A Taco John's in Cloquet.
A truck stop McDonald's in Albert Lea.
A grocery store in St. Louis Park.
Of the 44 locations the Minnesota Department of Labor & Industry says have hired illegal child labor over the last five years, many are in the food industry. But no meatpacking plants were on the list the department provided this week to the Star Tribune.
That's why the employment of teenagers by Packers Sanitation Services Inc. to clean slaughterhouses in Worthington and Marshall is so brazen, said state and federal officials, as well as researchers who study child labor.
"The specific allegations here are just so shocking, in part because of how they compound each other," said Charlotte Garden, a University of Minnesota law professor. "It's hard to think of a worse set of child-labor violations than very young kids working overnight in a hazardous environment."
The resolution on Tuesday of a civil lawsuit filed by the U.S. Department of Labor against PSSI for hiring at least 50 minors to illegally work at meatpacking facilities in three states has brought closure to a federal court case. But it hasn't ended the Labor Department's probe into PSSI.
Federal attorneys said in recent court documents in Nebraska that the overall tally of minors illegally employed by PSSI can — and likely will — increase. There may also be fines levied against PSSI, which says rogue employees and fabricated identification documents skirted a company prohibition against hiring anyone under the age of 18.