State cheese producer plans to stop buying milk from 11 Wisconsin dairy farms

A Wisconsin cheese producer has notified 11 state dairy farms that it will stop buying their milk in 60 days.
Share on twitter
Share on facebook
Share on linkedin
Share on whatsapp
Share on email

Arla Foods’ Hollandtown Dairy in Kaukauna notified the farms earlier this week that it would stop buying their milk as of July 1, said Donald Stohrer, the general manager for Arla Foods Inc., USA.
Arla Foods, headquartered in Denmark, is the fifth-largest dairy company in the world and a cooperative owned by more than 12,500 dairy farmers, according to its website. Its U.S. headquarters is in Basking Ridge, New Jersey, and Hollandtown Dairy is the only farm it owns in the United States.
Hollandtown has more milk than it needs to make cheese and it was forced to make a difficult decision, Stohrer said. It’s not a unique problem. The milk glut has been affecting farmers, cheese producers and others in the dairy industry and has led to depressed milk prices for four years.
“We tried to wait this out for awhile. But it wasn’t turning around and we had to make a decision,” he said.
Representatives from Hollandtown Dairy broke the news to the dairy farmers personally, Stohrer said. Arla Foods also has reached out to the state Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection to let it know it wants to help the farmers find new buyers for their milk, he said.
“We’re trying to do this as empathetically as possible,” Stohrer said.
Hollandtown started producing cheese for Arla in 1998 before Arla bought it in 2006.
It employs over 150 people and makes specialty cheeses such as Havarti, Gouda, Edam, Fontina and Muenster.
Hollandtown is the top producer of Havarti in the United States, according to Arla’s Hollandtown website.
The company follows European standards and buys milk from farmers who do not give hormones to their cows to increase the amount of milk they produce, according to its website.
“(Hollandtown) is not a massive player in Wisconsin and (the decision to stop buying milk from farmers) is a smaller scale situation than what happened last April,” said John Umhoefer, the executive director of the Wisconsin Cheese Makers Association.
Last April, Grassland Dairy Products of Greenwood told about 75 farms in Wisconsin that it was no longer buying their milk after a U.S.-Canada trade dispute led Grassland to lose its Canadian business.
By: ROB SCHULTZ
Source: La Crosse Tribune
Link: http://lacrossetribune.com/news/local/state-and-regional/state-cheese-producer-plans-to-stop-buying-milk-from-wisconsin/article_cb513a14-e483-561e-9512-9bf65ce69161.html

G
M
T
Detect language
Afrikaans
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Basque
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Bulgarian
Catalan
Cebuano
Chichewa
Chinese (Simplified)
Chinese (Traditional)
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Esperanto
Estonian
Filipino
Finnish
French
Galician
Georgian
German
Greek
Gujarati
Haitian Creole
Hausa
Hebrew
Hindi
Hmong
Hungarian
Icelandic
Igbo
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Javanese
Kannada
Kazakh
Khmer
Korean
Lao
Latin
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Malagasy
Malay
Malayalam
Maltese
Maori
Marathi
Mongolian
Myanmar (Burmese)
Nepali
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Punjabi
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Sesotho
Sinhala
Slovak
Slovenian
Somali
Spanish
Sundanese
Swahili
Swedish
Tajik
Tamil
Telugu
Thai
Turkish
Ukrainian
Urdu
Uzbek
Vietnamese
Welsh
Yiddish
Yoruba
Zulu
Afrikaans
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Basque
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Bulgarian
Catalan
Cebuano
Chichewa
Chinese (Simplified)
Chinese (Traditional)
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Esperanto
Estonian
Filipino
Finnish
French
Galician
Georgian
German
Greek
Gujarati
Haitian Creole
Hausa
Hebrew
Hindi
Hmong
Hungarian
Icelandic
Igbo
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Javanese
Kannada
Kazakh
Khmer
Korean
Lao
Latin
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Malagasy
Malay
Malayalam
Maltese
Maori
Marathi
Mongolian
Myanmar (Burmese)
Nepali
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Punjabi
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Sesotho
Sinhala
Slovak
Slovenian
Somali
Spanish
Sundanese
Swahili
Swedish
Tajik
Tamil
Telugu
Thai
Turkish
Ukrainian
Urdu
Uzbek
Vietnamese
Welsh
Yiddish
Yoruba
Zulu
Text-to-speech function is limited to 200 characters

Mirá También

Así lo expresó Domingo Possetto, secretario de la seccional Rafaela, quien además, afirmó que a los productores «habitualmente los ignoran los gobiernos». Además, reconoció la labor de los empresarios de las firmas locales y aseguró que están «esperanzados» con la negociación entre SanCor y Adecoagro.

Te puede interesar

Notas
Relacionadas