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McDonald’s sues JBS, Cargill, others for alleged price fixing
McDonald’s is suing Tyson, JBS, Cargill and National Beef Packing Company — and their subsidiaries — alleging a price fix on beef, specifically.
NEW YORK — McDonald’s has some beef with today’s largest meat packers.
The fast food giant is suing the U.S. meat industry’s “Big Four” — Tyson, JBS, Cargill and National Beef Packing Company — and their subsidiaries, alleging a price-fixing scheme for beef specifically. In a federal complaint, filed Friday in New York, McDonald’s accused the companies of anticompetitive measures such as collectively limiting supply to boost prices and charge “illegally inflated” amounts.
This collusion caused the beef market to become “a monopoly in which direct purchasers were forced to buy at prices dictated by (the meat packers),” McDonald’s suit reads — later noting that the injury it has sustained as one of those buyers is what “antitrust laws were designed to prevent.”
McDonald’s alleges that the meat packers’ conspiracy dates back nearly a decade, at least as early as January 2015, and continues today. Its suit argues these companies’ actions violate the Sherman Act, a federal antitrust law.
Tyson, JBS, Cargill and National Beef also did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday. But these companies have faced federal probes and allegations of price fixing before.
Both JBS and Cargill are headquartered in Minnesota.
Lawsuits filed by grocery stores, ranchers, restaurants and wholesalers have piled up over the years. Some litigation is still pending, but meat packers and processors have opened their wallets in the past.
In 2022, for example, JBS agreed to a $52.5 million settlement in a similar beef price-fixing lawsuit. And Tyson agreed to pay $221.5 million back in 2021, after facing class-action claims that alleged purposely inflated chicken prices.
Such settlements did not include admissions of wrongdoing, however. Meat processors have previously maintained that supply and demand factors, not anticompetitive behavior, has caused prices to go up.
Still, lawsuits like the one from McDonald’s point to increased profit margins during the alleged time of conspiracy — and argue that the overall concentration of the market helps facilitate collusion.
“Conspiracies are easier to organize and sustain when only a few firms control a large share of the market,” McDonald’s suit reads. Tyson, JBS, Cargill and National Beef have controlled more than 80% of the U.S. beef market combined in recent years, the suit notes.
McDonald’s is seeking a trial by jury. The Chicago-based chain, which did not immediately respond to a request for further comment Tuesday, has more than 39,000 locations across over 100 countries worldwide, including about 13,000 in the U.S. The vast majority are franchised.
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Minnesotans on probation can vote this time
Tuesday will be the first statewide election since lawmakers changed the law, enabling ex-offenders to vote even when on probation.
MINNEAPOLIS — The state’s top elections officials, faith groups and other nonprofits are working to remind formerly incarcerated persons they can vote in Tuesday’s election, even if they’re still on probation.
This is the first presidential election since the law was changed in 2023, which instantly restored the right to vote to more than 50,000 former felony offenders still serving the community portion of their sentences.
“There was some murkiness, some confusion before this law was implemented,” Secretary of State Steve Simon told reporters Tuesday. “Now it’s real clear. If you’re in prison for a felony, you know you can’t vote. But the minute you step out in Minnesota and many other states now you can vote.”
Simon joined Brian Fullman of the interfaith nonprofit ISAIAH for a press conference at All Square, a Minneapolis café that helps people reenter society beyond prison walls. Fullman is one of several advocates in the state who’s been working to get the word out about the law change.
“A lot of my work I’ve been doing around the house meetings, from barber shop to barber shop, from business to business, from church to church has been about lifting up the news to whoever will listen,” he said.
Fullman is a longtime barber who went to prison at the age of 19 on a drug rap. His voting rights were restored in 1994 after just one year on probation, but he didn’t know it. He said he missed voting in every election until 2008, because he had been told his voting rights were stripped for life.
“I was told in my neighborhood that I couldn’t vote. But I was told by somebody else who was a felon in my community, unfortunately, so misinformation travels. It’s like cancer,” he said. “It just continues to travel and it decays.”
Fullman was part of the citizen lobbying effort at the State Capitol to get the law changed and was there for the joyous celebration at the State Capitol on a cold night in February of 2023, when the Minnesota Senate took the final vote on the Restore the Vote bill.
That came after two decades of failed attempts by the Second Chance Coalition and allies, who couldn’t get past Republican opposition. Most GOP lawmakers asserted the ban on voting should apply to the full sentence handed down by the courts, including time served in the community, commonly known as probation.
Governor Walz signed the bill in early March of 2023, making Minnesota the 22nd state to allow former felony offenders living outside of prison to vote regardless of probation status. Opponents have launched multiple legal challenges, but none of them have succeeded thus far.
“And the national trends are all in this direction,” Simon said. “I know of no other state looking to be more punitive or go in the other direction. Minnesota is really riding the wave of a national trend.”
Advocates asserted that Minnesota’s judicial system traditionally leaned towards shorter time in prison but longer probation sentences that could stretch for decades. One of the advocates who came to the Capitol several times had a check writing felony in her 30s but would’nt be able to vote until she reached her 70s.
The other argument made by supporters was that regaining the right to vote can reduce recidivism because it makes released offenders feel more like they’re part of a community and have more of a voice in local elections.
“I understood that I was a first-class citizen, and not somebody that needed to be patted on the head and told ‘Wait your turn, your voice is not valuable yet.’ So. I just really appreciate what the state of Minnesota has done,” Fullman remarked.
Steve Simon has visited every state prison speaking to inmates who are nearing release. He asserts the Minnesota Dept. of Corrections is doing a good job getting the word out to inmates on the verge of heading home.
“For folks who are about to get out, say within five or six weeks, there’s typically a class of some kind, that helps reorient folks. This is a part of that curriculum. Then they get written information upon actual release,” Simon explained. “And they’ve connected not just us, but nonprofits, faith groups and others with the county corrections system. They’re typically the ones who run the probation system.”
But Fullman is also hoping to reach people who’ve been out of custody for a long time, who may still be operating in the dark when it comes to their voting rights, the way he once was.
“So, yes, this is about our brothers and sisters who are now reentering society right away, but it’s also about our brothers and sisters who’ve been walking around with the wrong messaging, misinformation about how they can use their voices publicly, so I’m very passionate about this work,” he said.
Removing the voting ban for felony offenders eliminated the most common form of election law violations in Minnesota in recent history.
Double voting, non-citizen voting, ID fraud are extremely rare here, but in 2008 dozens of people were prosecuted for voting -— or just registering to vote — before they were off probation.
The system of cross-checks between the judiciary and election officials was tightened after that. Under the new law, it’s much easier to track. Incarcerated inmates don’t have access to voting booths or absentee ballots.
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Greek restaurant helps revitalize Bloomington intersection
City staff helped support Gyropolis by removing an abandoned gas station and securing appropriate funding.
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. — Even before noon, the lunch line was long at Gyropolis on Tuesday. The Greek restaurant was closed for renovations for several months but returned this week under a soft opening.
Dino Contolatis first opened Gyropolis in Bloomington in 2005, following in his parents’ footsteps. They opened a deli in the city in 1996 after emigrating from a picturesque but poor Greek village in 1971.
“My customers, I want to thank them for getting us to this point,” Contolatis said. “I couldn’t have done it without them.”
One such customer, Chuck Pittman, says he’s eaten at the restaurant for at about 10 years now.
“There are lines that would go out the door,” said Pittman, who lives in St. Paul but works in Bloomington. “The parking lot was always super full.”
There have been so many customers, Contolatis decided in 2022 it was time to expand. Only, there was an abandoned gas station next door.
“It got broken into many times,” Pittman said. “It was just kind of an eyesore on the corner.”
The restaurant is located on 90th Street W and Penn Avenue S, which lead to places including City Hall and I-494. It’s considered a busy area, though not as busy as the Mall of America. Still, the city was eager to get involved in the restaurant’s expansion plans.
Economic development analyst Michael Palermo says the city helped demolish the gas station.
“This was a way to kind of redevelop a site that was kind of difficult to develop on its own,” Palermo said.
Palermo says city staff helped secure $58,400 in grant funds from the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development, making the demolition possible in Fall 2023. Tax increment financing also made the project possible.
“This just speaks to the greater effort we have to support our local commercial nodes,” Palermo said. “We have these big prominent regional destinations but we also want to support our small businesses.”
Gyropolis employees worked from a food truck over the last few months as the restaurant building nearly tripled in size.
The expansion includes a larger kitchen, more parking spaces, more indoor seating and a new patio for outdoor seating.
Pittman joked that gyros are somewhat challenging to eat in the car or on the go.
“I’ve done it, but it’s one of those things that you really want to sit down and enjoy it fresh because they make it perfectly,” he said.
Unlike before, there’s also enough room indoors to wait in line. There’s a pick-up window now, too.
“We used to be 10 employees and now we’re 14 and probably gonna need more, as we can see today,” Contolatis said. “My team are the best people I could possibly work with and the city has been great in helping me navigate this process and to help create a self-determining business on a very important corner in Bloomington that I hope has a bright future.”
Contolatis said a grand opening will take place next week.
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Duluth’s first snowplow naming contest open for voting
After more than 300 suggestions were submitted, city officials have narrowed the finalists down to 10.
DULUTH, Minn. — Halloween can often be a reminder that snow is just around the corner… just ask any Minnesotan who was living in the state back in 1991.
While the idea of snow may not always be welcomed, city officials in Duluth are hoping to make the transition a little more fun.
Voting is now open online for the city’s first-ever snowplow naming contest after more than 300 suggestions were submitted. The 10 finalists to choose from include:
- Enger Plower
- Blizzard Wizzard
- Dewaagonebidood (“the one whi is pishing/plowing snow” in Ojibwe)
- Lake Snowbegone
- Sled Zeppelin
- Snow Dozer
- Edgar Allen Plow
- Plowus Maximus
- D’Lhut Drifter Lifter
- Plowabunga
People will have until Nov. 4 to vote, and the winning name will be announced during the Christmas City of the North Parade on Nov. 22. To vote, click here. The person or persons who submitted the name will win a photo opportunity and will ride in the plow during the parade.
The idea stems from the Minnesota Department of Transportation’s “Name-A-Plow” contest that was introduced back in 2020.