Agriculture - N/A, N/A, N/A
During the late 1960s, there were nearly 10,000 slaughter facilities in the U.S., or roughly three per county. Over the half century since, the meat processing industry has consolidated. Corporate meat processing operations grew larger and more commercialized. Struggling to compete and remain profitable, small farmers were driven out of business. Thousands of localized slaughterhouses were decimated. By April 2018, there were only 2,758 slaughter facilities in the U.S. — less than one per county.Local farmers, the backbone of American agriculture, fell secondary to the rise of large-scale meat processing operations. The agricultural landscape changed, and not for the better.To stay in business, farmers began traveling long distances with their animals to regional slaughterhouses. The trips stressed animals and affected meat quality. Farmers sacrificed profits due to increased transportation costs and wasted time. They bore the stress of scheduling with large abattoirs, sacrificing autonomy in their operations for the unpredictability of regional slaughterhouses. Consumers, once nourished by fresh, high-quality local meat, were disserved by mass-produced meat and little idea where it came from.The farm-to-table connection, diminished by corporate commercialization over the past half decade, is worth restoring: for our animals, farmers, communities, and environment.At Friesla, our mission is to provide farmers with the tools to help you take control of your meat processing operations — on your terms, time, and at your site.Our vision is to create a global network of strong, sustainable ecosystems in which independent farmers raise, process, and deliver premium meat direct to your local communities.Together, let's get started.
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