pilgrim's Pride poultry processing plant — more than double the 83 cases just four days ago.
"We're hoping the company will sanitize the whole facility so that the workers can safely return to work," said Pablo Tapia, one of the rally organizers. Pilgrim's Pride "needs to be responsible. They knew this was happening and they just kept ignoring it."
In a statement Monday, Pilgrim's Pride said it has "implemented a wide of range of measures to combat coronavirus" at the Cold Spring plant. "We know some people are scared and anxious, and we are doing everything we can to keep this virus out of our facility."
With horns blaring and a loudspeaker booming, a chain of 75 to 85 vehicles carrying workers and their supporters rolled past the facility, demanding that the company shut it down for a deep cleaning for two weeks and pay the workers for the down time.
The Pilgrim's Pride chicken plant, which employs more than 1,100, is the site of the largest COVID-19 workplace outbreak in Minnesota outside of JBS' sprawling pork plant in Worthington. The JBS plant had 541 confirmed cases as of Monday.
Outbreaks at the Cold Spring plant and at several other facilities in the region have fueled a spike in confirmed cases over the past few weeks, rapidly making the St. Cloud area a COVID hot zone.
Since many of the Cold Spring workers live with family members in St. Cloud and throughout the region, state officials say the Cold Spring plant has been a significant driver of the now more than 1,400 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Stearns County — second-highest in the state after Hennepin County, according to the Minnesota Department of Health.