Tyson
Foods changing America one town at a time; up next Humboldt, TN Posted by Ann Corcoran 12/1/17
This time with the help of Tennessee
Governor Haslam and Senator (Little Bob) Corker.
As you know BIG MEAT and BIG
CHICKEN are major drivers of the US Refugee Admissions Program and here we
learn that Tyson Foods new plant in Humboldt, TN will employ 1,500
workers.
But
get this: the pols admit that unemployment is really low, so where might those
workers, who will do mostly dirty jobs, come from?
You guessed it! Immigrant and
refugee labor will soon be streaming into a town of less than 9,000 people!
And
before I get to this really bad news for the citizens of Humboldt, this gives
me another opportunity to show you the direct connection between giant global
corporations like Tyson Foods (JBS Swift and Chobani too) and the federally funded
refugee ‘religious’ contractors placing refugees secretly in to American towns. See Lutherans sign deal with Tyson Foods!
Now
to Tyson Foods’ new deal in Tennessee…..
From
the Commercial Appeal (hat tip: Joanne):
Tyson
Foods will build a new chicken production complex in Humboldt — 75 miles
northeast of Memphis — that will employ 1,500 people, company and government
officials announced Monday. [Memphis
is the closest refugee placement office to Humboldt, but the feds and Catholic
Charities could expand to Humboldt as has happened in other states to
accommodate meatpackers.—ed]
The
$300 million project is to start operations in late 2019 to meet what Tyson
described in a release as “strong consumer demand for its chicken.”
“This is an historic day for
Humboldt, Gibson County and West Tennessee,” Humboldt Mayor Marvin Sikes said
in a prepared statement. “I want to thank Tyson Foods for their commitment to
our community and region. The
significant job creation and capital investment that will result from this project
will have a positive impact on our community that will last for many years, and
I could not be more excited about the future of Humboldt and Gibson County.”
Plant
will employ 1,500 people
Tyson
Foods picked West Tennessee over potential sites in other states. Gov. Bill
Haslam said in a prepared statement, “The new facility will be Tyson’s fifth
location in Tennessee and it means a great deal that a company of this
magnitude will continue to grow its footprint in our state. I appreciate Tyson
for its continued commitment to Tennessee and for helping us become one step
closer to our goal of making Tennessee the No. 1 location in the Southeast for high quality jobs.”
Then here at The News and
Observer we learn….
Tennessee
Gov. Bill Haslam and U.S. Sen. Bob Corker attended the news conference and
praised Tyson for choosing Humboldt, a rural city of about 8,200 people located
about 85 miles (135 kilometers) northeast of Memphis. Tennessee competed with
other states for the project. Doug Ramsey, group president of poultry for
Tyson, would not discuss which other states were in the mix.
Haslam said that while unemployment in Tennessee is low — at 3 percent
as of September — “it’s no news that some of our rural counties have
struggled.” He called the plant a “big deal” for the state.
The company’s portfolio of products includes Tyson chicken, Jimmy Dean, Hillshire Farm and Ball Park.
The company’s portfolio of products includes Tyson chicken, Jimmy Dean, Hillshire Farm and Ball Park.
So,
if the unemployment rate stands at 3%, where are the
workers going to come from? It might be a financial big deal for bigwigs
and assorted hangers-on, but not for the citizens of Humboldt!
Tyson
currently operates four facilities in the state, employing about 5,000 people.
The company says it paid Tennessee farmers more than $61 million in the 2016
fiscal year.
The
announcement marks the second major economic development project Tyson has
begun this year in Tennessee. In August, the company announced an $84 million
expansion of operations in Union City. That project is expected to create about
300 jobs.
I
think we all need to start making a list of the products companies that
employee foreign workers (whose salaries we supplemented with our tax dollars)
are producing and become more discerning shoppers.
See
my ever expanding file on Tyson Foods, here.
Don’t miss posts on Shelbyville, TN where Tyson
Foods initially succumbed to pressure to dump the Labor Day holiday in exchange
for a Muslim holiday for its workers.
And,
definitely don’t miss: BIG MEAT squawks when Trump lowered refugee
ceiling, here. Or tiny Nebraska town defeats
BIG CHICKEN, here.
Wonder
why the Heritage Foundation completely missed the boat and
never looked at the impact of global corporations and refugee labor on American
towns in their supposed “roadmap for reform” plans for the UN/US Refugee Admissions
Program?
Could it be because powerful
Republicans are pushing for migrant labor for their big business donors?
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