Cargill fires 190 workers at Colorado plant after Muslim prayer protest

hm1996

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Perhaps Cargill should start processing hogs.

Quote:
Cargill fires 190 workers at Colorado plant after Muslim prayer protest
By Pioneer Press

January 1, 2016 |

Cargill Meat Solutions said Thursday it tried to resolve a workplace prayer dispute with Somali workers at a Colorado meatpacking plant that led to the firing of about 190 employees.

The workers who lost their jobs were mostly immigrants from Somalia and their termination came after they failed to report to work for three consecutive days last week to protest what they say were changes in times allowed for Muslim prayer.

Cargill says, however, it makes every “reasonable attempt” to provide religious accommodation for all of its employees at the Fort Morgan, Colo., plant without interrupting operations.

“At no time did Cargill prevent people from prayer at Fort Morgan,” said Michael Martin, a spokesman for the company, which is part of Wayzata-based agribusiness giant Cargill Inc. “Nor have we changed policies related to religious accommodation and attendance. This has been mischaracterized.”

Cargill also said while reasonable efforts are made to accommodate employees, accommodation is not guaranteed every day and depends on changing factors in the plant.

“This has been clearly communicated to all employees,” Martin said.

But the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which is representing more than 100 of the fired employees, said Thursday messaging from plant supervisors has not always been so clear.

On Dec. 18, the Friday before employee protest began Dec. 21, “the workers were told: ‘If you want to pray, go home,’ “CAIR spokesman Jaylani Hussein said.

“To these employees, that is what it is. Maybe Cargill never changed its policy, but to these employees, they feel whatever the policy is, or how it is implemented, there was a change put in place,” Hussein said.

Cargill provides a “reflection room” at the plant where observant Muslim workers are allowed to pray, something that has been available since 2009.

Hussein said depending on the season, the workers pray at different times of the day, typically taking five to 10 minutes away from their work. The time was carved out of a 15-minute break period or from the workers’ unpaid 30-minute lunch breaks.

Many of the workers banded together and decided to walk off the job in an attempt to sway plant managers to reinstate the prayer policy.

“They feel missing their prayer is worse than losing their job,” Hussein said. “It’s like losing a blessing from God.”

Cargill on Dec. 23 fired the hold-out workers who had not returned to work, citing a company policy that employees who do not show up for work or call in for three consecutive days will be let go.

“It’s an unfortunate situation that may be based somewhere in a misunderstanding,” Martin said. “But the policies have been in place and we go over the policies for all people who are newly hired to the company when they are hired.”

All of the terminated employees worked second shift on the plant’s fabrication floor, where chilled beef carcasses are broken down into smaller cuts and packaged, Martin said.

Of those involved, “fewer than 20” employees walked out in the middle of a shift, he said. About 160 failed to report to work, and 10 resigned.

Before the walkout, Cargill employed roughly 600 Somali workers at the Fort Morgan plant. More than 400 still work there, Martin said, and accommodations are still being made to allow Muslims to leave the floor in small groups to pray.

“There has been a desire among some employees to go in larger groups of people to pray. We just can’t accommodate that,” Martin said. “It backs up the flow of all the production. We’re a federally inspected, USDA inspected plant. We have to ensure food safety. We have to ensure the products we produce meet consumer expectations.”

The workers earn $14 per hour and up, and are represented by a union, Teamsters Local 445. More than 2,000 people are employed at the plant.

Cargill has a policy stating that any workers who are terminated cannot reapply for a position for six months. CAIR continues to talk with Cargill and Hussein said he hopes the six-month freeze is waived and that the workers will be allowed back.

“I’m confident in our upcoming negotiations that we can come to a resolution,” Hussein said.

http://www.twincities.com/2016/01/01/car...prayer-protest/

Regards,
hm
 
good.

if non-muslim wanted to go hang out for 5 to 10 minutes at random times throughout the day he would be fired.
 
You seriously have to wonder WHY did Cargill have 190 Somalia immigrants hired to begin with???

What are the odds that 190 Somali immigrants all decided to go down and apply at the fertilizer plant? And, NO ONE was better qualified than these people?

You don't suppose by chance that they were paying them about half what they were paying their other employees, and providing no benefits, to hedge their profit margin a little bit further; do you?

Or, was there maybe government incentive funds involved?
 
I have had the opportunity to walk the floor with management at a meatpacking plant here in AZ during business dealings some years ago. I must say that at that time they employed mostly wet backs as we had not lost our minds yet and imported folks from the religion of peace. It was like a scene from a horror movie. Several hundred wet backs flailing around with razor sharp knives ain't my idea of a good time. They didn't bother putting up a sign showing how many days without an injury. Now that's just in the course of normal daily operations, they didn't want to talk about how often serious injuries occurred due to disagreements and anger. I wouldn't work there for $140 dollars an hour.
 
Originally Posted By: Rocky1You seriously have to wonder WHY did Cargill have 190 Somalia immigrants hired to begin with???

Or, was there maybe government incentive funds involved?

That...
 
Originally Posted By: 6724good.

if non-muslim wanted to go hang out for 5 to 10 minutes at random times throughout the day he would be fired.

No anybody can use their breaks or lunch to pray or do whatever they want.

They had a standing policy that prayer was okay and you can bet it was on breaks or lunch time, because nobody would be able to do so during work time.

I was in a union at a transformer plant in the drafting department, there was one of the guys that had been there for 15 years or so that drove the management nuts, I'd have fired his sorry butt. He got up from his desk exactly 15 minutes before morning break supposedly to go to the bathroom to take a crap. He would walk back to his desk as the horn went off for break. The union protected his "right" to use the bathroom when the need arose. He did the same thing in the afternoon. That's half an hour of lost productivity a day, which adds up. The guys out in the plant would never have been able to get away with disappearing from their production jobs like that.
 
Read it all Rocky, they have had 600 before 190 got fired. You mean that we cant get people to work for 14 bucks plus benefits. They are union benefits are ther somewhere.
 
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