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Business & Economy

Ohio Meat Packing Facilities Are Experiencing Major Backlogs. A State Grant Could Help

Meat cutters at the Winner's meat facility in Darke County.
Alejandro Figueroa
/
WYSO
Meat cutters at the Winner's meat facility in Darke County.

Right now, farmers that raise animals for meat can鈥檛 find places to get their stock slaughtered and processed. aims to stop that bottleneck.

The grant program was made available last summer through the signing of the for the fiscal year 2022-2023. It funded the program at $10 million for meat packing facilities to expand capacity, upgrade to new equipment, such as buying a new meat slicer, or cover training costs.

One of those processors is Brian Winner, he operates ., a fourth generation meat packing facility in Darke County. His facility mostly deals with cattle and hogs. He applied for the state grant and said processors like him can't keep up with the demand.

鈥淲e can only do so much,鈥 Winner said. 鈥淎nd everybody flocked to us as all the other producers in Ohio or anywhere else across the United States. So we're maxed out right now.鈥

The state funds come nearly two years after COVID-19 has overwhelmed across the country鈥 many of which experienced large-scale COVID outbreaks.

Much of that pent-up demand comes after the big meat packers such as Tyson Foods, JBS USA Holdings, Inc and Cargill, Inc, have been experiencing staffing shortages throughout the pandemic, according to Winner.

Ohio doesn鈥檛 have major meat packing facilities, according to Valerie Graham, the executive director of the Ohio Association of Meat Processors (OAMP). She said most processors in the state are small to medium sized operations that usually process about 30 head of cattle a week.

鈥淲hat we're needing right now is a way that we can move more product through the system,鈥 Graham said. 鈥淯nfortunately, today if you work with some of these processors, you may not have a kill or harvest day for at least 12 months.鈥

But the money can only do so much. Winner said there鈥檚 also the issue of labor and a shortage in workers across all industries. He adds meat cutting was already a dying trade before the pandemic, but now it's much harder to find skilled employees.

鈥淢eat cutting is something you don't learn overnight. It takes years to develop skills and actually do it efficiently,鈥 Winner said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also not the most glorious job, you're working in a lot of colder environments, heavy lifting and harvesting animals so it鈥檚 just not cut out for everybody.鈥

Winner said if he gets the grant 鈥 which will begin to be disbursed in January 鈥 he plans to add a new freezer for his facility to open up more storage space.

As for labor, Graham said OAMP is working closely with the to help introduce younger workers and recent high school graduates to the meat processing business. She adds there鈥檚 no telling how the industry will stabilize in the near future.

Food reporter Alejandro Figueroa is a corps member with , a national service program that places journalists into local newsrooms.

Copyright 2022 WYSO. To see more, visit .

Alejandro Figueroa
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