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Missouri AG Asks Tyson To Sell Missouri Plants, Not Close Them

Missouri AG Asks Tyson To Sell Missouri Plants, Not Close Them

Missouri AG Asks Tyson To Sell Missouri Plants, Not Close Them

file-photo-tyson-chicken-nuggets-owned-by-tyson-foods-are-seen-for-sale-in-queens-new-york-2
FILE PHOTO: Tyson Chicken Nuggets, owned by Tyson Foods, are seen for sale in Queens, New York, U.S., November 16, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo

(KTTS News) — Missouri’s attorney general is asking Tyson Foods to sell two poultry plants in Missouri, instead of shutting them down.

Attorney General Andrew Bailey says closing the plants in Dexter and Noel would be devastating to those communities.

He told officials that if Tyson refuses to sell to certain parties, including competitors, it would be a direct violation of Missouri’s antitrust laws.

Press Release

Joining Senator Hawley’s efforts to protect working families in southern Missouri, Attorney General Andrew Bailey directed a letter to Donnie King, Chief Executive Officer of Tyson Foods, encouraging him to sell, rather than close, two of Tyson‘s plants in Dexter and Noel, Missouri.In the letter, Attorney General Bailey writes, “with serious concern about your decision to close two plants in Dexter and Noel, Missouri. These plants are critical to local communities. The City Administrator of Dexter, for example, recently pointed out that Dexter ‘has been home to an active poultry production industry since the 1890’s, and the current plant location has been active since the Swift Poultry Company opened in the 1930’s.’ Closure will be devastating to the local economy. The same is true in Noel, where the plant employs 1,500 workers in a city whose population is 2,100. “Closure will have ripple effects that will harm more than just the individuals who would lose their factory jobs. How can a restaurant or grocery store in a town of 2,000 people expect to stay open when 1,500 people lose their jobs? What will chicken farmers and grain growers do if the plants they have long relied on close?”He continues, “It is thus paramount that you do everything in your power to either keep the facilities open or sell to any interested party, including a competitor. I understand that Senator Hawley recently informed you that federal antitrust laws require you to make every effort to sell, including to a competitor. Missouri’s own antitrust laws are ‘construed in harmony with ruling judicial interpretations of comparable federal antitrust statutes.’ Mo. Rev. Stat. § 416.141; see also Empire Storage & Ice Co. v. Giboney, 357 Mo. 671, 675 (1948), aff’d, 336 U.S. 490 (1949) (certain actions taken ‘for the purpose of refusing to sell to a certain person or persons is in direct violation of’ Missouri antitrust law). Thus, the requirement to make every effort to sell is imposed not only by federal law, but by state law as well. Like Senator Hawley, I am committed to ensuring corporations fulfill their legal obligations. I will always enforce state law in defense of working Missouri families.” Attorney General Bailey concludes, “But even setting aside potential legal liability, doing everything in your power to find a buyer who will keep these critical factories open is simply the right thing to do. It is vital to the people of Missouri whose livelihoods depend on these factories that Tyson works to ensure that these plants remain open. I welcome the opportunity to speak with you to discuss this matter.”

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