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 Home > Thisjustin > Story

Published - Tuesday, April 01, 2008

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Organic Valley reports record revenue in its 20th anniversary year

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Twenty years ago, seven Wisconsin farmers formed Organic Valley Family of Farms with a shared vision the cooperative still maintains: Work in partnership to produce healthy, nutritious organic food; keep family farmers farming; help revitalize rural communities while serving as stewards of the earth; and always offer a stable, sustainable pay price to its member farmers.

Today, Organic Valley is the nation's largest farmer-owned cooperative, with more than 1,200 farmers in 34 states and one Canadian province. And, as the organization prepares to celebrate its 20th anniversary this year with a variety of events and activities, Organic Valley is reporting its 2007 revenues reached $432.5 million, a 29 percent increase over 2006 and an almost 250 percent increase over the past five years.

In 1988, when prospects for American family farmers were as dismal as they had ever been, the founding produce and dairy farmers of Organic Valley sought a workable alternative to the disappearing family farm. By doing so, in an age when corporations dominated all facets of business including government, energy, agriculture and global food supply, Organic Valley became a true "un-corporation," serving small family farmers and rural community health by combining two alternative business models - the family farm and the cooperative.

"When we first got together back in 1988, our goal was to save our farms and family farming culture. We saw organic agriculture and the cooperative business model as our opportunity to do this," explained George Siemon, one of the original Organic Valley farmers and its chief executive officer. "Within our first year we set the target farmer pay-price for organic milk almost 50 percent higher than that of conventional milk. We kept our organic pay price at a fixed amount for the entire year, an unprecedented move in the dairy industry. This became the foundation for stable pay pricing that we maintain today.

"The first years were encouraging and exciting, though nail-biting times," Siemon added. "We pitched in to overcome every challenge. We milked cows by day and balanced the co-op's books at night.

"But, we remained confident because we had partners along the way who shared our vision and helped assume our risk: regional distribution coordinators, natural food co-op grocers, supermarket managers, our dedicated staff, citizen partners who chose and still choose organic foods, and...today now more than ever.. a new generation of organic farmers seeking to carry this tradition onward," he continued.

With this spirit of collaboration in mind, Organic Valley's theme for 2008 is "20 Years of Organic Partnership." The cooperative will devote much of its marketing focus to events and initiatives highlighting its partners' contributions to the co-op, including its April Annual Meeting of cooperative members; its July community celebration, The Kickapoo Country Fair (www.kickapoocountryfair.org), near its La Farge, Wis., headquarters; a variety of product launches; numerous trade show activities; anniversary branding on select products; and, Earth Dinners, eat-local celebrations that Organic Valley will sponsor around Earth Day and throughout the year (www.earthdinner.org).
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Jealous Options wrote on Apr 3, 2008 6:53 AM:

" Other Options says
" By touting these record revenues, it seems like the oil companies and Organic Valley now have something in common. Pain at the pump and pain at the checkout counter. I hope they can find a way to make their products more palatable on the pocketbook because if not, I and many others will be voting with more of our dollars on a growing number of more affordable yet still organic options. "

Organic is an option on has. Little bit of a difference than putting gas in your tank. Why don't some people grow up and cut others some slack. It all boils down to jealousy! Some people hate the fact others may get a $ more for their product even though they work hard for it.
Jealous Options "

to: Keep It Organic wrote on Apr 2, 2008 2:51 PM:

" I totally agree with what Keep It Organic said. The oil companies have rich executives; Organic Valley has farm families who are able to continue to do what they love and provide for their families at the same time. Organic Valley is also providing hundreds of jobs for local residents. "

speedy wrote on Apr 2, 2008 12:21 AM:

" I would like to thank them for donating their products for the Gays Mills flood. "

question wrote on Apr 1, 2008 6:11 AM:

" I know that Organic Valley burns bio-diesel in their trucks. My question is that bio-fuel made from organically grown crops? "

Keep it organic! wrote on Mar 31, 2008 8:06 PM:

" As long as the options you speak of are certified organic, I'm quite certain Organic Valley is behind your purchase! First best is to 'grow your own organic food', second best is to 'buy local organic food', and Organic Valley provides you an option. The growth in revenue reflects the increased number of family farmer-owners who have joined the Co-op. I personally don't think of reporting the number as 'touting' since it's not a corporation with a few people getting rich. It's a cooperative with 1,200 plus families making a living! Think locally! Think globally! "

Other Options wrote on Mar 29, 2008 10:20 PM:

" By touting these record revenues, it seems like the oil companies and Organic Valley now have something in common. Pain at the pump and pain at the checkout counter. I hope they can find a way to make their products more palatable on the pocketbook because if not, I and many others will be voting with more of our dollars on a growing number of more affordable yet still organic options. "


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