Shame of Pilgrim's Pride.

AuthorCountryman, Carol
PositionPoultry factory workers' safety scandal

Mount Vernon, Texas

For years, Dr. Louis Arrondo heard horror stories from his patients about working conditions at the local Pilgrim's Pride plant--the nation's fifth--largest poultry company. Injuries were commonplace, they told him--everything from minor falls to severed limbs to deaths. His female patients, who were mostly undocumented workers, told him they were being physically and sexually abused by male supervisors. In order to get proper equipment, they said, they had to let the supervisors touch them. "They call us wetbacks," said Blanca Garcia, who was injured at the plant. Garcia reported being pushed around and sexually abused. "They tell us we should be grateful because we get paid more here in an hour than we do for a full day's work in Mexico."

Arrondo, who has treated about 100 injured workers, attempted to alert state officials to the situation at the plant. He tried phoning, faxing, and writing, but received no response.

Then, in 1992, Arrondo wrote a confidential letter to the Texas Workers' Compensation Commission, telling what his patients had been reporting, and noting that the workers were not receiving their compensation for injuries and lost time.

Soon after, Arrondo found he had been blackballed. Injured workers say they were told they could no longer seek treatment from him. Those who did, workers allege, were fired or threatened with deportation. Arrondo also began having trouble obtaining payment from the insurance companies.

The Workers' Compensation Commission, he later discovered, was negotiating deals behind his back. The upshot was to deny Arrondo payment for his services, prohibit workers from seeing him in the future, and deny the workers their temporary income and benefits.

In February, the Catholic Church took a stand and called in the Reverend Les Schmidt, an organizer from Virginia, to help secure justice for injured workers at Pilgrim's Pride. "So many workers have been hurt," Schmidt said, "that one of the TWCC commissioners put it this way--if we have that much smoke, there must be pretty heavy fire."

Schmidt's appearance on the...

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