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Phase Five Supply Chain – With a Message From A Dairy Farmer….
Conservative Tree House ^ | April 14, 2020 | sundance

Posted on 04/14/2020 7:59:33 AM PDT by Presbyterian Reporter

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A few days ago someone posted a story on Free Republic from USA TODAY that made some snarky allegations that it was all Trump's fault that some dairy farmers were dumping milk.

Well, the above story from the Conservative Tree House demonstrates what a 'real' journalist would write if they learned that dairy farmers were dumping milk.

I might add to what Sundance wrote is that school closures also have impacted the milk supply chain. I suspect most schools are either buying milk in 5 gallon bulk containers or in 1 cup individual serving containers.

With all of the schools closed those kiddies are at home and drinking milk from the 1/2 gallon or 1 gallon containers that there parents bought at the local grocery store.

Hence, the reason their is a limit on milk purchases at many grocery stores.

As detailed in the above story it is not easy to switch from bulk packaging to home use packaging on a very short notice.

1 posted on 04/14/2020 7:59:33 AM PDT by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: Presbyterian Reporter
VERY informative piece. Some of us knew some of the issue but this casts a lot more info on it. Hopefully a lot of folks read and heed. Thanks. 👍😷
2 posted on 04/14/2020 8:06:33 AM PDT by rktman ( #My2ndAmend! ----- Enlisted in the Navy in '67 to protect folks rights to strip my rights. WTH?)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

The “Just In Time” mentality is good for profits but it does make us fragile. Likewise with the centralization.

I don’t see it changing. We are a rich country and people like it that way. I guess I’d prefer to live in a slightly slower, more decentralized, more olde-timey country. But my opinion doesn’t count for much.


3 posted on 04/14/2020 8:07:03 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (If White Privilege is real, why did Elizabeth Warren lie about being an Indian?)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter
I’m a dairy farmer, believe me NO dairyman likes dumping milk;

You can point the finger at the dairy lobby (Big Milk?) that has essentially put local, family dairy farmers out of business in favor of the behemoths.

Local dairys (dairies?) could probably fill the needs of local restaurants more efficiently.

4 posted on 04/14/2020 8:07:23 AM PDT by Texas Eagle (If it wasn't for double-standards, Liberals would have no standards at all -- Texas Eagle)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter
Approximately 60% of all food was consumed “outside the home” (or food away from home), and 40% of all food consumed was food “inside the home” (grocery shoppers).

Wow. That is WAY out of balance for my home (me, wife, 18 YO son). In home is more like 80%.

I guess we're not "average"...

5 posted on 04/14/2020 8:08:05 AM PDT by jeffc (The U.S. media are our enemy)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter
Good article about one sector. Keep the closing sentence in mind:

This is a warning the same problems exist in all supply chains.

6 posted on 04/14/2020 8:08:23 AM PDT by gloryblaze
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To: jeffc
Wow. That is WAY out of balance for my home (me, wife, 18 YO son). In home is more like 80%.

My wife and I are even more out of the average. Maybe 95% at home. I also take my lunch to work.

7 posted on 04/14/2020 8:15:02 AM PDT by Sans-Culotte (With every passing day, I am a little bit gladder that Romney lost in 2012.)
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To: rktman

I likewise am hopeful many FReepers will read it and pass the report on to friends.

This is the type of journalism that the American Public wants. They want to know about a problem and why it is a problem.

Instead, the vast majority of journalists today are indoctrinated into being ‘sensationalists’——kinda like the tabloid magazines that formerly confronted our eyeballs at the grocery store checkout line.


8 posted on 04/14/2020 8:23:21 AM PDT by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: Sans-Culotte
"I also take my lunch to work."

As does my wife, and she works at a school. She could buy a hot lunch (and in Marion County, FL, school food isn't bad). She just prefers to take her own.

We don't even go out that much, maybe 4 times a year. Although we do like to splurge once in a while on a giant Jersey Mike's original Italian, Mike's way. Yum!

9 posted on 04/14/2020 8:25:32 AM PDT by jeffc (The U.S. media are our enemy)
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To: Sans-Culotte

“””My wife and I are even more out of the average. Maybe 95% at home.”””


There is a reason that in any community the number of fast food and regular restaurants far exceed the number of grocery stores. People are eating there.

Add the free breakfast and lunch for kiddies going to school. Along with those who have to pay for their school lunch.

Also, the cafeterias at the workplace.

And all of a sudden it is easy to see why the percent of food consumed outside the home is so large


10 posted on 04/14/2020 8:29:36 AM PDT by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: ClearCase_guy

Few Americans are aware of this.


Another abject failure in the way we educate our youth.


11 posted on 04/14/2020 8:37:03 AM PDT by VTenigma (The Democrat party is the party of the mathematically challenged)
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To: Tilted Irish Kilt

... For almost 8 weeks the retail supply chain has been operating beyond capacity and the burn rate of raw food products is up a stunning 40 percent.

Those bulk warehouses, the feeder pools for retail/consumer manufactured food products, are starting to run low. Believe me: (1) we don’t want to find out what happens when those 800 mass storage facilities run out; ...


12 posted on 04/14/2020 8:38:31 AM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

How many millions of school children aren’t getting cafeteria milk? (two, sometimes three meals a day). I don’t recall seeing a section in the grocery store for half-pints.

So I imagine a bunch of unused small cartons piling up somewhere.


13 posted on 04/14/2020 8:43:53 AM PDT by P.O.E. (Pray for America)
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To: ClearCase_guy
Most industries have abandoned their “just in time” supply chain model for a different approach that is sometimes called “just in case.” Instead of having one highly efficient supply chain, the better approach is to have multiple chains set up that can be adjusted as circumstances require it.

This change began back in the 1990s in response to major supply chain disruptions related to storms, port strikes on the West Coast, and the infamous chaos in the aftermath of the Union Pacific-Southern Pacific railroad merger.

Keep in mind, however, that some supply chains MUST be operated in a “just in time” manner due to the nature of the products involved. Milk has gotten a lot of attention in recent days because the disruption has wreaked havoc on the industry. That’s because milk is a temperature-controlled product that has a very limited shelf life at each step in the supply chain.

14 posted on 04/14/2020 8:55:24 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("And somewhere in the darkness ... the gambler, he broke even.")
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To: gloryblaze

“This is a warning the same problems exist in all supply chains.”

Yes, for all corporatized, hubbed production and distribution.

And for centralized government!


15 posted on 04/14/2020 8:55:51 AM PDT by polymuser (It's discouraging to think how many people are shocked by honesty and so few by deceit. Noel Coward)
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To: DuncanWaring

From what I’m hearing in the industry, the distribution centers are the core of the problem and it’s not because they’re “running low.” It’s actually the opposite. They can’t move products out the door fast enough because they are operating with smaller crews due to excessive absenteeism. A lot of staff isn’t showing up to work for various reasons — illness, family commitments, or just fear.


16 posted on 04/14/2020 8:58:44 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("And somewhere in the darkness ... the gambler, he broke even.")
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

#OUAN Open up America Now!!


17 posted on 04/14/2020 9:01:11 AM PDT by dhuls (better late than never)
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To: rktman

Agreed on the information value of this column - Needs to be widely read so people can see the need to get everybody out of their tyranny-spun cocoon that the media wants to call a “quarantine”. To cast a military-view on this article, I would remind FReepers that only amateurs discuss strategy & tactics - professionals discuss logistics, i.e. supply chain. Today is a lovely day to write your various elected officials to lobby for a re-opening of the economy RFN.


18 posted on 04/14/2020 9:03:49 AM PDT by T-Bird45 (It feels like the seventies, and it shouldn't.)
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To: DuncanWaring; 3D-JOY; 4everontheRight; 4Liberty; 5thGenTexan; 45semi; 101stAirborneVet; ...
Prepper Ping : Understanding the Supply Chain (food processing, transportation, and delivery)

"Phase Five Supply Chain – With a Message From A Dairy Farmer…." and more.

A brief glimpse into the supply chain and limited ability to re-engineer to the "home-bound"consumer.
Understanding your domestic food supply and the difficulties in supply chain adjustment

"..the overall U.S. food delivery system; however, this network [to supply commercial and restaurant ] was approximately 60 percent of all food consumption on a daily basis.
The ‘food away from home‘ sector has its own supply chain.
Very few restaurants and venues (cited above) purchase food products from retail grocery outlets.

As a result of the coronavirus mitigation effort the ‘food away from home’ sector has been reduced by 75% of daily food delivery operations.
However, people still need to eat. That means retail food outlets, grocers, are seeing sales increases of 25 to 50 percent, depending on the area.

The retail consumer supply chain for manufactured and processed food products includes bulk storage to compensate for seasonality.
As Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue recently noted “there are over 800 commercial and public warehouses in the continental 48 states that store frozen products.”

As a nation we essentially stay one harvest ahead of demand by storing it and smoothing out any peak/valley shortfalls.
There are a total of 175,642 commercial facilities involved in this supply-chain across the country "

" One dairy farmer helps explain:
Are we dumping milk because of greed or low demand, no. It’s the supply chain, there are only so many jug fillers, all were running 24/7 before this cluster you-know-what."

Now demand for jug milk has almost doubled. However, restaurant demand is almost gone; NO ONE is eating out.
Restaurant milk is distributed in 2.5 gal bags or pint chugs; further, almost 75 percent of milk is processed into hard products in this country, cheese and butter.
Mozzarella is almost a third of total cheese production; how’s pizza sales going right now?? "

Eggs? Same problem. Bakeries and restaurants of any size use Pullman egg cases, 30 dozen at a pop, 30 eggs to a flat, 12 flats to a case.
There are only so many 1 dozen egg cartons available and only so many packing machines.
Industrial bakeries and processors of packaged food buy bulk liquid eggs, no carton at all.

H/T to Duncan Waring !
Duncan Waring :" ... For almost 8 weeks the retail supply chain has been operating beyond capacity and the burn rate of raw food products is up a stunning 40 percent."

19 posted on 04/14/2020 9:18:34 AM PDT by Tilted Irish Kilt
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To: Presbyterian Reporter

Thanks for posting.

Not to take away from the actual, IMPORTANT point of the story, but this sentence, towards end, got my attention...

...On your standard buffet of any size, do you really think they boil eggs and peel them? They come in a bag, boiled and diced; those nice uniform slices of boiled egg you see on your salad, a lot of them come in tubes boiled and extruded at the same time, just unwrap and slice. Your scrambled eggs come in a homogenized bag on most buffets. Another example of Main Street being gutted and “improved by wall street”...

:- /


20 posted on 04/14/2020 9:33:28 AM PDT by Jane Long (Praise God, from whom ALL blessings flow.)
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