By Jackie Hendry
Some employees of the Smithfield meatpacking plant in Sioux Falls are back at work. A COVID-19 outbreak shut the plant down in mid-April. More than a thousand cases are connected to the plant. At one point it had the largest cluster of cases in the nation.
Governor Kristi Noem says President Trump’s executive order to keep meatpacking plants open puts federal departments in charge of overseeing Smithfield’s operations.
“To be honest I’m disappointed we never received Smithfield managements plan for how they’re going to implement CDC’s recommendation for a safe reopening," Noem says, "but despite that we’re going to do all that we can to protect the health of the Smithfield workforce.”
Noem says the state has ordered four-thousand face shields and 20-thousand face masks for Smithfield workers through FEMA. She expects that shipment this week.
The South Dakota National Guard has set up a drive-through testing site for plant workers and their household members in the Washington High School parking lot.
“One of the most effective things we can do is test Smithfield employees to make sure they’re COVID negative before they’re going back into work," the governor explains. "We also want to make sure their family members have the opportunity to be tested, and so I have authorized the Department of Health to coordinate a mass testing event for Smithfield employees and their dependents.”
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