The News Journal

Feds: Children hired to clean slaughterh­ouses

Probe fines company $650K after kids as young as 13 employed

- Thao Nguyen Christine Heri

A Tennessee-based cleaning company has agreed to pay nearly $650,000 in civil penalties after federal investigat­ors found the company employed at least 24 children at two slaughteri­ng and meatpackin­g facilities, the U.S. Department of Labor announced.

A federal court in Iowa approved a consent order and judgment Monday with Fayette Janitorial Service LLC that requires the company to pay $649,304 in civil penalties, the U.S. Labor Department said in a news release. The company must also hire a third party to implement company policies to prevent the illegal employment of children and create a program for reporting concerns about child labor violations.

According to a federal complaint, the Labor Department’s investigat­ion “found that Fayette employs minors under the age of 18 whose job is to clean the killing floor.” In the complaint, the department says the company employed 15 children in Virginia and at least nine children in Iowa on its overnight sanitation shifts. Some were as young as 13.

On Feb. 27, the Labor Department obtained a preliminar­y injunction against Fayette Janitorial to halt the company’s employment of children. The company agreed to nationwide compliance six days after the department filed its temporary restrainin­g order and injunction.

Fayette Janitorial is headquarte­red in Somerville, Tennessee. The company provides contract sanitation and cleaning services for meat and poultry processing facilities in more than 30 states and employs more than 600 workers, the department said.

The children were employed at Seaboard Triumph Foods LLC in Sioux City, Iowa, and Perdue Farms in Accomac, Virginia, according to the Labor Department. Both facilities said in February that they had terminated their contracts with Fayette Janitorial.

Under U.S. law, children under 18 are prohibited from being employed in dangerous occupation­s such as meat and poultry slaughteri­ng, processing, rendering and packing operations. According to the Labor Department, Fayette Janitorial had minors “clean dangerous kill floor equipment such as head splitters, jaw pullers, meat bandsaws, and neck clippers.”

The department said investigat­ors witnessed children hiding their faces and carrying “glittered school backpacks” before starting their shifts at the Iowa facility. The children used “corrosive” cleaners to clean kill floor equipment. At the Virginia facility, the department said at least one child, who was identified as a 14-year-old, suffered severe injuries after the child tried to remove debris from machinery.

“The Department of Labor is determined to stop our nation’s children from being exploited and endangered in jobs they should never have been near,” regional solicitor Christine Heri said in a statement. “Children in hazardous occupation­s drove the Fair Labor Standards Act’s passage in 1938. Yet in 2024, we still find U.S. companies employing children in risky jobs, jeopardizi­ng their safety for profit.”

Child labor violation crackdowns

In recent years, federal authoritie­s have been cracking down on child labor violations across the country, promising to hold employers accountabl­e.

The Labor Department reported last February that child labor violations have increased 69% since 2018. During the last fiscal year, the department said its investigat­ors found that more than 5,800 children had been employed in violation of federal child labor laws.

In March, a Tennessee parts supplier was fined for illegally employing children as young as 14 in dangerous jobs and subjecting them to “oppressive child labor.” In the same month, a Baskin-Robbins franchisee in Utah was fined for allowing 64 employees ages 14 to 15 “to work too late in the day and too many hours in a week while school was in session at eight locations,” the Labor Department said.

Federal investigat­ors said in January that inadequate safety standards at a poultry processing plant in Mississipp­i led to the death of a 16-year-old sanitation worker. The teen died on July 14, 2023, after he was pulled into dangerous machinery while cleaning equipment. It was the second fatality at the facility in just over two years.

A Southern California poultry processor and several related poultry companies, which supplied grocers including Aldi and Ralphs, agreed to pay $3.8 million last December for violations including illegally employing children as young as 14 to debone poultry with sharp knifes and operate powerdrive­n lifts to move pallets.

In May 2023, three McDonald’s franchisee­s with a combined 62 restaurant­s in Kentucky, Indiana, Maryland and Ohio paid fines totaling more than $212,000 after the Labor Department charged them with violating the labor rights of 305 minors, including two 10year-olds who were not paid.

A Wisconsin company paid a $1.5 million fine in February 2023 after the Labor Department found it employed 102 minors ages 13 to 17 in “hazardous occupation­s” at 13 meat processing facilities in eight states.

Contributi­ng: Keenan Thomas, Knoxville News Sentinel; Mike Snider, USA TODAY

“The Department of Labor is determined to stop our nation’s children from being exploited and endangered in jobs they should never have been near.”

 ?? WILLIAM BRETZGER/DELAWARE NEWS JOURNAL FILE ?? The children were employed at Seaboard Triumph Foods LLC in Sioux City, Iowa, and Perdue Farms in Accomac, Virginia, according to the Labor Department.
WILLIAM BRETZGER/DELAWARE NEWS JOURNAL FILE The children were employed at Seaboard Triumph Foods LLC in Sioux City, Iowa, and Perdue Farms in Accomac, Virginia, according to the Labor Department.

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