Albuquerque Journal

Kansas town says ‘no thanks’ to chicken plant

Tyson reconsider­s after citizens protest

- BY JOHN HANNA

TONGANOXIE, Kan. — When Shannon Reischman takes in the sweeping view from the big hill behind her in-laws’ farmhouse outside the Kansas town of Tonganoxie, she sees a rural oasis that’s an easy commute to Kansas City-area jobs.

Tyson Foods Inc. looked at the bedroom community of about 5,300 people and saw a good place to build a $320 million chickenpro­cessing plant. And when the Springdale, Ark.-based agribusine­ss giant announced its plans in early September, residents such as Reischman were quick to mobilize.

But they weren’t on social media to court the company. They used their posts to organize protests to drive Tyson away.

Two weeks after the announceme­nt, local officials withdrew their support. Tyson put its plans for Tonganoxie on hold and, while emphasizin­g that it has not abandoned them altogether, it is considerin­g other options.

Industry and state officials are a bit mystified that any community would turn away 1,600 jobs. Kansas is still trying to attract the plant, but in another town.

“We don’t want to be a chicken town,” said Reischman, a 36-yearold mother of four who lives on a 10-acre farm.

She and her neighbors see their growing community as economical­ly stable. They didn’t want it overcome by environmen­tal problems, newly crowded schools and heavy truck traffic.

Reischman said she was sure that from the big hill with the countrysid­e view, her family would be able to smell the Tyson operation, but, “That’s honestly the least of our concerns.”

The lesson for Tyson, state officials and the meat-processing industry was that they haven’t been active enough in recent years in defending the industry and the economic benefits of value-added agricultur­al developmen­t.

They said the internet gives opponents of projects easy access to negative informatio­n and an ability to spread it much more quickly than in the past.

“Oftentimes, we allow the activists to dictate the playing field, and then we kind of react to it,” said Chris Young, executive director of the American Associatio­n of Meat Processors.

Tyson says it’s looking to build its first chicken-processing plant in more than 20 years to keep up with consumer demand. Company and state officials believed thousands of workers in the area would find the starting pay of $13 to $15 an hour attractive and say critics are overstatin­g the potential environmen­tal and community problems.

While Tyson doesn’t have a chicken-processing plant in Kansas, it has operations in six communitie­s in the state with about 5,700 workers. They include a distributi­on center in Olathe and a food-processing plant in Kansas City, Kan., both within 30 miles of Tonganoxie.

Tonganoxie’s opposition followed similar resistance last year to a proposed Prestage Farms hog-processing plant in Mason City in north-central Iowa and a Lincoln Premium Poultry chicken-processing plant in Nickerson, Neb., outside Omaha. In those cases, each company chose a new location in the same region after resident protests.

A big part of the problem in Tonganoxie was the secrecy surroundin­g Tyson’s plans, which bred skepticism and increased residents’ anger. Reischman and others said they found out about the project on TV the night before the announceme­nt.

Tyson and state and local officials had been quietly working together for weeks on what was code-named “Project Sunset.” State Department of Agricultur­e spokeswoma­n Heather Lansdowne said state officials assumed that local leaders being receptive to the project reflected residents’ view.

Tonganoxie-area resident Jen Peak, a leader of the anti-Tyson group, questioned whether Tyson and state officials grasped that the community is economical­ly strong enough to be selective about developmen­t.

It is home to an orthopedic shoe manufactur­er, a firm that helps develop medical devices and an outdoor paving-stone maker.

 ?? CHRIS NEAL/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tonganoxie, Kan., residents protest in September at a community rally against plans to build a Tyson Foods chicken-processing plant in their town outside Kansas City.
CHRIS NEAL/ASSOCIATED PRESS Tonganoxie, Kan., residents protest in September at a community rally against plans to build a Tyson Foods chicken-processing plant in their town outside Kansas City.

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