Tyson’s beef plant closure in Nebraska will impact Lexington and ranchers nationwide

Tyson Foods’ decision to close a beef plant that employs nearly a third of residents of Lexington could devastate the small city and undermine the profits of ranchers nationwide.

Closing a single slaughterhouse might not seem significant, but the Lexington plant employs roughly 3,200 people in the city of 11,000 and has the capacity to slaughter some 5,000 head of cattle a day. Tyson also plans to cut one of the two shifts at a plant in Amarillo, Texas, and eliminate 1,700 jobs there. Together, those two moves will reduce beef-processing capacity nationwide by 7-9%.

Consumers may not see prices change much at the grocery store over the next six months because all the cattle that are now being prepared for slaughter will still be processed, potentially just at a different plant. But in the long run, beef prices may continue to climb even higher than the current record highs — caused by a variety of factors from drought to tariffs — unless American ranchers decide to raise more cattle, which they have little incentive to do.

An increase in beef imports from Brazil, which President Donald Trump encouraged last week by slashing tariffs on the South American country, may help insulate consumers while ranchers and feedlots struggle with high costs and falling prices.

Here’s what we know about the impact of the plant closure and the changing tariffs:

A ‘gut punch’ to the community

Clay Patton, vice president of the Lexington-area Chamber of Commerce, said Monday that Tyson’s Friday announcement felt like a “gut punch” to the community that serves as a key link in the agricultural production chain.

When it opened in 1990, the Lexington plant that Tyson later acquired revitalized and remade the formerly dwindling town by attracting thousands of immigrants to work there. The town’s population nearly doubled.

When the plant closes in January, the ripple effects will be felt throughout the community, undermining many first-generation business owners and the investment in new housing, Patton said. Tyson said it will offer Lexington workers the chance to move to take open jobs at one of its other plants if they are willing to uproot their families for jobs hundreds of miles away.

Laurie Nierman trims sample strips that will be tested for E. coli from batches of the trimmings at the Tyson meatpacking plant in Lexington in this photo from November 2007. Photo by Kent Sievers/Omaha World-Herald via AP

“I’m hopeful that we can come through this and we’ll actually become better on the other side of it,” Patton said.

Elmer Armijo was struck by how established the community was when he moved to Lexington last summer to lead First United Methodist Church. He described solid job security, good schools and health care systems and urban development — all in doubt now.

“People are completely worried,” Armijo said. “The economy in Lexington is based in Tyson.”

Many local churches, Armijo’s included, are already offering counseling, food pantries and gas vouchers for community members.

Cattle prices falling in response

The prospect of losing a major buyer for cattle and increasing imports from Brazil, which already accounted for 24% of the beef brought into the country this year, only adds to doubts about how profitable the U.S. cattle business might be over the next several years, making it less likely that American ranchers will commit to raising more animals.

“There’s a just a lack of confidence in the industry right now. And producers are unwilling to make the investment to rebuild,” said Bill Bullard, president of Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund United Stockgrowers of America.

A worker uses a high-pressure jet of water on cattle at the Tyson meatpacking plant in Lexington in this photo from November 2007. Photo by Kent Sievers/Omaha World-Herald via AP

Boosting imports from Brazil has the potential to affect the market — much more than Trump’s suggestion to increase imports from Argentina — since the country sends more beef to America than any other. But for steak lovers, the sky-high price of the cut isn’t likely to be affected regardless, as most imports are lean trimmings that get mixed into ground beef.

Kansas State University agricultural economist Glynn Tonsor said it’s hard to predict whether imports will continue to account for roughly 20% of the U.S. beef supply next year. He pointed out that Trump’s tariffs have changed several times since they were announced in the spring and could quickly change again.

The only constant in the equation has been that consumers have continued to buy beef even as prices soar. Tonsor said on average Americans will consume 59 pounds of beef per person this year.

Tyson faces continued losses in the beef business

There has long been excess capacity in the meat business nationwide, meaning the nation’s slaughterhouses could handle many more cattle than they are processing. That has only been made worse in recent years as the government has encouraged more smaller companies to open slaughterhouses to compete with Tyson and the other giants that dominate the beef business.

Vanessa Rodriguez washes carcasses with 180-degree water before they go into thermal heat treatment at the Tyson meatpacking plant in Lexington in this photo from November 2007. Photo by Kent Sievers/Omaha World-Herald via AP

Tyson expects to lose more than $600 million on beef production this year after already reporting $720 million of red ink in beef over the past two years.

Tonsor said it was inevitable that at least one beef plant would close. Afterward, Tyson’s remaining plants will be able to operate more efficiently at closer to full capacity.

Associated Press writer Hannah Fingerhut contributed to this report from Des Moines, Iowa.

10 Comments

I thought that Trump was going to help Americans in the way of job openings and not get the products overseas. He needs to help Americans not Brazilians, And then we are going to have to pay to get the product to the US.

This is a blow to central Nebraska. Those 3,000 jobs probably support 3 or 4 times that number of supporting jobs. Where will ranchers sell a million cows a year when Tyson closes?

Per capital beef consumption may be 59 pounds per person, but it was 90 pounds in the 1970’s.
Ranchers could diversify income with solar farms on low value grazing land. It would be drought proof and provide steady money coming in. Ranchers are getting old and raising cattle is hard work. It is difficult to attract younger people to agriculture when it is always struggling to be profitable. Steady income from solar and wind should be welcomed, not fought because of “culture war” thinking.

The Nebraska rural electric grid handles a lot of irrigation pump load. Solar panels would take the strain off power plants sending power to the countryside. Power irrigation and air conditioning all summer, heating in the winter.

“Where will ranchers sell a million cows a year when Tyson closes?”

At the newly opened yuge Wal Mart processing facility in Olathe, KS.

“Power irrigation and air conditioning all summer, heating in the winter.”

Try to think those ideas through: with fewer cattle, there will be less need for irrigated corn, hay, and other animal feeds. With fewer cattle and less feed grown, there will be fewer ranchers & farmers. With fewer ranchers, farmers, and irrigation wells, there will be less of a need for electricity.

The logical result of your short-sighted ideas is long-term emigration from cattle country.

Should we also discuss the very harmful environmental effects of more solar panels and wind turbine towers?

“Where will ranchers sell a million cows a year when Tyson closes?”

Or, how about the new Sustainable Beef processing plant in North Platte?

Yet, the FFP reported on Oct. 20th that the OPENING a new meat processing plant in Kansas–owned by Wal Mart–would adversely affect cattle ranchers.

Here, FFP reports that CLOSING a processing plant in Lexington would adversely affect cattle producers!

Come on FFP, the opening of the yuge processing plant in Kansas was more about bashing big bad Wal Mart than anything else.

FFP: Please root out the obvious biases from your stories.

Probably because Walmart has an established reputation for offering consumers the lowest prices on a given product, which they achieve via extreme demands on their suppliers.
The majority of products today have totally separate lines for their products that go to Walmart. For example, a can of soup may have 10% more water, with 8% less vegetables, and slightly more sodium to make up for that. That’s how they can sell things to Walmart for a few cents less.
With that in mind… do you think Walmart will be paying prevailing market prices for the cattle they buy? Or do you think they will use their purchasing power to force ranchers into lower prices?

“Probably because Walmart has an established reputation for offering consumers the lowest prices on a given product, which they achieve via extreme demands on their suppliers.”

Meatpackers/processors in general have had that reputation for 125 years!

In any case, putting “extreme demands” (your opinion of course) on suppliers is on balance, a good thing. If ranchers/producers can be more efficient, or more able to meet consumer tastes, that benefits ALL OF US.

“do you think Walmart will be paying prevailing market prices for the cattle they buy? ”

Who exactly do you think determines “prevailing prices” in the cattle industry?

“Or do you think they will use their purchasing power to force ranchers into lower prices?”

“force” ranchers into lower prices! That’s hilarious. Come on, man!

” For example, a can of soup may have 10% more water, with 8% less vegetables, and slightly more sodium to make up for that. That’s how they can sell things to Walmart for a few cents less.”

I doubt that you can provide any evidence to support this bizarre assertion. But, have at it, Chuck. (I’m also surprised that FFP would permit such a defamatory comment to be published, but that FFP’s business).

As I said, whether it’s FFP or Chuck, this story is all about bashing big bad WalMart.

What to do with the facility?

It would be fantastic to renovate it into a ICE detention facility! Let’s do it, Nebraska!

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