Fayette Janitorial Service LLC agreed to pay nearly $650,000 in civil penalties and the court-ordered mandate that it no longer employs minors.

A Tennessee-based sanitation company has agreed to pay more than half a million dollars after a federal investigation found it illegally hired at least two dozen children to clean dangerous meat processing facilities in Iowa and Virginia.

The U.S. Department of Labor announced Monday that Fayette Janitorial Service LLC entered into a consent judgment, in which the company agrees to nearly $650,000 in civil penalties and the court-ordered mandate that it no longer employs minors. The February filing indicated federal investigators believed at least four children had still been working at one Iowa slaughterhouse as of Dec. 12.

U.S. law prohibits companies from employing people younger than 18 to work in meat processing plants because of the hazards.

  • no banana
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    1338 months ago

    Half a million doesn’t seem like enough tbh

    • Dojan
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      808 months ago

      Honestly when it comes to severe crimes the punishments should put them out of business. Yeah some people will lose their jobs, but suddenly there’s a vacuum that can be filled, and it’s not like the expertise is gone. Someone else can start a better company that doesn’t do illegal shit and fill that vacuum.

      Isn’t that how capitalism is supposed to work anyway?

      • Avid Amoeba
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        8 months ago

        I keep hearing this about how companies failing being how capitalism is supposed to work. Capitalism doesn’t give a shit about bad companies failing or competition. Capitalism is concerned with the ownership of the means of production. Lack of regulation and competition works tremendously for the owners of capital and those owners will use their capital to foster such profitable environments. This is how capitalism works.

      • @Stovetop
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        98 months ago

        This isn’t a skilled industry, hence why they have children working there. The equipment/facilities is the real value. Unless the government wants to take control or find new management, the jobs are dependent on whoever owns the machines.

        Or, just maybe, we close the meat packing plant anyways because everyone should eat less meat.

        • @[email protected]
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          228 months ago

          It’s not even the slaughterhouse. The meat packing plant contracted out to “Ricky’s bone saw cleaning LLC” who is paying the fine for child labor. They might have a few jugs of detergents and sanitizers plus some work vans.

        • @NFord
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          28 months ago

          No no no! It’s the responsibility of the corporations to act ethically! Consumers bear no fault in how corporations decide do business!!

          Yikes, sorry about that. I had the urge to sound ridiculous for a second. I agree. Money talks and we should all be mindful of what we say.

    • @tacosplease
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      68 months ago

      Yeah was just wondering how it compares to the money they saved using child labor.

  • @ohlaph
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    908 months ago

    A fine is merely the cost of doing business.

    If we want change, there needs to be jail time.

    • @[email protected]
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      148 months ago

      I’d say one day for each hour of child labour for everyone who was involved in facilitating it, or had oversight responsibilities.

    • @[email protected]
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      108 months ago

      And yet in the same breath we often point out that prison time doesn’t rehabilitate (think petty crime). I think realistic fines to individuals AND companies that are more than “cost of doing business,” as well as blacklisting the (undoubtedly several) individals responsible from being able to hold that level of power in an industry, not just the company, then there may be a reasonable deterrent, and it won’t be a languishing burden on tax payers to put these guys up in dressed up 4 star hotels.

      • @barsquid
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        28 months ago

        People deliberately putting children’s lives at risk should be jailed the same whether or not they are doing it from hiding behind a limited liability. And also the prisons should be changed so that they are actually about rehabilitation.

    • @[email protected]
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      58 months ago

      Bad idea. Just increase the fines so they outweigh any potential savings the business may have received.

      Hit them where it hurts, in their wallets.

            • @[email protected]
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              8 months ago

              From a better solution that actually improves the lives of people.

              He’s just advocating for revenge. It doesn’t solve anything.

              Let me say it again for the people in the back: it’s better to redistribute these people’s wealth than to throw them in prison without redistributing their wealth.

              Try not to distract from the problem at hand.

    • @barsquid
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      158 months ago

      Oh, I can see how you might think that from having basic common sense. But actually, laws are only for poors.

    • @Coreidan
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      138 months ago

      Only if they didn’t give a cut to the regulators. This isn’t a fine. It’s payment so the regulators look the other way.

      It’s cheaper for them to break the law and pay a “fine” then to go about things legitimately.

      It’s the cost of doing business.

  • @frunch
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    8 months ago

    That’s not all, folks! 🐷 This shit runs deep, this is merely the tip of the iceberg. I just can’t wrap my head around children being brought into these places, trained, and then let loose–and no adult along that chain thinks to themselves that maybe there’s a problem with that?!?!?!

    From the article:

    • One 14-year-old was severely injured while cleaning the drumstick packing line belt at the plant in Virginia, the investigation alleged.

    • The agreement stipulates that Fayette will hire a third-party consultant to monitor the company’s compliance with child labor laws for at least three years, as well as to facilitate trainings. The company must also establish a hotline for individuals to report concerns about child labor abuses.

    • The Labor Department’s latest statistics indicate the number of children being employed illegally in the U.S. has increased 88% since 2019.

    This is all very performative, slap-on-the-wrist level punishment, and i imagine there are hundreds more children out there still working in shit conditions because nobody will say or do anything about it until more injuries/deaths force them to.

    • mynachmadarch
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      88 months ago

      I wonder, also, how much that increase in children being employed illegally is them needing to in order to make ends meet at home due to corporate greedflation running rampant?

      Like, yes, the companies shouldn’t hire the kids. But also, we should address why those kids are willing to work those jobs in the first place.

    • @bhmnscmm
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      128 months ago

      It’s always immigrant kids. Nobody should be surprised that the companies that are willing to illegally employ immigrants are also willing to violate other labor laws.

      Allow these people (the adults, not kids) to become legally employed and this problem will be drastically reduced.

      • @psycho_driver
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        38 months ago

        I work for a top 50 by population city here in the US and they’re hiring illegals left and right. They do it by bringing them in through a temp agency and then transferring them over to our books after six months.

        • @[email protected]
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          8 months ago

          There is no such thing as an illegal person. A business may have illegal hiring practices, though.

  • @woodenskewer
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    298 months ago

    No fine for Perdue or Seaboard Triumph Foods though even though the kids were even allowed in the plants. How could we possibly hold them liable for vetting outside contractors.

    • @cybersandwich
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      88 months ago

      That’s the way it works. It’s a risk management and mitigation strategy for companies. You hiring contractors and offload the liability.

      From what I understand, and IANAL(with the best of em) we’d have to change the laws to go after companies for their contractor’s liability/negligence.

      I think you’d be able to go after Perdue or seaboard if you could prove they were grossly negligence or derelict or knowingly hired this contractorbecause they used kids.

      But they can play that legal “plausible deniability” card otherwise.

  • @antidote101
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    8 months ago

    Once Trump gets in, and the “Freedom to be Poor” bill is passed than these damn woke liberals won’t be able to limit these children’s rights like this!

    We’ll pass Poe’s Law too.

  • @[email protected]
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    178 months ago

    Child labor laws are ruining this country! I started at the metal refinery when I was 9, and worked my way up to shift foreman by 12.

  • @NatakuNox
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    8 months ago

    And they think an untrained minor will ever effectively clean food production compared to trained adult. Doesn’t matter that they are endangering a minor and giving people food poisoning, as long as it’s cheaper.

    • @SkybreakerEngineer
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      128 months ago

      Effective? All that matters is profit, get out of here with that commie crap

  • @Stonewyvvern
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    148 months ago

    “The children yearn for the mines” -some goofball

  • @Siegfried
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    148 months ago

    The money will be given to the children, right?

    • @[email protected]
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      68 months ago

      Sure will, money will go to Israel, they buy bombs, bombs find children therefore money being given to children!

  • @UnderpantsWeevil
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    148 months ago

    Cost of doing business. Not going to slow anyone down.

  • @nutsack
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    8 months ago

    i don’t know how they can call these places “meat processing plants”. they are slaughter houses. for slaughtering

    • @[email protected]
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      108 months ago

      Because people are detached from ethics and humanity as an intended function of capitalism. If people regarded animal welfare every time they needed to eat by being exposed to the slaughter, line might go down. Media is sanitized whatever degree maximizes potential consumer bases, and ultimately profits.