Immigrants Keep an Iowa Meatpacking Town Alive and Growing.
Waves of Asian, African and Latino newcomers have filled jobs at pork, egg
and turkey plants where wages have fallen and work has grown more grueling.
STORM LAKE, Iowa When Dan Smith first went to work at the pork processing plant in Storm Lake in 1980, pretty much the only way to nab that kind of union job was to have a father, an uncle or a brother already there. The pay, he recalled, was $16 an hour, with benefits enough to own a home, a couple of cars, a camper and a boat, while your wife stayed home with the children.
It was the best-paying job you could get, 100 percent, if you were unskilled, said Mr. Smith, now 66, who followed his father through the plant gates.
After nearly four decades at the plant, most of them as a forklift driver, Mr. Smith is retiring this month.
The union is long gone, and so are most of the white faces of men who once labored in the broiling heat of the killing floor and the icy chill of the production lines. What hasnt changed much is Mr. Smiths hourly wage, which is still about $16 an hour, the same as when he started 37 years ago. Had his wages kept up with inflation, he would be earning about $47 an hour.
The forces that have helped transform this snug lakeside town in northwestern Iowa and others like it during Mr. Smiths working life have created a complex swirl of economic successes and hardships, optimism and unease.
Fierce global competition, agricultural automation and plant closures have left many rural towns struggling for survival. In areas stripped of the farm and union jobs that paid middle-class wages and tempted the next generation to stay put and raise a family, young people are more likely to move on to college or urban centers like Des Moines. Left behind are an aging population, abandoned storefronts and shrinking economic prospects.
Yet Storm Lake, hustled along by the relentless drive of manufacturers to cut labor costs and by the towns grit to survive, is still growing. However clumsily at times, this four-square-mile patch has absorbed successive waves of immigrants and refugees from Asia, from Mexico and Central America, and from Africa.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/29/business/economy/storm-lake-iowa-immigrant-workers.html?
dalton99a
(81,068 posts)so hospitable to refugees
elleng
(130,149 posts)freddyvh
(276 posts)i donate and volunteer for his opponent every election.
freddyvh
(276 posts)Denison, Carroll, and others are just like this one.
War Pigs
(252 posts)Low-skilled workers who set this in motion. Combined with the greed of the plant operators. Americans would work in those plants at the decent wage level just not at the minimum wage. All over the Midwest including my state of Ohio this played out. Cheap undocumented labor leads to suppressed wages and removes any incentive to modernize and increase the efficiency in these processing plants