What’s holding back local meat? (Or which came first, the farmer or the processor?)

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CORVALLIS, Ore. — Building more meat processing plants won’t yield more local meat unless farmers and processors change how they do business with each other.

That’s according to a new report that focused on seven successful processors around the U.S.

“Farmers say, ‘There aren’t enough processors.’ But how can processors stay open, let alone grow, without enough steady, consistent business to pay their bills?” said lead author Lauren Gwin, a researcher at Oregon State University. “’I’ll call you when I need you’ is convenient in the short term but doesn’t give either side any long-term stability or growth.”

The report analyzed challenges and innovations in local meat processing.

Find a local meat processor.

Enough supply? Gwin and co-author Arion Thiboumery, an Extension associate at Iowa State University, found that long-term business commitments between processors and farmers were essential to success.

“If farmers, on their own or in coordinated groups or brands, commit to bringing a steady supply of livestock, processors could then commit to providing consistent, high-quality services,” Gwin said.

What works

Researchers found different examples of these arrangements.

For Lorentz Meats and TFC Poultry, two Midwest processors, a few anchor customers provide most of their revenue. This allows them to process for small farms that bring far fewer animals each year, and only seasonally.

Mobile unit

Island Grown Farmers Cooperative, of Bow, Wash., is known for running the first USDA-inspected mobile slaughter unit. Perhaps more critical to its success is that all members commit to slaughter dates a year in advance, even for livestock not yet born.

Commitment goes both ways: Smuckers Meats, in Mount Joy, Pa., and Heritage Meats help their farmer customers with marketing and distribution.

“Without local processors, you simply have no local meat,” Thiboumery said. “We even saw examples of farmers investing financially in their processors — helping them add needed equipment or improve services.”

Gwin and Thiboumery also examined efforts around the country where nonprofits, universities, and state and local agencies are working together to provide technical assistance to local processors and their farmer-customers.

Learn more

The Niche Meat Processor Assistance Network, led by Gwin and Thiboumery, published a version of the report with policy recommendations, including technical assistance for processors and farmers and clarification of regulations.

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1 COMMENT

  1. This article, simply doesn’t hold any water. Currently in our state, Ohio is lacking in quality processors. Processors, in our area of northeast Ohio, are swamped with business. Some actually are turning clients down. Small farms need high quality processing, and currently that’s what is lacking. Processors that are knowledgable and willing to work with a client. On farm processing is starting to be a reality for many farms. Wish the ODA was on board and helped farms find funding to do such projects. When talking with farmers around the country, it’s the ones with on farm facilities that are making a name for themselves. In the meantime, we need more processors to step up to the plate to meet the local demand for quality meats.

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