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Missouri Hog Farmers
Patch
Together a Solution
By Linda Fischer
Assistant Editor
Three hog farmers from northern Missouri embarked on a mission in
1992 to increase their incomes. What they did resulted in an unusual
enterprise that has endured for 10 years and has affected other
Missouri farmers, as well as consumers.
"It was a strong group of farmers," says Lindsay Howerton
of the nonprofit Missouri Rural Crisis Center (MRCC). "Changes
in the livestock industry made them realize they needed help."
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| Pigs
kick up the dust on a Patchwork farm. |
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The most devastating change was the growth of corporate hog farms,
which were putting small hog operations out of business at a fast
pace. MRCC had been formed in 1985 to address a tripling rate of
farm bankruptcies in the state. The farmers were members of the
organization and turned to it for assistance. Together, they launched
Patchwork Family Farms, an economic development project designed
to eliminate middlemen, give hog farmers a guaranteed price that
exceeds the market price and provide high-quality pork to consumers.
"We've had to build a name for ourselves through quality
and service," Howerton says. "We're in a tough marketplace.
It takes a lot of people and volunteer hours and sweat equity to
make this work."
The process starts with Patchwork farmers promising to raise hogs
in a healthy environment. The hogs are allowed outside in the fresh
air and sunshine. Growth hormones and antibiotics in feed are prohibited.
Once the hogs are ready for market, Patchwork steps in and buys
them up-front so that profit flows smoothly to the farmers. Patchwork
pays 43 cents per pound or, if the market price is higher, 15 percent
above the market price. Hogs were selling for 30 to 35 cents per
pound on the market earlier this spring. In 1998, the guaranteed
price played a critical role for Patchwork members when the market
price sank to 7.5 cents per pound.
The next step is to send the hogs for processing to one of three
federally inspected, family-owned plants that Patchwork uses in
Missouri.
Although the farmers are paid before the meat is sold, their work
goes beyond raising hogs. Along with staff from Patchwork, the farmers
put on their sales hats and market the meat to restaurants, grocery
stores and members of a food cooperative. A husband-wife team makes
all the deliveries.
"We've been creative in our marketing strategy,"
Howerton says. "Patchwork feels it is important to sell quality
products to all income levels. We don't just go after a niche
market."
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| A
Missouri farmer coaxes his hogs to come out in the sunshine. |
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Its market includes about 50 restaurants in mid-Missouri, many
in Columbia. They also sell to a specialty grocery store, four mainstream
supermarkets and the 5,500-member food co-op. The pork products
bear the Patchwork Family Farms label and are displayed in their
own cases in stores.
Patchwork has received some financial support in the form of grants
from nonprofit organizations and a grant from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. One of the nonprofits, the Federation of Southern
Cooperatives, provided the fledgling organization with training
on how to conduct a feasibility study; the Catholic Campaign for
Human Development funded the study.
Patchwork Family Farms' sales have steadily increased since
1992. In 1997, Patchwork recorded $60,000 in gross sales. By 1999,
that figure jumped to $196,000. Last year, total sales were $302,000.
The number of hog farmers who are participating in the project has
also increased, to 20.
Despite the good news, Patch-work Family Farms is not yet at the
breakeven point, Howerton says. "But we're getting closer."
In the 10 years since Patchwork Family Farms was started to help
farmers keep their hog-producing businesses, the trend in corporate
farming has continued in Missouri. The number of hogs produced in
the state has risen dramatically with the influx of large corporate
operations, but the number of Missouri families that are hog farmers
has dropped to less than a third of previous levels, wrote John
Ikerd, a retired University of Missouri professor, in the March/April
2001 issue of Small Farm Today.
Meanwhile, Patchwork Family Farms keeps working. The project has
been recognized on a national level for its efforts to keep the
independent family farmer in business. It has been featured on the
Discovery Channel and at a Farm Aid concert.
"We have produced a project that is changing the system,"
Howerton says. "We're here to say these projects can be
successful."
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