WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump late Tuesday signed an order compelling meat processing plants to stay open under the Defense Production Act to protect the nation's food supply.
The decision comes as at least 20 plants across the country — including at least three in Minnesota — have been shuttered temporarily by outbreaks of COVID-19.
The order came after Tyson Foods, other companies and Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota — where Smithfield Foods in Sioux Falls has a huge outbreak and is temporarily closed — warned of possible shortages of pork, beef and poultry.
The five-page order, which was developed in consultation with industry leaders, is designed, in part, to provide companies with additional liability protections in case workers get sick. Trump on Tuesday described the issue as a "legal roadblock." The order, he said, would "solve any liability problems where they had certain liability problems and we'll be in very good shape."
The order coincided with a renewed call by union leaders for more extensive testing of meatpacking and processing workers. The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW) represents most workers in meat and poultry packing and processing plants across the country. Its leaders have made virus tests for employees a priority for protecting them.
The union believes packers and processors must be declared first responders to the coronavirus pandemic in order to qualify for broad-based testing. At a daily COVID-19 press briefing Tuesday, state Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm said Trump's plan to keep meat and poultry plants open seemed "counterintuitive" based on current coronavirus outbreaks that caused shutdowns.
"At a time when we we're seeing such explosive increases in numbers of cases and the impacts on surrounding communities, it seems problematic to say the least," she said.
The state Health Department said that, as of late Tuesday, the Pilgrim's Pride plant in Cold Spring had 17 confirmed cases of COVID-19, while the Jennie-O plant in Melrose had four. Both plants are still open. The department said another 23 cases have been confirmed among workers at two Jennie-O plants in Willmar, which were closed late last week due to COVID-19 concerns.