Three worker deaths reported at Hyundai’s Georgia plant before US immigration raid

Apart from the deaths, more than a dozen workers have suffered serious injuries at Hyundai's $7.6bn (R131.68bn) car plant in Georgia, US. (Hyundai)

Three workers have died since Hyundai started construction of its $7.6bn (R131.68bn) car plant in Georgia, US, in 2022, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported on Sunday, citing a review of federal records.

Apart from the deaths, more than a dozen workers have suffered serious injuries, including from falling without wearing harnesses and getting crushed by forklifts, according to the WSJ.

“We conducted a comprehensive audit and strengthened safety oversight across the site. We have enhanced contractor vetting, training and accountability to ensure all partners meet Hyundai’s standards and legal requirements,” a spokesperson for Hyundai North America told Reuters.

Dozens of the company’s current and former workers, many of them safety co-ordinators who helped oversee construction, told the newspaper in interviews the work environment involved many inexperienced immigrant labourers, often lax safety standards and frequent accidents.

The plant, which is operated through a joint venture between Hyundai and South Korea’s LG Energy Solution, has been in the limelight since an immigration raid last month that detained hundreds of South Korean workers in the largest single-site enforcement operation in the US department of homeland security’s history.

The workers interviewed by the WSJ said Hyundai did not ensure people were properly trained, and safety regulators did little to prevent worksite violations, the report added.

“We acted immediately and comprehensively to prevent anything like this from happening again,” Hyundai CEO Jose Munoz told the newspaper. “I travelled to Georgia to tell our team directly: Their safety comes before production schedules, before costs, before profits, before everything.”

Construction on the electric vehicle and battery plant, located in Bryan County about 48km west of Savannah, is ongoing.

Reuters


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