A celebrated startup promised Kentuckians green jobs. It gave them a 'grueling hell on earth
요약
보고된 날짜: 2023년 11월 16일
위치: 미국
기업 페이지
AppHarvest - Employer영향받은
영향받은 사람의 수: 숫자를 알 수 없음
Migrant & immigrant workers: ( 숫자를 알 수 없음 - 멕시코 , 농업 및 가축 , Gender not reported )토픽들
강간과 성적 학대 , 정보 접근성 , Heat exposure , 산업 안전 및 보건 , 정신 건강 , 개인 건강 , 질병 , 위협 , 표현의 자유 , 질병결과
Response sought: 아니오
시행된 조치: The company declared itself bankrupt in July 2023.
출처: News outlet
...
A new investigation from Grist finds that what went on inside [AppHarvest] from its earliest days bore little resemblance to the sustainable, worker-friendly operation that Webb publicly touted… unsafe working conditions, negligible training that failed to prepare workers for their job requirements, and an unprofessional workplace doomed the company nearly from the start…
Then, within weeks of the Morehead greenhouse opening in November of 2020, Nora and her colleagues were told they needed to work overtime...
One afternoon during the first summer of AppHarvest’s operation, then-55-year-old Janet Moore threw up at least three times from heat exhaustion in the bathroom outside the greenhouse. Other workers recalled seeing coworkers pass out from heat...
Other safety concerns detailed in the complaints included the sudden onset of nausea, and on two occasions vomiting, when the plants were sprayed with “something unsafe.” Two more complaints said tearing out mold, dust, and insulation from walls caused eye and lung irritation. Employees reported that they didn’t receive respirators, and during the tear-out one team member went to the hospital for breathing issues, according to the complaints...
…[Contract] workers arrived in Morehead each morning on big white buses, according to Nora. They worked longer hours, sometimes not leaving until midnight, after picking up a second shift in the air-conditioned packhouse... they didn’t receive benefits like health insurance or stock options...
Workers were housed in mobile homes and apartment complexes where the number of laborers appeared to far exceed occupancy levels…