Chicken Farmers Have Hearts Plucked Out
by ilene - July 1st, 2009 3:05 pm
Did Pilgram’s Pride’s Don Jackson have his brain plucked out too? Read it and weep.
Chicken Farmers Have Hearts Plucked Out
Courtesy of Mish
Last December, Pilgrim’s Pride Went Bankrupt. The repercussions on chicken farmers are still being felt.
Please consider At Chicken Plant, a Recession Battle.
DOUGLAS, Ga. — This small town was devastated in February when its largest employer, Pilgrim’s Pride Corp., said it would close a chicken-processing plant as part of the company’s bankruptcy filing.
Since then, city and county officials have been working to find a buyer who could save the plant’s nearly 1,000 jobs and $300,000 in annual county tax revenues. But there’s a problem: Pilgrim’s Pride isn’t eager to sell.
Pilgrim’s has so far rejected a $32 million bid for the plant from Amick Farms LLC of Batesburg, S.C., company and city officials say. Another chicken company took a look and decided Pilgrim’s asking price was too high, say people familiar with the matter. City officials say the company kept a prospective bidder from touring the plant, making it a challenge to market.
Pilgrim’s says it hasn’t been offered a fair price for the plant and is cautious about letting rivals see its manufacturing processes. In an email to the city of Douglas, Pilgrim’s President and Chief Executive Don Jackson said, "With declining demand for chicken in this terrible economy we need to remove chicken from the market. This would not be accomplished with a sale." While he said he recognized the "devastating impact" a closing would have on Douglas, "the actions do strengthen the company and help protect the jobs" of the company’s 40,000 U.S. employees and farmers.
Many businesses in the U.S. are struggling with excess capacity. From autos to airlines to houses, "there’s a landscape of industries and sectors that are recognizing that they’re going to need to scale down," says Nancy L. Rose, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Economics in Cambridge.
With no plant to process the birds they raise, local chicken farmers have no income to pay off debts. Months ago, the hundreds of cavernous, metal-and-wood chicken houses in the county were worth at least $200,000 each when filled with chickens, farmers say. Now, except for flies and old feathers, the structures sit empty and are virtually worthless.
Mr. Jackson, Pilgrim’s CEO, appears to have struggled