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Jackson County meat processor fined again for CO2 workplace exposure

Horizontal view. A group of worker in meat factory, chopped a fresh beef meat in pieces on metal work table, industry of processing food.

LONE JACK, Mo. — A Jackson County meat processor faces fines again after federal inspectors found that employees has been exposed to high levels of carbon dioxide.

The processor, Republic Foods in Lone Jack, has been cited seven times by inspectors over the last three years for endangering workers, according to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

Federal investigators allege that allege, despite knowing hazardous levels of carbon dioxide existed, Republic Foods did not put an employee monitoring program in place or implement effective engineering controls to limit workers’ exposure to the dangers.

OSHA measurements showed some parts of the site had nearly double the permissible level of carbon-dioxide exposure.

Dry ice used to keep meat at safe temperatures emits the carbon dioxide gas. Excessive exposure to carbon dioxide can cause headache, dizziness, breathing difficulty, tremors, confusion, and potentially, death. Long-term health effects may surface months or years later.

“Exposing workers to high levels of carbon dioxide can cause serious illnesses and even death,” OSHA Area Director Karena Lorek in Kansas City said. “Republic Foods failed to increase employee monitoring or change engineering controls to reduce the exposure.”

ZMDR LLC, which operates the processor, faces nearly $600,000 in fines from the latest exposure. OSHA says the processor has had 35 violations in five previous inspections from its 2020 opening through May 2022.