Meat processor ordered to pay fines after teen lost hand in grinder
Meat processor ordered to pay fines after teen lost hand in grinder
This is the best summary I could come up with:
IONIA, Mich. (AP) — The owner of a meat business in western Michigan was ordered to pay $1,143 Tuesday after a 17-year-old worker lost his hand in a grinder.
Ionia County Judge Ray Voet said the accident was a “horrible tragedy” but didn’t warrant jail or probation for Darin Wilbur, WOOD-TV reported.
The teenager lost his hand in 2019 while working at US Guys Processing in Saranac, 25 miles (40 kilometers) east of Grand Rapids.
“Two months later, we wouldn’t even be here,” the judge said, noting that the teen soon would have turned 18 years old.
Defense attorney Howard Van Den Heuvel said Wilbur hired the teen, a high school dropout, as a way to help him.
He said the boy was warned to never put his hand inside the grinder.
I’m a bot and I’m open source!
Defense attorney Howard Van Den Heuvel said Wilbur hired the teen, a high school dropout, as a way to help him. He said the boy was warned to never put his hand inside the grinder.
I’m sympathetic to this, but he shouldn’t have been working around dangerous machinery at all. Give the kid safer jobs, like fetching tools or mopping floors.
It is an average of the highest 39 paid weeks during the last 52 weeks of employment. The minimum death benefit is equal to 50% of the state average weekly wage in the year of injury. Payments continue for a maximum of 500 weeks, and it is tax free money.
So roughly 5 years salary, at least in Michigan.
If you go by weight:
A hand is about 0.46kg An average adult body is about 81kg 81÷0.46×1143
=> about 200.000$
Should be able to get 50% of salary in that industry, for life.
Too bad the lawyers are going to take 40% off the top.
Two years wages is ~$1200?
I’m over paying my interns.
FWIW, the incident in question happened in 2019, so it’s not anything happening due to the current climate. And while the owner should have ensured the kid had a work permit, the kid was already a high school dropout, so might not have had any way to get a work permit legally anyway. At some point, people still need to eat. I’ve read several articles at this point and it feels like there’s some grey in here somewhere that I just don’t know enough to be able to form an opinion on.
While this is pretty awful and shouldn’t have happened, I don’t think I’d advocate that a 17 year old shouldn’t be allowed to have any job at all. I think they should be paid normal minimum wage, same as any other employee, and there should be jobs that they can’t do due to age (such as this one), but I wouldn’t stop it altogether.
That said, I’m completely fine with increasing the fines for employing a minor in a dangerous profession though, which is apparently the charge that the owner plead guilty to. Fines for employers who break the law should be increased in general, especially when it puts workers in danger.
The owner of a meat business in western Michigan was ordered to pay $1,143
“Two months later, we wouldn’t even be here,” the judge said, noting that the teen soon would have turned 18 years old.
“Ionia County is a farming county, and I know a lot of people in this county view children working, sometimes around dangerous machinery, as part of growing up,” [the judge] said.
He said the boy was warned to never put his hand inside the grinder.
What the FUCK
He said the boy was warned to never put his hand inside the grinder.
He said the boy was warned not to fall into the thresher. Why did he fall into the thresher?
“Ionia County is a farming county, and I know a lot of people in this county view children working, sometimes around dangerous machinery, as part of growing up,” [the judge] said.
I married a farm girl and live in a small town surrounded by farming communities. This is unfortunately very true. Harvest time comes you need all of the help you can get to harvest everything before the weather destroys it. There’s no easy answer to this problem as most people generally don’t want to work on farms given the work conditions, and most small family farms can’t afford to pay for the labor they need (and its gigantic corporate farms where the real abuse happens because there’s no incentive to maintain the land or animals) Pretty much the only people willing to work on farms are the people who grew up on farms and people who can’t work anywhere else (such as migrant laborers from poorer countries)
Yeah, not surprising and not new.
I mean it’s nice to see this getting some light and on this but honestly nothing new outside of crappy Republicans looking to get rid of parental consent to have these accidents happen.
I was one of these kids that worked at 14, with my parents signing off on the work permit, to keep food in the table and that check is honestly worthless since once you got the job all enforcement and checks are ignored outside of one rule. I’ve had a friend get his thumb caught between a roller at the age of 15 that he shouldn’t have been allowed to work on, another of that stuff chemical burns. I’ve had my fair share of working machines that by law I should have been working at had a few injuries but thankfully nothing maiming.
There were was never anyone who checked out enforced any of the rules and none of us ever complained because, well there’s a reason were working these jobs and not a cushy retail job, and none of these companies ever suffered any meaningful consequences. The laws and enforcement were and remain laughably inadequate except the one rule as I’ve said, the hours worked. They followed the number of good were allowed to work because that’s the only thing anyone ever really checked on probably because that would be the only thing that would trigger audits.
Over twenty years later and nothing has really changed and only getting worse thanks to Republicans.
The fun part is that he now gets to be on disability for life. At the company’s expense? No. At the taxpayer’s expense.
Don’t get me wrong, he deserves it, but it should be the company paying out for the rest of this guy’s life.
The fine is $1,143 BTW
Jokes on you
The UK is planning on the same
The kid is a high school dropout. What’s he going to do with no education and just one hand? How is he supposed to make a living?
How is the type of accident even possible in 2023? We’ve had a century to evolve industrial safety.
Lastly, that judge is an asshole. “2 months later and we wouldn’t even be here” … irrelevant. We had to draw the line somewhere. That line is there to protect the vulnerable.
And that nonsense about dangerous machinery just part of growing up? Not in a long, long time. We used to have a lot more kids back then too, because we expected we’d lose some to disease or injury.
We evolved.
I mean, the judge hasn’t, but the world has.