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Around the Old Dominion

Valley farmers gobble up processing plant

Virginia Business
November 2004

When Pilgrim’s Pride Corp. announced in April that it was closing its poultry processing plant in Hinton, it looked like the livelihoods of hundreds of Shenandoah Valley turkey growers might go with it. But instead the growers pooled their money, lobbied government officials for additional funding, and in September bought the plant for an undisclosed price. The reported asking price was $35 million.

The Virginia Poultry Growers Cooperative, the official name of the new owners’ venture, will start processing meat at the plant on Nov. 29. “Our initial goal is to get the doors open and make it profitable,” says Cecil “Sonny” Meyerhoeffer, president of the co-op, which consists of 134 turkey grower members and a management team of executives from such major poultry players as Wampler and WLR Foods.

The co-op bought only the plant and not Pilgrim’s Pride’s local hatchery and breeding divisions, which were also on the market. That doesn’t bode well for the 1,100-plus employees laid off by Pilgrim’s Pride after September’s sale. Meyerhoeffer expects the co-op to hire back just 450 workers before processing resumes, but he says that that number could increase if new products are added, such as labeling and packaging for other turkey retailers.

Return to Virginia Business - November 2004