Return to Virginia Business - February 2003

Poultry farms still recovering from Avian flu

The Avian flu that swept through the Shenandoah Valley’s poultry industry a year ago is gone, but the damage remains. The federal government in December began doling out relief payments to some of the growers and processors but capped those payments at $51 million — not nearly enough to cover an estimated $130 million in losses, says Virginia Poultry Association president Hobey Bauhan.

“If they pay the entire $51 million, it obviously would be a big help but there are substantial losses left,” Bauhan says. Those losses “are still being felt now” through the valley’s economy as suppliers and others who depend on poultry growers as customers see their income drop.
Poultry is big in the Shenandoah — Virginia ranked fifth in the nation in 2001 in turkeys produced, and eighth in broiler chickens. Broilers are the state’s most valuable livestock, producing $441 million in cash receipts in 2000.

Last year’s outbreak from March through June affected 197 farms, most of them in and around Rockingham County. During the outbreak, 4.7 million birds were destroyed.

Virginia Business - February 2003