John Morrell to Close Sioux City, Iowa Plant
20 Janeiro 2010 - 12:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
CINCINNATI, Jan. 20 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- John Morrell &
Co. announced today that it would permanently close its hog
processing and fresh meat fabrication plant located in Sioux City,
Iowa, effective April 20, 2010. The Sioux City plant processes hogs
and produces boneless loins and other fresh pork products. John
Morrell is a subsidiary of Smithfield Foods, Inc. (NYSE: SFD). "We
deeply regret having to close this facility," said Joseph B.
Sebring, president of John Morrell. "We recognize that layoffs and
plant closings are difficult for everyone concerned. But at the
same time, we believe this is a necessary business decision. The
Sioux City plant is one of the oldest, most outdated and least
efficient plants in the Smithfield system," he continued. The Sioux
City plant closure will affect approximately 1,450 hourly and
salaried employees. The company will confer with union officials
regarding this transition. The company will comply with the federal
Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN), and will
provide employees with a 90-day notification of the plant closure.
Under the WARN Act, the company also will notify state dislocated
worker units so that they can promptly offer dislocated worker
assistance. WARN Act notices, where appropriate, are being issued
today. "The consistent quality of our products is extremely
important and is a daily priority. We are constantly improving our
facilities and equipment to ensure a safer, higher-quality product.
In this case, the Sioux City plant was constructed in 1959 and
would require significant capital expenditures to outfit it with
the next generation of pork processing technology. In this adverse
business environment those capital needs simply cannot be met,"
said Mr. Sebring. "Furthermore, the Sioux City plant design,
layout, and footprint severely limit our operating and sales
flexibility and our ability to produce value-added packaged meats
products and maximize production throughput. The refrigeration
system is antiquated and inefficient and the plant lacks any
significant refrigerated storage space," he continued. The company
said that three other Smithfield plants - located in Sioux Falls,
South Dakota; Denison, Iowa; and Crete, Nebraska - have the
capacity to partially absorb the number of hogs that are currently
being processed at Sioux City and that it will transfer some of the
Sioux City production to those plants in the near term. This
partial transfer of production capacity will not require the
company to secure additional employees. In addition, the company
stated that it will honor all production contracts at Sioux City
and that Smithfield has no further plans for plant closures in the
foreseeable future. With sales of $12 billion, Smithfield Foods is
the leading processor and marketer of fresh pork and packaged meats
in the United States, as well as the largest producer of hogs. For
more information, visit http://www.smithfieldfoods.com/.
DATASOURCE: Smithfield Foods, Inc. CONTACT: Keira Ullrich,
Smithfield Foods, Inc., +1-212-758-2100, Web Site:
http://www.smithfieldfoods.com/
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