Nearly 300 people at a JBS meat-processing plant in Greeley, Colo., tested positive for the coronavirus, and at least six have died from it, according to data from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, the New York Times reported. Several families of JBS employees in Greeley are now seeking compensation for a death caused by COVID-19. The company has denied some families’ claims, according to lawyers representing the families who are now taking those claims to court. Those denials offered a view of the difficulties faced by families of essential workers who have fallen ill or died because of the coronavirus, many of whom are struggling to cover medical or funeral costs. Across the U.S., more than 100 meat-processing plants operated by different companies, including Smithfield and Tyson, have had outbreaks of COVID-19, in part because of crowded working conditions. So far, more than 44,000 meatpacking workers have tested positive for the coronavirus, and more than 200 have died, according to the Food & Environment Report Network, which has been tracking the outbreak. Workers’ compensation has traditionally been used to address on-the-job injuries — not fatalities tied to a pandemic that has disrupted millions of lives and killed more than 200,000 people in the United States. Tracing the exact origins of individual infections can be difficult, which appears to have given JBS an avenue to deny compensation claims on the grounds that the illnesses were not necessarily work-related.
