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Employee of Calgary chicken plant tests positive for COVID-19 as union calls for closure

An employee of a southeast Calgary chicken processing plant has tested positive for COVID-19, prompting the union to callfor a closure, citing "cramped" quarters that hamper physical distancing.

United Food and Commercial Workers Canada is calling for 2-week closure

An employee at the Lilydale chicken processing plant in the inner-city neighbourhood of Ramsay has tested positive, according to the union that represents the workers. (Ivdonata/Shutterstock)

An employee of a southeast Calgary chicken processing plant has tested positive for COVID-19, prompting the union to callfor a closure, citing "cramped" quarters that hamper physical distancing.

The Lilydale plant, located in Ramsay at 2126 Hurst Road S.E., is owned by Sofina Foods Inc. The companyoperates 16 plants across Canada.

The company said it wasinformed Tuesday by Alberta Health Services that one of its employees had tested positive for the coronavirus.

Theemployee is self-isolating at home and following AHS guidance, according to an email to CBC News fromDaniele Dufour, senior director of communications, public relations and consumer inquiries for Sofina Foods.

Sofina Foods said the plant remains fully operational and has taken a number of steps to protect its workers.

"We met and reviewed our current COVID-19 practices with the Alberta Health Services, who confirmed that all necessary measures had been taken to protect the health of our employees and prevent further spread of the virus in the plant," Dufour wrote.

But the United Food and Commercial Workers Canada Union said it hadsent a letter to Sofina Foods on Tuesday calling for the plant's closure.

"That plant in particular, it's an older facility, there are cramped quarters listening to the members, we were getting so many calls as soon as the first case was announced," said UFCW local 401 spokesperson Michael Hughes.

"This is one case, but if Cargill has taught us anything the way this virus is spreading, we have no idea how extensive this can be."

COVID-19 has taken a particularly hard toll onthe meat-packing sector.

A shutdown of an Olymel plant in Quebec was followed by Harmony Foods near Calgary and theCargill plant near High River, Alta.

As of Wednesday, therewere 580 cases linked to theoutbreak at the Cargill facility which is the largest outbreak in the country linked to a single location and one worker has died.

The JBS meat plant in Brookshad96 cases linked to it as of Wednesday andremains open, but production has been reduced to one shift.

The Lilydale chicken processing plant in Ramsay was slated to move into the Dufferin North industrial area sometime in 2020 prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. (Google Maps)

As of Wednesday night, Hughes said the union had yet to receive a response to its letter.

"[At Cargill] you went from five cases on a Thursday to 38 on Sunday then 358 on Friday. And now we're over 500 [Cargill linked cases]," Hughes said.

"We can't hesitate on this. If we're wrong calling for the closure and it saves one life, that's OK."

The company says that as part of its COVID-19 preparation, it took steps to minimize risks to employees, including:

  • Ongoing disinfection of offices, equipment and common areas.
  • Physical distancing where feasible.
  • Staggered breaks.
  • Plexiglas separations for employees working in production.
  • Enhanced communication on good hygiene practices.
  • Providing face shields to employees.
  • Temperature checks for anyone entering its facilities.
  • A ban on travel and limiting visits to facilities to essential needs only.

Alberta Health Services said it could not provide comment on individual casesWednesday night.

The Lilydale plant is slated to move from Ramsay into the Dufferin North industrial area once construction is complete on a268,000 square-foot facility.

Clarifications

  • This story, originally published on April 22, was updated on April 23 to add comment from Sofina Foods Inc.
    Apr 23, 2020 9:47 PM MT

With files from the Canadian Press