‘Maid’ in Alaska?
Reprinted with permission from the July issue of the Ester Republic.
Barring the proverbial”act of God,” many people seem to agree that Matanuska Maid’s days are numbered — the valiant, last-minute coup detat by Governor Palin notwithstanding. It is not for a lack of vision; in fact you might say that too much vision is what has steered the dairy down this path. Mat Maid has been operating as if it bore a mandate to offer all manner of dairy products to all Alaskans, all the time, including some unexpected ones like Florida orange juice and a pro-biotic yogurt called “Glacier Yo” intended for export to Pacific Rim countries. There is plenty of blame to go around, and the folks who won’t buy local milk because they think it costs too much deserve their share of it, but nevertheless you simply can’t have an industrial dairy without first having a dairy industry.
To the fine farmers of the
But from day one the development of an agriculture industry was confounded by competition from Outside. As transportation improved in the 1940s, 50s and 60s, and the price of shipping came down, cheap packaged goods became a real problem for local food producers. Iconic Creamer’s Dairy was the first to fall, despite prospering for the first half of the 20th century. Their operations were obliterated by competition from imported milk, which thanks to pasteurization and the new
We cannot afford to let the closure of Mat Maid mark the beginning of the end for Alaskan food production. American culture has come to believe in consistency of food on the shelves as surely as they do the pull of gravity, but when it comes to food security, Alaskans don’t, in fact, have any. Not only does the massive amount of fuel needed to get the food here contribute its fair share to environmental concerns like global warming, but the distance of the supply chain also makes us extremely vulnerable to any interruptions in supply. Conservative estimates say that if all supply planes stopped flying into the state,
The Mat-Maid drama, which comes on the heels of the unfortunate BY Farms closure, is proof that our history of outsourcing is catching up with us. By consistently channeling money out of state we have usurped the development of any significant, local agricultural infrastructure and industry, such as slaughterhouses, feed growers, and processing, canning and packaging plants. Matanuska Maid has to import 65% of their milk from out of state because
My message to the folks at Mat Maid is simple: choosing to close down is a declaration of your belief that the dairy should be everything to everyone, or it should be nothing. Instead of giving up, do whatever it takes to become what Alaskans need: a self sufficient, local creamery. Take a nod from Northern Lights Dairy: scale back your product line to a level you are able to sustain with existing infrastructure, and focus on the needs of your local customer-base rather than trying to subsidize failing product lines with new products and diversification. If you direct revenue back into the agricultural community around you, infrastructure will develop itself as that community grows. Here too is where the State of
And one more thing: if and when you commit to a new vision as a leader in the growth of Alaska’s agricultural community, take some time to develop your website,’Mat Maid’s Future’ page (http://www.aadland.com/matmaid/pages/future.html), which currently looks like this:
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