Tyson Foods takes out full-page ad: ‘The food supply chain is breaking’

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Tyson Foods executives said in a full-page ad published Sunday that the closure of food-processing plants due to the coronavirus is “breaking” the supply chain.

In a full-page ad published in The New York Times, The Washington Post and the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, board chairman John Tyson wrote that “the food supply chain is breaking,” saying farmers will be left without anywhere to sell livestock and “millions of animals — chickens, pigs and cattle — will be depopulated because of the closure of our processing facilities.”

“There will be limited supply of our products available in grocery stores until we are able to reopen our facilities that are currently closed,” he added.

The company has already closed facilities in Logansport, Ind., and Waterloo, Iowa, while Smithfield has closed a facility in Sioux Falls, S.D., where at least one worker has died from the virus, as well as a JBS facility in Worthington, Minn. The Waterloo, Worthington and Sioux Falls facilities comprise about 15 percent of pork production in the U.S.

At least 182 cases of the virus were linked to the Waterloo plant closure, and three employees told CNN the plant has taken insufficient steps to protect them from the virus, including conditions that made it all but impossible to properly practice social distancing inside the facility.

The company told CNN plants are sanitized daily and Tyson himself wrote in the advertisement that the company performs daily temperature checks and requires the wearing of face masks in all facilities.

Grocery stores could see shortages of pork by next week/CDC issues new coronavirus guidelines for meat processing plants

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1 hr 47 min ago

Wisconsin must expand testing capacity before it can reopen, state official says

https://www.cnn.com/us/live-news/us-coronavirus-update-04-27-20/index.html

Mandela Barnes speaks during a campaign rally in Milwaukee on October 22, 2018, before taking office as Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin.
Mandela Barnes speaks during a campaign rally in Milwaukee on October 22, 2018, before taking office as Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin. Daniel Acker/Bloomberg/Getty Images

While some states are already allowing certain businesses to reopen, Wisconsin extended its stay-at-home order until May 26.

“Part of the criteria [to reopen] is making sure we have adequate testing so we can get about 80,000 tests per week,” Wisconsin Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes said. “We don’t have that yet.

With this testing capacity, the state can build contact tracing and find out where the concentration of outbreaks are. This would help get the virus under control, Barnes said.

Barnes said the coronavirus crisis has highlighted the need for Medicare for All as the state remains under stay-at-home orders, forcing businesses to stay…

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KS: 7-year-old shot in hunting accident improving

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

https://www.wibw.com/content/news/Authorities-7-year-old-shot-in-hunting-accident-improving-569978221.html

McPHERSON, Kan. (AP) — A 7-year-old boy shot in a weekend hunting accident in central Kansas is improving, authorities said.

The shooting happened around 5 p.m. Saturday while the boy was turkey hunting with his parents south of Roxbury in McPherson County, Wichita television station KAKE reported. Sheriff’s Capt. Doug Anderson said another hunter who believed he was shooting at a turkey shot the boy. Investigators said the hunter was actually shooting at a turkey decoy that the boy was standing near.

The boy, who was shot in the head, was flown to a Wichita hospital. The boy was expected to be released from intensive care on Monday, authorities said.

The names of the boy, his parents and the hunter who shot the child have not been released. The shooting remains under investigation.

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Even if you test negative for COVID-19, assume you have it, experts say

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PCR tests being prepped
(Image: © Shutterstock)

Conventional diagnostic tests for the novel coronavirus may give false-negative results about 30% of the time, meaning people with an active COVID-19 infection still test negative for the disease, according to news reports.

“Unfortunately, we have very little public data on the false-negative rate for these tests in clinical practice,”…

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Could What You Choose to Eat Prevent the Next Pandemic?

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

'Amirali Mirhashemian on Unsplash'
Source: ‘Amirali Mirhashemian on Unsplash’

When the history of COVID-19 is written, will we list our obsession with eating animals as a major cause that led to a catastrophe of such profound consequence?

Will we have learned from the lesson of the Wuhan “wet market”—where COVID-19 is theorized to have originated—that cramming wild animals into meat markets can be dangerous? Will we have added to that lesson the one about the H1N1 swine flu of 2009 that originated in an intensive pig confinement operation in North Carolina? Will we have also added both these lessons to the H5N1 bird flu lesson of 1997, in which yet another deadly disease evidently originated in animal farms? Will we have factored in the tens of millions of illnesses each…

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Global coronavirus death toll hits 200,000

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(Reuters) – Global deaths linked to the coronavirus passed 200,000 on Saturday, while confirmed cases of the virus are expected to hit 3 million in coming days, according to a Reuters tally.

FILE PHOTO: Michael Neel, funeral director of of All Veterans Funeral and Cremation, wearing full PPE, looks at the U.S. flag on the casket of George Trefren, a 90 year old Korean War veteran who died of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in a nursing home, in Denver, Colorado, U.S. April 23, 2020. REUTERS/Rick Wilking

More than half of the fatalities have been reported by the United States, Spain and Italy.

The first death linked to the disease was reported on Jan. 10 in Wuhan, China. It took 91 days for the death toll to pass 100,000 and a further 16 days…

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10 Things Mentally Strong People Do During a Pandemic

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

The COVID-19 global pandemic and the systemic ramifications are not only unprecedented but harrowing. We are all adjusting to new realities and grieving the loss of old ones. All of us are simply trying to manage our daily lives taking care of our children or parents, dealing with financial stresses, and adjusting to a new way to live.

All stressors related to COVID-19 may likely result in a myriad of negative feelings such as depression, anxiety, and even post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This collective trauma that we are experiencing may feel bleak, but this isn’t the first crisis in our history. For example, research investigations in crises such as the 9-11 terrorist attacks, Ebola, and SARS reveal how individuals respond to pandemics/crises…

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MO: Hunter lucky to be alive after being shot, mistaken for turkey in Shannon County, Mo.

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

https://www.ky3.com/content/news/Hunter-lucky-to-be-alive-after-being-shot-mistaken-for-turkey-569940291.html

SHANNON COUNTY, Mo. — A man from Mountain View says he is lucky to be alive after being shot while hunting turkey in Shannon County.
He spoke with Michael Deere about how it’s changed how he hunts.
Warning, there may be pictures in this story that some viewers find disturbing.

“I’m trying to figure out what’s going on and it just dawned on me, I’ve been shot,” Chase Rutledge told KY3.

31-year-old Chase Rutledge was mistaken for a turkey by a 17-year-old hunter with a shotgun.

“You can imagine a bunch of red wasps stinging you, that’s how it felt,” Rutledge described.

Rutledge knows the young man didn’t mean to shoot him.

“He said he thought I was a turkey. He said he shot at movement….said he seen white,” Rutledge added.

Rutledge was helped to his truck and…

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2 million chickens will be killed in Delaware and Maryland because of lack of employees at processing plants

https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/25/us/chickens-depopulated-delmarva-plants-delaware-maryland/index.html

By Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio, CNN

(CNN)Two million chickens on several farms in Delaware and Maryland will be “depopulated” — meaning humanely killed — due to a lack of employees at chicken processing plants, according to a statement from Delmarva Poultry Industry Inc.

The reduced employee attendance at the company’s plants is a result of “additional community cases of COVID-19, additional testing, and people practicing the ‘stay home if you’re sick’ social distancing guidance from public health officials,” the statement reads.
The chickens will be depopulated “using approved, humane methods” that are accepted by the American Veterinary Medical Association and all state and local guidelines, the company said.
CNN has reached out to the Delaware Department of Agriculture but has not yet received a response.
The Maryland Department of Agriculture says it learned of the company’s plans on April 9 and “continues to monitor for any developments.”
“MDA is only involved in depopulations when it is done in response to animal health concerns,” the department said in a statement. “This particular case was a private decision made by an individual business.”
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Delmarva says it made the “difficult but necessary” decision after exhausting “the study of other alternatives, including allowing another chicken company to transport and process the chickens and taking a partially processed product to rendering facilities to utilize for other animal feed.”
“If no action were taken, the birds would outgrow the capacity of the chicken house to hold them,” the company said, adding that they are not closing any processing plants and will continue to compensate the affected chicken growers.
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