A story about people not following safety regulation, OSHA violations and you pull it?? WHY???
Some of the mods are heavy drinkers.
tuna oven??
Didn’t they say they pulled it for lack of attribution?
Sounds fishy to me...
You can tune a piano...
Maybe because you put yourself as the author instead of Brian Melley as listed on the article. Unless you are Brian, but then you put ‘me’ as the author and your screen name isn’t Brian, so that could be a problem.
15 psi @ 212 degrees for 60- 80 minutes will sterilize a hypodermic needle....or home canning fish.
The guy was pressure cooked!
I normally like making jokes as much as the next guy. Poor guy. Cooked alive is horrible.
Invited to. tuna bake. Didn’t get all the details first...
The Tuna was in cans the worker was not ?
So, I’m thinking closed casket.
If you live in Wisconsin and are a Whistle Blower about your sh*tty working conditions in a paper mill, you, too can become a part of the product!
May 17, 1995 Sandy Banisky,Sun Staff Correspondent
Green Bay, Wis. — It took two days to find Tom Monfils’ body, sunk to the bottom of a giant paper mill pulp vat, a 45-pound weight around his neck. It took 2 1/2 years to charge six co-workers in his murder.
When the arrests finally came last month, weary police detectives paused quietly for a beer. The Green Bay Press-Gazette put out a rare special edition. And in a tidy brick house on South Roosevelt Avenue, Joan and Edwin Monfils gave thanks that someone, at last, would have to answer for the death of their son.
“We’ve really been the kind of a town that’s had one or two murders a year,” said Police Chief Robert Langan. “We think of Green Bay, Wis. — work-ethic, salt-of-the-earth, good, upstanding people. And usually we are.”
But then Tom Monfils died Nov. 21, 1992. He was beaten and tossed into a one-and-a-half-story-tall vat in the James River Corp. paper mill, where he’d worked for 10 years. In that tank, filled with water and pulp — a mixture the consistency of cottage cheese — Mr. Monfils, 35, drowned.
“How could this happen?” Chief Langan wondered. “It was a shock something so vicious could happen right here in Green Bay, Wis.”
The spark for his murder, police say, was a dispute over a length of electrical cable — an item so mundane it hardly seems worth arguing over, let alone killing for.
But what apparently started as Tom Monfils’ effort to be a good employee went tragically wrong. “This hurt Green Bay probably more than anything,” said Police Detective Sgt. Randy Winkler. “It’s so hard to believe that somebody could go to work and get killed over something like this.”
Edwin Monfils worked 36 years in the same mill, until he retired less than a year before his son was killed.
“Something like this — I can’t understand,” he said, shaking his head. “And other people I’ve talked to can’t understand either.”
Bumble Bee is gonna be soaked to the gills on lawsuits...
There are no tuna canneries in California. The last one closed decades ago. The tuna canneries are overseas. This story is fishy.
This story is fake. There are no tuna canneries in the United States. The Bumble Bee cannery is in Samoa. There never has been a tuna cannery in Santa Fe Springs in California. There used to be to canneries in San Diego but they closed down about 40 years ago. THIS STORY IS FAKE.
I had the Lasagna