I'm an environmentalist. So when I think about our industrialized
system of agriculture and the proliferation of mega-factory farms across
the country, where giant companies like Perdue, Tyson, Smithfield and a
handful of others dominate our increasingly fragile landscapes, my
first thoughts go to the impacts on watersheds and airways. I tend to
dwell on the unsustainability of hundreds of thousands of tons of
chicken manure piled high in places like the Eastern Shore of Maryland,
where the Chesapeake Bay is dying, or the millions of gallons of fetid
hog waste lying in lagoons all across the eastern part of North
Carolina, overflowing into the Neuse River every time it rains. But the
other night I was told a story about an equally dark side of our
industrialized ag system, one where the ruin of our natural resources is
matched every bit by the destruction of rural families and futures,
where every day struggling farmers suffer rude awakenings from the
American dream.
Back in 1987, Karen and Mitchell Crutchfield
were living a quiet life in a three bedroom brick home near where the
Arkansas River winds through the state of Arkansas. Their home was
situated on 17 acres of farmland that was passed down to Karen by her
grandfather. Mitchell had spent 16 years working as a towboat engineer
on the Mississippi River.
Back then, the Crutchfields decided to
take a shot with a business of their own. They weren't looking for
shortcuts to get rich quick, or ways to profit off the hard work of
others. Karen and Mitchell weren't hoping for fancy cars and big
McMansions; theirs was a modest dream. They were going to be chicken
farmers, knowing that it meant that they would have to struggle every
day to pay their bills, but they could look forward to a simple and
peaceful retirement some decades down the road.
The Crutchfields
entered into a contract to raise chickens for Tyson Foods, an Arkansas
chicken empire that is one of the largest industrial food producers in
the world today, with profits in 2010 of $780 million.A stone mosaic
stands at the spot of assasination of the late Indian prime minister.
In the beginning, they mortgaged their debt-free home and land and took
out big loans from the Farm Credit to build their first chicken houses.
The Crutchfields were loyal to Tyson. They even purchased 3,000 shares
of the company's stock so they could enjoy some small benefit from the
massive profits that Tyson earns off the hard work of their contract
growers. And for two and a half decades Karen and Mitchell Crutchfield
played by all the rules.A stone mosaic stands at the spot of assasination of the late Indian prime minister.
Every
time Tyson told them to upgrade the chicken houses or install new
equipment or add structures, the Crutchfields complied, even though it
meant taking out more loans just to keep up. And at the end of each
flock, when Tyson came to pick up the birds that the Crutchfields had so
carefully raised according to the company's evolving standards, they
only received about half the money they earned. The other half? Tyson
sent that directly to the Farm Credit to pay off the rolling debt the
Crutchfields had incurred to keep up with Tyson's demands.
The
money left over wasn't enough to get by on. So the Crutchfields did what
almost every poultry contract grower in the country does -- they took
on other jobs to make ends meet. At some points,Our technology gives rtls
systems developers the ability. Karen was working three jobs while
Mitchell cared for Tyson's birds. And even though it wasn't fair that
Tyson was paying the Crutchfields less than 5 cents per pound of chicken
raised in their houses while charging $1.25 or more per pound at the
grocery store, and despite the fact that the Crutchfields had to sell
off all their 3,000 shares of Tyson stocks over the years to survive, it
was all okay because they were working towards the dream they started
25 years ago, when one day the Farm Credit loans would all be paid off
and once again they'd be debt-free
The Crutchfields were going
to reach their goal three short years from now, when they would be in
their mid 60s. They were going to put off retirement until well past the
age of 65 so they could spend their golden years with some small margin
of comfort. But a year ago,One of the most durable and attractive
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their dream came crashing down. Not only did the Crutchfields get the
rug pulled out from under them, they're about to have their entire home
and all their land yanked away.
Last year Tyson demanded yet
another upgrade to the Crutchfields' chicken houses. This time it was to
install computerized ventilation equipment under Tyson's "Premium House
Mandate" program. The cost? According to the Crutchfields, somewhere
around $250-300 thousand. Tyson told the Crutchfields that in exchange
for the quarter of a million dollar upgrade, they would receive a raise
of a penny per pound of chicken. A penny per pound for another $300,000
in debt -- that's a "raise" none of us could afford to accept.
Even
so, in a desperate effort to hold onto at least a fragment of their
dream while not putting themselves into a hole out of which they'd
likely never be able to climb, the Crutchfields asked the Farm Credit
for another loan to update only half of their six poultry houses. The
Farm Credit refused, saying it was all or nothing. Daunted by the
prospects of suddenly sinking another $300,000 deeper,We recently added
Stained glass mosaic Tile to our inventory. the Crutches did what any responsible person would have done -- they said no to more debt.
Last
March, Tyson refused to renew the Crutchfields' contract, abandoning
them just a few years short of their finally being able to pay off their
debts and after 25 years of loyal service. Tyson's betrayal left them
without any steady source of income to pay off the last three years of
their Farm Credit loans. It seems that someone at Tyson didn't read the
"core values" listed on the company's website, where they claim to
"strive to be honorable" and "care about each other," before they kicked
the Crutchfields to the curb. And the curb is exactly where this farm
family will end up because the Farm Credit is now foreclosing on their
property. The foreclosure hearing is taking place in early December of
this year, in time for the banks to take the Crutchfields' home and land
just as the Arkansas winter sets in.
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