Oklahoma, Cherokee Nation form poultry growth council

Governor Mary Fallin and Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Bill John Baker announced on Sept. 12 that the state and tribe are forming a coordinating council to evaluate the expansion of poultry growth in northeast Oklahoma.

Bennian, Bigstock
Bennian, Bigstock

Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin and Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Bill John Baker announced on September 12 that the state and tribe are forming a coordinating council to evaluate the expansion of poultry growth in northeast Oklahoma.

The Coordinating Council on Poultry Growth will examine the expansion of poultry production and its impact on rural communities and citizens in the region.

The coordinating council will also bring together state and tribal agencies, scientific researchers, and agricultural and community stakeholders at one table to maximize communication and access to information.

“Oklahoma has successfully used this model to look at a lot of complicated issues in the past, but this is the first time a coordinating council has been created in conjunction with one of Oklahoma’s federally recognized Indian tribes,” said Fallin. “This is a great opportunity to work cooperatively with the Cherokee Nation to focus on a regional issue that impacts both of our governments and citizens. Everyone needs to be at the same table and talking.”

The coordinating council will be co-chaired by Oklahoma Secretary of Agriculture Jim Reese and Cherokee Nation Secretary of Natural Resources Sara Hill. It will include staff from the Cherokee Nation along with staff from Oklahoma’s Department of Food, Forestry and Agriculture, the Oklahoma Water Resources Board, the Grand River Dam Authority, and the Oklahoma Conservation Commission.

“There has been a lot of discussion about the expansion of poultry operations in northeastern Oklahoma,” said Cherokee Nation Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin, Jr. “The new Coordinating Council on Poultry Growth will bring together Oklahoma and Cherokee Nation officials with community and agricultural stakeholders so that there are opportunities for real communication on these issues.”

The coordinating council’s co-chairs will include input from community members, researchers and individuals in agricultural production. Its goal is to ensure that accurate information is being shared between all stakeholders and to protect important natural resources and rural communities while supporting an important sector of the food chain and the agricultural industry.

For additional information regarding the Coordinating Council on Poultry Growth, call Betty Thompson with the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food and Forestry at +1.405.522.6105 or Julie Hubbard with the Cherokee Nation at +1.918.207.3896.

Oklahoma also has poultry plant close

While Oklahoma is experiencing a growth in poultry production, one poultry plant in the state has closed.

In late July, West Liberty Foods, parent company of Crystal Lake Farms, announced that it was closing its poultry processing plant in Jay, Oklahoma. It’s last day of operation was scheduled for September 10.

The 35,000-square-foot plant processes pasture-raised broiler chickens that carry a Step 4 rating certification from the Global Animal Partnership (GAP). Crystal Lake Farms President Gerald Lessard said the decision to close the plants was due to economics.

 

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