Thousands of workers strike at one of the largest meatpacking plants in
the US
[March 17, 2026] By
BRITTANY PETERSON, MATTHEW BROWN and MORGAN LEE
GREELEY, Colo. (AP) — Thousands of workers for the world’s largest
meatpacking company began a two-week strike Monday in Colorado,
threatening to make already costly beef even more expensive for U.S.
consumers.
As the sun rose, employees picketed outside the Swift Beef Co. plant in
Greeley, one of the largest slaughterhouses in the nation that's owned
by JBS USA. Walking back and forth in the morning cold, bundled in
blankets, some yelled “huelga!” — Spanish for “strike." Others waved
signs encouraging people to not buy from JBS.
The first walkout at a U.S. beef slaughterhouse in four decades follows
accusations from union officials that the company retaliated against
workers and committed other unfair labor practices. They said the
company offered wage increases of less than 2% annually, which is below
Colorado's inflation rate.
Union officials said 99% of the plant’s 3,800 unionized workers voted to
strike. More than 2,600 showed up at the picket line by early Monday
afternoon and others were expected to check in over coming days, said
Claire Poundstone, an attorney for the United Food and Commercial Union
Local 7.
Poundstone said the strike could be repeated if the unfair labor
practices recur.

A spokesperson at JBS USA denied any labor law violations and said its
offer is fair. Each side blamed the other for an impasse before the
contract ended Sunday night.
“They don’t really value their workers and we’re the ones that help them
get all their profit,” said Leticia Avalos, a union steward and Greeley
native who has been working at the plant since 2020. She depends on the
job to support her family, including a 6-month-old baby, but said she'll
make sacrifices to get the company to listen.
Union says workers pay to protect themselves
The union said its workers perform some of the most difficult and
dangerous jobs in the country and deserve higher wages and better health
care. It said JBS in many cases has charged workers $1,100 or more to
offset the company’s expenses for personal protective equipment.
Smoke rose from parts of the plant Monday, but it was unclear if it was
fully operating. JBS spokesperson Nikki Richardson said “many team
members” reported to work but did not provide a precise number.
“Our team members want stability, they want to support their families,
and they deserved the opportunity to vote on the company’s historic
offer — an opportunity the union leadership has denied them,” Richardson
wrote in an email.
Richardson said any employee who didn’t strike would have work and be
paid. The company also has said it would move production as needed to
other JBS facilities.
A federal probe into soaring beef prices
The strike comes at a 75-year low in U.S. cattle numbers, with a Jan. 1
inventory of 86.2 million animals — down 1% from the prior year. The
decline has been driven in part by drought and low prices offered to
ranchers. Meanwhile, beef prices have soared to record levels.
President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Brazil, a major beef exporter, have
also curbed imports. Pressed to act on “affordability” issues after
Republican losses last November, Trump accused foreign-owned companies
of driving up U.S. beef prices and asked the Department of Justice to
investigate.

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Meatpacking workers strike at Colorado's JBS-owned Swift Beef
company Monday, March 16, 2026, in Greeley, Colo. (AP Photo/Brittany
Peterson)
 The price for 100% ground chuck beef
more than doubled over the past two decades from $2.55 to $6.07 per
pound, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The increase has
added to economic anxiety in the U.S. The Trump administration has
promoted a trade deal with Argentina in efforts to lower prices for
food, including beef.
The Greeley plant has about 6% of the total U.S.
beef slaughterhouse capacity, said Abby Greiman, a livestock market
adviser for industry consultant Ever.Ag.
Most ranchers can still get cattle to market because the national
herd is smaller, and that could give JBS some leverage in
negotiations, since other slaughterhouses can absorb the Greeley
plant's work, Greiman said.
Feedlots hold clues to consumer costs
Yet an extended dispute with the Greeley workers could disrupt the
industry, particularly in Colorado and neighboring states, said
Jennifer Martin at Colorado State University’s animal sciences
department.
“The feedlots, the people who have the cattle right now -- the
longer they sit kind of in a holding pattern, the more expensive
they become to feed,” said Martin. “For consumers, it means that
prices will likely go up."
The strike follows the January closure of a meatpacking plant in
Lexington, Nebraska, which was expected to ripple through the local
economy and community. Tyson Foods cited the smaller herd and
millions of dollars in expected losses this year for the closure.
JBS has a market capitalization of $17 billion on the New York Stock
Exchange after being approved for trading last May, despite
environmental opposition and a federal probe that led to its guilty
plea in October to bribing Brazilian officials for the financing it
used for its U.S. expansion.

JBS is a top local employer
At the Greeley plant, the company tried to intimidate workers to
quit the union in one-on-one meetings, union general counsel Matt
Shechter said.
It’s the first strike at a U.S. slaughterhouse since workers walked
out at a Hormel plant in Minnesota in 1985, according to Martin and
Kim Cordova, president of the union in Greeley. That strike lasted
more than a year and included violent confrontations between police
and protesters, according to the Minnesota Historical Society.
JBS is the top employer in Greeley, a city 50 miles (80 kilometers)
northeast of Denver with a population of about 114,000 people.
“It’s a huge impact in the community for us to be striking,” said
union steward Avalos. “I know a lot of us are worried, and hope that
nothing goes even more south.”
___
Brown reported from Billings, Montana, and Lee reported from Santa
Fe, New Mexico. Associated Press journalists Colleen Slevin in
Denver and Kathy McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire, contributed.
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