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| JBS Foods is the leading beef producer in the world. |
"Negotiations between the company and union representatives have stalled," reports Tony St. James for RDF TV. "The strike, which began on March 16, centers on allegations of unfair labor practices, wage concerns, and workplace conditions."
JBS is the nation's biggest beef supplier, and the Greeley plant is one of its largest slaughterhouses, which, in many cases, would bring JBS to the bargaining table to get workers back on the line. But in today's economy, where meatpacking companies have been losing money due to "excess slaughter capacity," JBS has little incentive to move negotiations forward, report Matthew Brown and Colleen Slevin of The Associated Press.
With the Greenly plant nearly shut down, and other slaughterhouse "capacity reductions — including the closure of a major Tyson Foods’ plant in Nebraska — JBS and other companies are seeing profits increase," AP reports.
The economic timing may mean the strike drags on until JBS sees some economic benefit to discussing any concessions. St. James writes, "Union officials say the company has not returned to the bargaining table, while workers are seeking higher wages that better reflect inflation. The dispute follows months of negotiations" in which JBS offered a 2% wage increase.
The last slaughterhouse strike happened at a Minnesota Hormel plant in 1985. AP reports, "That strike lasted more than a year and included violent confrontations between police and protesters."

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