Golden Triangle of Meat-packing
The Golden Triangle of Meat-packing or Golden Triangle of Beef refers to the importance of meat-packing in three southwestern Kansas counties and their principal cities: Dodge City, Garden City, and Liberal. While population decreased in many counties in western Kansas during the 20th century, these three cities and their environs experienced population increases from 1980 to 2020. The increases were primarily due to employment opportunities at four large slaughter houses and meat-packing plants. The large majority of the employees at the meat packing plants are Hispanics, most foreign-born and many presumed to be undocumented. Unlike the rest of the state, Hispanics by 2020 made up a majority of the population of these three counties plus one adjacent county.
The industry
Until the mid 20th century, the meat-packing industry usually moved live cattle or carcasses by rail from producing areas to meat-packing facilities near large cities such as Chicago and Kansas City. This began to change in the 1960s, as companies began to move slaughterhouses and meat-packing plants to where cattle were raised. Southwestern Kansas was attractive to the meat-packing companies because of an abundance of groundwater obtainable from the Ogallala Aquifer. The abundance of water permitted irrigation to be used for growing large quantities of animal feed. Precipitation in this "Dust Bowl" region is sometimes inadequate for agriculture. The increased production of animal feed permitted the establishment of large feedlots in which cattle could be collected and fattened before being sent to slaughterhouses. Finally, the slaughterhouses themselves needed large quantities of water, estimated at 800 U.S. gal (3,000 L) of water for each butchered animal.[1] (The Ogallala Aquifer is being depleted, with one estimate that it will be dry in the Golden Triangle region about 2040.[2]
In 1980, Iowa Beef Packers (known as IBP) opened what was then the world's largest beef packing plant in Holcomb, Kansas, 10 mi (16 km) west of Garden City. The plant employs 3,600 people and slaughters 6,000 cattle every day. The facility is now owned by Tyson Foods.[3] Finney County induced the company to locate the plant near Garden City by providing the company with $100 million in industrial revenue bonds and $3.5 million in property tax relief.[4] In 1983, a small meat packing plant in Garden City, later owned by ConAgra, began expanding and eventually employed 2,300 people. The plant burned down in 2000 and has never reopened.[5]
The two largest employers in Ford County (Dodge City) are National Beef with 2,950 employees and Cargill Meat Solutions, 2,700 employees.[6] National Beef purchased a large Dodge City slaughterhouse in 1992.[7] Cargill began operations in Dodge City in 1979 and its plant eventually reached a capacity of slaughtering and processing 6,000 cattle per day.[8] National Beef also owns and operates a slaughterhouse and beef packing plant in Liberal with a capacity of processing 6,000 cattle per day[9] and employing about 3,500 people. That number of employees comprises about one-third of the total employed work force in Seward County where Liberal is located.[10]
By the mid-1990s, the meat-packing industry in the Golden Triangle was slaughtering 23,500 cattle daily. As the ConAgra plant in Garden City burned down in 2000, the 21st century capacity is somewhat lower.[11]
Population
The three counties with large meat packing plants are among the four counties in Kansas with a majority Hispanic population. Grant, the fourth county with a majority of Hispanics, is also in southwest Kansas, but has several vegetable processing plants rather than a large packing plant. The employees at the meat-packing plants in these three counties comprise about two-thirds of the total employees of meat-packing plants in Kansas. The majority of workers at meat-packing plants are foreign-born Hispanics. Nationally, 66.8 percent of meat-packing employees are Hispanic and 56 percent of all workers are foreign-born.[12] By contrast with the heavily Hispanic and foreign-born population of the Golden Triangle counties, Hispanics make up only 13.02 percent of the total population of Kansas.[13]
County | City | 1980 total population | 2020 total population | 2020 Hispanic population | Hispanic percentage of population | Number of meat-packing plant employees |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Finney | Garden City | 23,825 | 38,470 | 19,883 | 51.68% | 3,600 |
Ford | Dodge City | 24,315 | 34,287 | 19,666 | 57.36% | 5,700 |
Grant | Ulysses | 6,977 | 7,352 | 3,862 | 52.53% | - |
Seward | Liberal | 17,071 | 21,964 | 14,406 | 65.59% | 3,500 |
Labor
While the establishment of a large meat-packing industry in southwest Kansas was facilitated by the abundance of water, animal feed, feedlots, and local governments offering incentives to investors, there was no similar abundance of labor in the small cities and towns of the region. Unemployment was low; the population was largely non-Hispanic white; and most Anglos were not interested in the hard and dangerous work associated with a meat-packing plant. As one commentator said, "Your Anglo community is not going to work there, pretty much regardless of the wage. The entire meatpacking industry depends on immigrant labor, and always has."[15]
In the 1980s, IBP recruited workers from far and wide for its Garden City plant, including 2,000 former refugees from Southeast Asia, mostly Vietnamese. In the 1990s, IBP opened an office in Mexico City to recruit Mexican and Central American workers. By 2000, Hispanics comprised 77 percent of IPB's work force in Garden City.[16] In February 2023, a company hired to clean the Cargill meat-packing plant in Dodge City was fined for employing 26 underage workers, aged 13 to 17, in the plant.[17]
Social and economic impacts
In 2007, a scholar summed up the social impacts of the packing plants: "influx of immigrants and refugees, housing shortages, rising demands for social services, increases in various social disorders, the creation of lots of relatively low-paying or part-time jobs, and relative falls in income levels." He pointed out also that these same issues characterize the meat-packing industry whatever its location. In Garden City, Spanish speaking children made up more than one-half of the school population and Mexican-owned businesses abounded.[18] In 2006, Pew Research Center estimated that 27 percent of the employees of meat processing plants nationwide were undocumented aliens.[19] Several raids by immigration officers on meat-packing facilities elsewhere ignited fears of the same in the Golden Triangle, but large-scale raids never occurred.[20]
Overall, however, problems associated with the rapid growth of an immigrant population have either not been serious or have been overcome. In 2018, Deborah and James Fallows titled an article about Dodge City, "A Conservative Town Embraces its Immigrant Population, Documented or Undocumented." They quoted a researcher of the Center for Rural Affairs stating that “Latinos and immigrants are not only bringing population growth to rural America, they are also bringing economic growth... Economists have found that, nationwide, rural counties with larger proportions of Latino populations tend to be better off economically than those with smaller Latino populations. Rural counties with higher proportions of Latinos tend to have lower unemployment rates and higher average per capita incomes.”[15]
In 2021, a Hispanic woman and second-generation immigrant was elected to the City Commission in Liberal and another Hispanic, also a second-generation immigrant, ran for the City Commission of Dodge City.[21] A Hispanic man, born in Mexico and undocumented (although a DACA recipient), is the Deputy City Manager of Dodge City.[22] In 2022, several department heads in the Garden City government have Hispanic surnames.[23] Garden City's first Hispanic mayor was elected in 1973.[24]
Muslim immigrants
In 2006, Muslims from Somalia, Burma, Sudan, and Ethiopia began arriving in Garden City and in 2021 they were joined by a few Afghans.[25] In 2022, one thousand Muslims were estimated to live in Garden City, and most of the adults worked in the meat-packing plant.[26] In 2016, three Anglo men from near Garden City were arrested for plotting to bomb a makeshift mosque in an apartment house largely occupied by Muslims. [27] The three men were sentenced to 25, 26, and 30 years imprisonment.[28]
References
- Broadway, Michael (2007). "Meatpacking and the Transformation of Rural Communities" (PDF). Rural Sociology. 72 (4): 560–567. doi:10.1526/003601107782638701. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- Art Cullen (17 August 2020). "Extreme weather just devastated 10m acres in the midwest. Expect more of this". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 August 2020.
- Condos, David. "How one meatpacking plant changed Garden City 40 years ago and left behind Lamar, Colorado". Topeka Capital-Journal. Kansas News Service. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- Stull, Donald D. "Of Meat and (Wo)Men: Meatpacking's Consequences for Communities" (PDF). National Agricultural Law Center. Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
- Broadway, Michael J.; Stull, Donald D. (January 2006). "Meat processing and Garden City, KS: Boom and Bust". Journal of Rural Studies. 22: 55. doi:10.1016/j.jrurstud.2005.06.001. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- "Existing Industry". Dodge City/Ford County Development Corporation. Retrieved February 6, 2015.
- "Farmland Industries". The New York Times. 1992-12-18. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
- "Cargill to invest 48 million in Dodge City Packing plant". Joplin Globe. Associated Press. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- "Investments being made to increase packing capacity". Feed Lot Magazine. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- "Labor Market". Liberal Kansas Economic Development. Archived from the original on 2017-03-13. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- Stull, Donald D.; Broadway, Michael J. (2013). Slaughterhouse Blues (Second ed.). Belmont, California: Wadsworth Cengage Learning. pp. 130–131. ISBN 9781111828783.
- Streusse, Angela; Dollar, Nathan T. "Who are American meat and poultry workers?". Economic Policy Institute. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- "Hispanic Population in Kansas by County, 2010-2020" (PDF). University of Kansas. Retrieved 23 February 2023.
- "Kansas Counties". Kansas Historical Society. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
- Fallows, Deborah; Fallows, James. "A Conservative Town Embraces its Immigrants, Documented and Undocumented". Yes Magazine. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- Broadway 2007, pp. 567–568.
- Vockrodt, Steve (February 17, 2023). "Company that put children to work in meat packing plants in Kansas and Nebraska pays maximum fines". KCUR - BBC World Service. Retrieved 3 March 2023.
- Broadway 2007, pp. 577–578.
- Artz, Georgeanne M.; Jackson, Rebecca; Orazem, Peter. "Is It a Jungle out There?". Iowa State University. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- "Meatpackers prepare for possible raids". Lawrence Journal-World. April 15, 2007. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- Condos, David (November 27, 2021). "Getting Elected as a Latina is an Uphill Battle even in the Most Hispanic Cities in Kansas". Topeka Capital-Journal. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- "Ernestor De La Rosa". Aspen Institute. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- "Staff Directory". Garden City, Kansas. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
- "Museum's Front Door Gallery features city's first Hispanic mayor". Garden City Telegram. April 11, 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
- Saadi, Yasmeen (7 September 2022). "Muslims in Rural Kansas Struggle to Find Needed Resources". Daily Yonder. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- Younes, Ali (2016). "Residents of Kansas City Rally in Support of Muslims". Aljazeera. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- Healy, Jack (October 26, 2016). "Somalis Living an American Dream in Kansas Glimpse a Nightware". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
- "Three Southwestern Kansas Men Sentenced to Prison for Plotting to Bomb Somali Immigrants in Garden City". Justice News, Department of Justice. January 25, 2019. Retrieved 25 February 2023.