Sondra Harding, the company’s director of communications, said the number of people at the plant will be less than half of what a typical shift would have been during this time of year. Where workers normally line up to record their time cards, the company has marked spaces every six feet for people to wait, and each employee has also been given a stylus to touch commonly-used screens, like the time clock, she said. In addition, she said equipment in the plant has been spaced apart and workers who are sick have been told to stay home, she said.

