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Industrial Meat Cutter
Employer
JBS Food Canada ULCDate Posted
February 10, 2025Languages
English-
Location Brooks, AB
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Earnings $22.85 to $29.20 hourly (to be negotiated)
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Work Hours 40 hours per week
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Position Permanent Full Time
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Vacancies 100  Vacancies
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Closing Date Apr 06, 2025
Employer
JBS Food Canada ULC
Languages
English
Education
Secondary (high) school graduation certificate
Work site environment
- Noisy
- Odours
- Hot
- Cold/refrigerated
Work setting
- Relocation costs covered by employer
- Meat processing and/or packing plant/establishment
Tasks
- Cut meat and poultry into specific cuts for institutional, commercial or other wholesale use
- Remove bones from meat
Equipment and machinery experience
- Knives
- Power cutting tools
- Saws
Security and safety
Drug test
Work conditions and physical capabilities
- Repetitive tasks
- Handling heavy loads
- Physically demanding
- Attention to detail
- Hand-eye co-ordination
- Combination of sitting, standing, walking
- Standing for extended periods
- Bending, crouching, kneeling
Personal suitability
- Accurate
- Team player
Experience
1 year to less than 2 years
Health benefits
- Dental plan
- Disability benefits
- Health care plan
- Vision care benefits
Financial benefits
- As per collective agreement
- Group insurance benefits
- Life insurance
- Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP)
Other benefits
Other benefits
Important notice: This job posting has been provided by an external employer.The Government of Alberta and the Government of Canada are not responsible for the accuracy, authenticity or reliability of the content.
Interest Codes
- OBJECTIVE
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Interest in operating equipment to split carcasses into smaller portions to facilitate handling
- METHODICAL
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Interest in comparing information to remove viscera and other inedible parts from carcasses, and to skin, clean and trim carcasses
- directive
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Interest in preparing meat for further processing, packaging and marketing
The interest code helps you figure out if you’d like to work in a particular occupation.
It’s based on the Canadian Work Preference Inventory (CWPI), which measures 5 occupational interests: Directive, Innovative, Methodical, Objective, and Social.
Each set of 3 interest codes for this NOC group is listed in order of importance.
A code in capital letters means it’s a strong fit for the occupation.
A code in all lowercase letters means the fit is weaker.