Tyson Foods bringing “ethnic empowerment network”
to a town near you, by Ann Corcoran 5/21/18
The story leads me to believe that everything is not peace and love when diversity comes to town….and that Tyson Foods has a huge stake in keeping the immigrant worker supply train on the tracks!
“There is a constant need for all of us as we continue to aspire for a homogenous community where we constantly experience a blend of culture, a blend of languages.
The story leads me to believe that everything is not peace and love when diversity comes to town….and that Tyson Foods has a huge stake in keeping the immigrant worker supply train on the tracks!
“There is a constant need for all of us as we continue to aspire for a homogenous community where we constantly experience a blend of culture, a blend of languages.
This
story from Garden City, Kansas makes me wonder—-who is deciding the future for
your meatpacking town, the citizens, or Tyson Foods?
I
have a pretty large archive on Garden City which is one more heartland city that
has been changed by the arrival of US State Department-planted third world
refugee workers over the last decade or so.
From
the Garden City Telegram: Representatives from 10 of Garden
City’s immigrant communities and six of its organizations and public entities
met at St. Catherine Hospital Saturday for the first meeting of the Southwest
Kansas Ethnic Empowerment Network.
The network is a reinvigoration of Tyson Fresh Foods Chaplain Jonathon
Galia’s Coalition of Ethnic Minority Leaders of Southwest Kansas,
which intended to bring together the leaders of Garden City’s immigrant
and minority groups and connect them to resources that would help them succeed
in the region. [Connect them to resources is code for getting them signed
up for their welfare and other social service goodies.—ed]
Galia
said the name of the original group, which he founded almost 10 years ago,
unintentionally left out city and organization representatives. He said he hopes the new network brings
together people from all areas of Garden City in a way that introduces,
connects and aids minority groups in adapting to the community.
We
see a need for an improved communication among the different peoples,” Galia
said.
On
Saturday, more than 20 people from a dozen different backgrounds sat in a
square in one of St. Catherine’s classrooms, with laminated placards announcing
the communities they represented. There
were leaders of immigrants from Myanmar, El Salvador, the Ethiopian ethnic
group Oromo, the Philippines, Somalia, Kenya, Vietnam, Sudan, Haiti and
Eritrea. [By the way, Oromos and Somalis don’t always get along—ed]
Among
them sat the network’s 2018 advisory board: Galia, Garden City Police Chief
Michael Utz, City of Garden City Human Resources Director Allie Medina, St.
Catherine Hospital Vice President Kayte Fulton, Catholic Agency for Migration and Refugee
Services Director LeVita Rohlman, Tyson Human Resources Manager Barb Larsen and LiveWell Finney
County Health Coalition Special Projects Consultant Troy Unruh, who came on
behalf of Callie Dyer, the coalition’s executive director.
Minority group representatives introduced themselves and spoke briefly
about the size and experience of their respective communities. More here.
Do
you have a meatpacking plant near you? If so, it is, and will be, the key
factor in determining the future of your town.
See
my Tyson Foods archive here. Someone should write a book about how
BIG MEAT is changing America by changing the people.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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