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Silent Type

(12,200 posts)
6. Cattleman's Beef Association says it is because of low cattle numbers. Have no idea if true.
Fri Nov 21, 2025, 11:45 PM
Nov 21

National Cattlemen’s Beef Association’s CEO Colin Woodall provided his reaction to the Oklahoma Farm Report- “NCBA is disappointed by the closure of the beef processing facility in Lexington. Similarly, the reduction in operations at the beef processing plant in Amarillo. This raises concerns about the impact on family farmers and ranchers, but it is the unfortunate result of the industry experiencing excess processing capacity in the face of historically low cattle numbers. We are closely monitoring this situation and are working to ensure the beef supply chain continues to function properly.”

The announcement by Tyson reminds those in the cattle business of the shock that rumbled through the industry a little over a decade ago when we also had tight cattle numbers. The Cargill beef processing plant in Plainview, Texas shut down operations on February 1, 2013, due to tight cattle supplies from prolonged drought, and by 2015 Cargill had put the plant up for sale, leaving it permanently shuttered.

https://www.oklahomafarmreport.com/okfr/2025/11/21/tyson-to-shutter-lexington-nebraska-beef-plant-make-amarillo-a-single-shift-plant/

I know they are going to have to put steaks behind locked glass at today’s prices.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Are we winning yet? Diamond_Dog Nov 21 #1
What is it about these companies, JMCKUSICK Nov 21 #2
For end of year financial filings IronLionZion Nov 21 #4
Jesus JMCKUSICK Nov 22 #11
3,200 workers in a town of 11,500 people. patphil Nov 21 #3
Can't imagine any of those stupid tRUMP voters displaying that fat-fuck's flag nowadays wolfie001 Nov 21 #5
Cattleman's Beef Association says it is because of low cattle numbers. Have no idea if true. Silent Type Nov 21 #6
the low numbers are true Kali Nov 22 #7
+1. Again, I don't know. Is it tariffs or we aren't/weren't producing enough beef here? Or something else? Silent Type Nov 22 #9
combo of things Kali Nov 22 #15
Thanks. I like beef, but saw 2 steaks other day for $77. Glad I live in an area that produces a lot of chicken. Silent Type Nov 22 #17
yeah I raise it but can't afford steak retail very often these days, for sure LOL Kali Nov 22 #18
The Got What They Voted For MissouriDem47 Nov 22 #8
except as usual, the workers are often imigrants who probably did NOT vote for asshole Kali Nov 22 #16
The businesses in that town and those close by MissouriDem47 Nov 23 #19
Retrain the workers Roy Rolling Nov 22 #10
US beef consumption peaked in the mid 70s Blumancru Nov 22 #12
t it must have something to do with all those cows the illegal immigrants are smuggling over the Bannon Barrier. NotHardly Nov 22 #14
Lexington NE Is In Dawson County, Which In 2024..... ColoringFool Nov 22 #13
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