skip to main content
skip to newscasts

Monday, March 31, 2025

Public News Service Logo
facebook instagram linkedin reddit youtube twitter
view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Wisconsin AG seeks to stop Elon Musk's $1M payments at rally giveaway; Rural advocates urge CA lawmakers to safeguard banking protections; Federal, state job cuts threaten FL workers' rights, services; Alabama counties lack high-speed internet and health access.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

President Trump says there are ways for him to take a third term. New tariffs are scheduled for this week, but economists say they'll hurt buying power. And advocates say the Trans Day of Visibility is made more important by state legislation.

view newscast page
play newscast audioPlay

Rural folks face significant clean air and water risks due to EPA cutbacks, a group of policymakers is working to expand rural health care via mobile clinics, and a new study maps Montana's news landscape.

MO advocates join fight against corporate influence in agriculture

play audio
Play

Monday, March 10, 2025   

Advocates for small independent farmers in Missouri and around the nation are sounding the alarm about the effects of corporate agriculture on farmers and local communities.

Missouri stands as the nation's second largest farming state, with nearly 86,000 farms spanning 27 million acres.

Yet, just four corporate giants - Tyson and Cargill from the U.S., Brazil's JBS, and China's WH Group Limited - dominate the country's livestock production.

Joe Maxwell - cofounder of the nonprofit Farm Action - warned that vertical integration created meatpacking monopolies, driving out independent hog farmers.

"These meat packers, they own the system," said Maxwell. "They own the baby pig. They own the feed. They price gouge the consumer at the grocery store. They pollute the land, to destroy the natural resources. They are extracting the wealth from rural America."

Corporate agriculture firms claim to boost efficiency and keep prices low - but advocates argue Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, or CAFOs, are polluting air and water.

Sonja Trom Eayrs and her family have farmed in Minnesota for generations and fought CAFOs for decades.

In her book, 'Dodge County, Incorporated', she described the corporate system as a pyramid - with big ag at the top, integrators in the middle, and contract growers at the base.

"The multinationals reorganized the marketplace, created a closed system where all the profits flow to the top of this pyramid," said Eayrs, "and they can control the pricing that flows all the way down to the contract farmer and that contract grower down at the bottom."

Many of the largest agricultural corporations are multinational, influencing global farming practices and food systems. They set industry standards, making it hard for smaller farms to compete.





get more stories like this via email

more stories
Nearly one in eight Mississippi residents relies on the food assistance program, which faces $230 billion in proposed federal cuts. (Pixabay)

Social Issues

play sound

For nearly one in eight Mississippians, monthly SNAP benefits provide a critical lifeline, one now at risk as congressional Republicans propose $230 …


Social Issues

play sound

Today, Montanans will gather outside the Statehouse to observe International Transgender Day of Visibility, during a legislative session that has …

Social Issues

play sound

Florida's public employees face twin crises as federal collective bargaining rights suddenly disappear and state government jobs are cut, leaving …


Cuts to Medicaid are one way Congress could pay for extending tax cuts passed in 2017. It is estimated two-thirds of the benefits of the extension would go to the wealthiest 20% of Americans. (Adobe Stock)

Health and Wellness

play sound

To pay for the priorities of President Donald Trump's administration, like mass deportations and tax cuts, Republicans in Congress are considering …

Social Issues

play sound

Today is the International Trans Day of Visibility, to recognize the contributions of transgender people in society -- and raise awareness of the …

Smoke hovers above Los Angeles as seen on January 8, 2025, as a result of wildfires. (Zack Hughes)

Health and Wellness

play sound

Wildfires are creeping closer and closer to health care facilities in California, including hospitals and nursing homes, according to a new study…

Social Issues

play sound

President Donald Trump's administration has targeted the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, so advocates for people in rural communities are …

Social Issues

play sound

A strike set to begin today has been averted at Western Michigan University's Homer Stryker MD School of Medicine, known as WMed. Its resident …

 

Phone: 303.448.9105 Toll Free: 888.891.9416 Fax: 208.247.1830 Your trusted member- and audience-supported news source since 1996 Copyright © 2021