Friday, April 15, 2022 CapitalPress.com 7 Organic Valley begins rebuilding Oregon creamery damaged in fire By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press McMINNVILLE, Ore. — One year after a fire significantly damaged the Organic Valley creamery in McMinnville, Ore., a new and expanded facility is ris- ing from the ashes. The country’s larg- est organic dairy coop- erative announced it is nearly finished with the first phase Mark of rebuild- ing, and will Pfeiffer hire eight new employees on May 2 to resume making nonfat milk powder at the original plant site. Fourteen employees are already back on the job. “It’s been a long, slow road,” said Mark Pfeiffer, vice president of inter- nal operations for Organic Valley. “It’s nothing short of miraculous, where we’re at.” Organic Valley acquired the creamery from another co-op, the Farmers Coop- erative Creamery, in 2016. Fire erupted at the plant on April 20, 2021, destroy- ing the 25,000-square- foot main building. Other assets — including the milk dryer, butter churn and storage tanks — sur- vived the blaze. “That was a really big deal for us,” Pfeiffer said. “If it had been a total loss, I’m not sure we’d be rebuilding anywhere, quite frankly.” Before the fire, the McMinnville creamery had 44 employees and handled approximately 4 million pounds of organic milk every week to make butter and milk powder. Pfeiffer said the co-op did a supply chain analy- sis to determine whether it was feasible to rebuild in McMinnville, about 45 miles southwest of Port- Organic Valley Phase one of rebuilding the Organic Valley creamery in McMinnville, Ore. The co-op plans to hire eight new em- ployees on May 2. Amy Hanifan/ McMinnville Fire Department Firefighters battle the flames April 20, 2021, at the Organic Valley Cream- ery in McMinnville, Ore. Organic Valley Work progresses on the Organic Valley creamery in McMinnville, Ore. The co-op will soon resume making milk powder at the plant. land in Oregon’s Wil- lamette Valley. Organic Valley has 1,700 farm- er-members, including 69 in Oregon, Washington and Idaho. After studying the farms’ locations and trucking routes to deliver their milk for processing, Pfeiffer said McMinn- ville “was close enough to the epicenter where it just made sense.” Groundbreaking for phase one of the rebuild was Oct. 4, 2021. In the meantime, Pfeiffer said the co-op arranged co-processing of members’ milk at other plants around the North- west, posing a major logis- tical challenge. “The metaphor I would use is (like) asking a 2-year-old to learn how to solve a Rubik’s Cube,” Pfeiffer said. “You’re dealing with such a per- ishable commodity. It’s just very difficult.” Despite this, Pfeiffer said the co-op continued to pick up milk and pay its members in full. “One thing we’re very proud of is that none of our farmers were ever really impacted by this,” he said. The McMinnville creamery is one of only two milk processing plants owned by the Organic Val- ley, Pfeiffer said, with the other being in Wiscon- sin. The co-op contracts with co-processing part- ners to ensure milk stays as fresh and local as pos- sible, without having to travel long distances from the farm. Phase one of the rebuild is estimated to cost $35 million. Crews have con- structed a new fluid milk processing room next to the original milk dryer and evaporator, which was unaffected by the fire. The fire also spared two 50,000-gallon raw milk silos. Pfeiffer said the new plant will include an addi- tional two 40,000-gal- lon milk silos, as well as two 30,000-gallon storage tanks for pasteurized milk and three 10,000-gallon cream silos. Pfeiffer said the increased capacity will better serve Organic Val- ley and potentially play a role in co-processing for other companies in the future. “Not only us, there is a lot of milk supply in the Northwest,” he said. “The processing infra- structure and supply chain out there leaves a lot to be desired.” The timeline for phase two of the rebuild remains uncertain. Pfeiffer said that effort will priori- tize employee offices and potential for renewed butter production at the McMinnville creamery, though construction costs have spiked with inflation. “We anticipate that this phase will extend into 2023,” he said. Pfeiffer credited the city of McMinnville and local support for making phase one of the rebuild a success. “It’s just been a great community effort,” he said. WHAT’S IN A NAME? WideARmatch ® FOR WEED CONTROL, IT’S A LOT. herbicide WideARmatch ® herbicide. The next-generation of cereals weed control. 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