Tyson Foods Shifts Meat Production Capacity To Southern US Plants
Published:25-January-2010
By Staff Reporter
Tyson has planned to shift some production from its Council Bluffs, Iowa, case-ready plant to its facilities in Goodlettsville, Tennessee, and Sherman, Texas, to enable the company to make more effective use of its existing case-ready production capacity. The two plants are closer to the company's growing customer base.
The company officials said that the continued growth of case-ready beef and pork sales in the Southern US has prompted it to make some adjustments in operations.
A portion of second shift case-ready production at the Council Bluffs plant will be suspended in mid-March and subsequently handled by the company's two other case-ready facilities, which have available capacity. The suspension will displace approximately 480 of the 1,300 people employed at the Council Bluffs plant.
The workers will be encouraged to apply for openings within the company and also will be invited to a job fair Tyson officials plan to host. In addition, Tyson intends to work with state officials to ensure the employees are informed about unemployment benefits and any potential re-training opportunities.
Tyson's case-ready facilities use beef and pork from its Fresh Meats' operations to produce packages of steaks, roasts, chops, ground beef and other items that are ready for retail grocers to place directly into the meat case.
Tyson Fresh Meats, formerly IBP, began a small scale case-ready operation at Council Bluffs in early 1999. Production at Council Bluffs subsequently grew, and in 2001 the company opened a case-ready plant in Goodlettsville. The Sherman plant began operations in 2006.
Gary Sheneman, senior vice president of case-ready beef and pork for Tyson Foods, said: "We believe shifting some production from Council Bluffs to our other plants is the right thing to do for our overall business, which continues to grow and diversify its customer base. The unfortunate downside is the impact on some of our employees.
"We believe the Council Bluffs plant will remain an important part of our case-ready beef and pork business and continue to benefit the local economy. In fact, if enough additional case-ready business develops in the Midwest, we'll consider reinstating the production we're suspending at Council Bluffs."