My late mother's home county--Watonwan County--shows up in the story below and on irs map. The demographics of the area have changed since her childhood in Madelia.
I'm also reminded of an event I attended in Willmar a couple of Saturdays ago in Willmar, in which members of rural communities, including Latino and Somali people, gathered to learn about becoming "meatpreneurs" to learn about meat processing in small town butcher shops and meat lockers with the goal of starting their own shops or taking on an existing shop when the owner retires.
Minnesota Farmers Union Bottleneck Project manager Paul Sobocinski discusses the event in a column in the New Ulm Journal, Supporting meat processors. The future of livestock production and processing doesn't have to be a new "Jungle" for rural Minnesotans, old and new.
From the Minnesota Reformer.
Unaccompanied minors flock to MN meatpacking towns, data show
By Christopher IngrahamMore than 4,700 unaccompanied minor migrants have been released into Minnesota since 2015, according to U.S. Health and Human Services data released by the New York Times.
Most are from Central and South American countries. Their numbers skyrocketed following the pandemic, which devastated economies in the region while also creating a labor shortage in the U.S. As a result, many families and their children made the dangerous trek to the United States in search of economic opportunity. The Biden administration’s moves to reverse some of the Trump administration’s restrictive policies may have also played a role.
The journey is especially dangerous for children. For those who arrive in Minnesota, roughly half are released to the custody of close family members like siblings, uncles and grandparents, while another 40% join their parents, the data show.
But roughly 10% of the minors end up in the homes of unrelated adults or distant relatives, arrangements that advocates say can lead to abuse and exploitation.
Child labor violations are an area of particular concern. The New York Times found that nationally, migrant children living with unrelated adults are often clustered in agricultural and manufacturing centers, suggesting they are searching for work in order to help families back home.
But those jobs can be dangerous, and numerous child labor law violations, many involving immigrant children, have made headlines in recent months.
The Minnesota data matches those national trends. Migrant children living with unrelated adults are most highly concentrated in Worthington, where JBS Foods had at least 22 underage children working overnight shifts cleaning a slaughterhouse. The janitorial company employing those children also sent underage workers to plants in St. Cloud and Austin, which also stand out on the map.
Other communities with unusually high numbers of migrant children living with unrelated adults include:
- Willmar, home to Jennie-O turkey processing;
- St. James, where a Smithfield Foods plant is the largest employer in town;
- And Austin, where Hormel and Quality Pork Processors are major employers.
Several Twin Cities zip codes also rank highly on the list, although it’s unclear whether this is due to the presence of specific employers or simply the large immigrant population in the metro.
The data does not include names of the children or their sponsors, nor does it have any specific information on their work or school status. Some children might end up in communities like Worthington because the businesses there employ large numbers of adult migrants, with strong social networks forming as a result.
This Minnesota Reformer article is republished online under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
Photo: Workers in a pork processing plant, 2016. Photo courtesy of U.S. General Accountability Office.
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- MN Farmers Union president: A legislative agenda for Minnesota’s family farmer
- Where’s the meat? Solving a bottleneck in the meat supply chain vital to farmers’ profitability
- Wabasso hog farmer & @LSPNow organizer Paul Sobocinski speaks truth to power on PBS
- Paul Sobocinski Star Tribune LTE: Cracks in industrial food system have been there all along
- Session Daily: Struggling farmers could see relief from loan fees with passage of Lippert's HF3739
- Guest post: Senate language defining feedlots as pasture could mean more manure in waters
- Paul Sobocinski: MN rural reality & factory farms
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