Tyson Foods is closing its beef plant in Lexington, Nebraska, laying off 3,200 workers next month in a town of just 11,000. Nearly a third of the town’s population will be out of work, causing spinoff layoffs in local businesses and threatening to unravel the small town.
Muddy eruption at Yellowstone's Black Diamond Pool captured on videoTrump announces he's appointing Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry to serve as US special envoy to GreenlandPatriots rookie RB Tre'Veyon Henderson sidelined against Ravens with head injury'Avatar: Fire and Ash' launches with $88M domestically, $345M worldwideMost US adults aren't making year-end charitable contributions, new AP-NORC poll findsBaltimore cyclist finds joy in collecting lost hubcaps and stringing them into artA humpback whale briefly swallows kayaker in Chilean Patagonia — and it's all captured on cameraAn elephant family smashed pumpkins at the Oregon Zoo.
But this baby just wanted to play ballHere’s what dermatologists are saying about your skin care routine: Keep it simpleDoctor's orders? ‘Belly laugh at least two to five days a week'The World in PicturesIn Antarctica, photos show a remote area teeming with life amid growing risks from climate changeYou finally got a doctor's appointment. Here's how to get the most out of itOlder adults may struggle to learn a new language but classes are a worthwhile exerciseData centers for AI could nearly triple San Jose’s energy use. Who foots the bill?These influencers are teaching Christianity online — and young people are listeningImpresionantes fotos de animales y naturaleza captadas por fotoperiodistas de la AP en 2025 But this baby just wanted to play ballHere’s what dermatologists are saying about your skin care routine: Keep it simpleDoctor's orders? ‘Belly laugh at least two to five days a week'The World in PicturesIn Antarctica, photos show a remote area teeming with life amid growing risks from climate changeYou finally got a doctor's appointment. Here's how to get the most out of itOlder adults may struggle to learn a new language but classes are a worthwhile exerciseData centers for AI could nearly triple San Jose’s energy use. Who foots the bill?These influencers are teaching Christianity online — and young people are listeningImpresionantes fotos de animales y naturaleza captadas por fotoperiodistas de la AP en 2025A pall is hanging over the holiday season in Lexington, Nebraska, where the Tyson beef plant, by far the largest employer in small town, is set to lay off 3,200 people when the company closes the facility on Jan. 20, after three decades of operation. Steam rises from chimneys during the night shift at the Tyson Foods’ beef plant in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. Tyson Foods employees wait for help at an informational meeting held by the Nebraska Department of Labor in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. Cattle line up at a trough at the Darr Feedlot in Cozad, Neb., Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. Armando Martinez, left, and his wife, Maria Dolores Perez, right, work in their restaurant, Los Jalapenos, near the Tyson Foods’ beef plant in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. A pall is hanging over the holiday season in Lexington, Nebraska, where the Tyson beef plant, by far the largest employer in small town, is set to lay off 3,200 people when the company closes the facility on Jan. 20, after three decades of operation. Steam rises from chimneys during the night shift at the Tyson Foods’ beef plant in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. Steam rises from chimneys during the night shift at the Tyson Foods’ beef plant in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. Tyson Foods employees wait for help at an informational meeting held by the Nebraska Department of Labor in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. Tyson Foods employees wait for help at an informational meeting held by the Nebraska Department of Labor in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. Cattle line up at a trough at the Darr Feedlot in Cozad, Neb., Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. Cattle line up at a trough at the Darr Feedlot in Cozad, Neb., Friday, Dec. 5, 2025. Armando Martinez, left, and his wife, Maria Dolores Perez, right, work in their restaurant, Los Jalapenos, near the Tyson Foods’ beef plant in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. Armando Martinez, left, and his wife, Maria Dolores Perez, right, work in their restaurant, Los Jalapenos, near the Tyson Foods’ beef plant in Lexington, Neb., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2025. LEXINGTON, Neb. — On a frigid day after Mass at St. Ann’s Catholic Church in rural Nebraska, worshippers shuffled into the basement and sat on folding chairs, their faces barely masking the fear gripping their town.“Suddenly they tell us that there’s no more work. Your world closes in on you,” said Alejandra Gutierrez. She and the others work at Tyson Foods’ beef plant and are among the 3,200 people who will lose their jobs when Lexington’s biggest“Losing 3,000 jobs in a city of 10,000 to 12,000 people is as big a closing event as we’ve seen virtually for decades,” said Michael Hicks, director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at Indiana’s Ball State University. It will be “close to the poster child for hard times.” All told, the job losses are expected to reach 7,000, largely in Lexington and the surrounding counties, according to estimates from University of Nebraska, Lincoln, shared with The Associated Press. Tyson employees alone will lose an estimated $241 million in pay and benefits annually.The plant’s closure threatens to unravel a Great Plains town where the American Dream was still attainable, where immigrants who didn’t speak English and never graduated high school bought homes, raised children in a safe community and sent them to college. Now, those symbols of economic progress — mortgages and car payments, property taxes and tuition costs — are bills that thousands of Tyson workers won’t have an income to pay. At St. Ann’s church, Gutierrez sat between her daughters and recalled being told of the plant closure just before Thanksgiving while she visited a college campus with her high school senior, Kimberly. “At that moment, my daughter said she no longer wanted to study,” Gutierrez said. “Because where would we get the money to pay for college?”If you threw a dart at a map of the United States, Lexington — called “Lex” by locals — would be just about bullseye. It’s easy to miss driving down Interstate 80, half hidden by barren hackberry trees, corn fields and pastures of Black Angus cattle, but a driver can spy the plant’s hulking industrial buildings pumping steam. The plant opened in 1990 and was bought by Tyson 11 years later, attracting thousands of workers and nearly doubling the town’s population within a decade. Many came from Los Angeles, then stricken by recession, including Lizeth Yanes, who initially hated what she called “a little ghost town.” But soon Lexington flourished, with suburbs sprouting among bur oak and American elm trees. The downtown, a strip of cobblestone streets and brick buildings, has a Somali grocer that abuts a Hispanic bakery; locals attend over a dozen churches and several city recreation centers. To this day, the plant creates the town’s rhythm as workers roll on and off the daily A, B and C shifts and fill restaurants, school pickup lines and the one-screen movie theater showing “Polar Express.” “It took a long time for me to actually enjoy this little place,” said Yanes. “Now that I enjoy it, now I have to leave.” The atmosphere inside the Tyson plant, where workers process as many as 5,000 head of cattle a day, laboring on slaughter floors, cleaning crews or trimming cuts of meat, feels “like a funeral,” she said. “Tyson was our motherland,” said plant worker Arab Adan. The Kenyan immigrant sat in his car with his two energetic sons, who asked him a question he has no answer to: “Which state are we gonna go, daddy?” The only thing Adan is set on is that his kids finish the school year in Lexington, where school officials say nearly half of students have a parent working for Tyson. The school district, where at least 20 languages and dialects are spoken, has higher high school graduation and college attendance rates than the state and national average, and one of Nebraska’s biggest marching bands. Residents are proud of the diversity and the tightknit community, where young people return to raise families. During Mass at St. Ann’s, parishioners gave the cash in their pockets to a fund for families in financial need, despite knowing they’ll be out of work next month. Afterward, Francisco Antonio ran through his future employment options with a sad smile. After the plant closes on Jan. 20, the 52-year-old father of four said he’ll stay a few months in Lexington and look for work, though “now there’s no future.” He took off his glasses, paused, apologized and tried to explain his emotions.‘Tyson owes this community’ The domino effect could go something like this: If 1,000 families skip town, said economist Hicks — who wouldn’t be surprised if it were double that — seats would be left empty in schools, leading to teacher layoffs; there would be far fewer customers in restaurants, shops and other businesses. Most of the customers at Los Jalapenos, a Mexican restaurant down the street from the plant, are Tyson workers. They fill booths after work and are greeted by owner Armando Martinez’s mustachioed grin and bellow of “Hola, amigo!” Martinez’s grandson once told his grandfather that when he grows up he wants to work at Tyson. The child’s fifth-grade sister recently gathered with classmates to talk about the changes happening with their parents. Some were headed to California, others to Kansas. All were in tears. If he can’t keep up with bills, the restaurant will close, but “there’s just nowhere we can go,” said Martinez, who undergoes dialysis for diabetes, has an amputated foot and prays for a miracle: that Tyson will change its mind. He knows it’s unlikely. Asked by The Associated Press for comment about plans for the site, Tyson said in a statement that it “is currently assessing how we can repurpose the facility within our own production network.” It did not provide details, or say whether it plans to offer support to the community through the plant closure. Many, including City Manager Joe Pepplitsch, are hoping Tyson puts the plant up for sale and a new company comes in bringing jobs. That isn’t a quick fix, requiring time, negotiations, renovations and no guarantee of comparable jobs. “Tyson owes this community a debt. I think they have a responsibility here to help ease some of the impact,” he said, noting Tyson doesn’t pay city taxes due to a deal negotiated decades ago.Near the plant, at the Dawson County Fairgrounds, Tyson workers recently filled a long hall as state agencies — responding with the urgency of a natural disaster — offered information on retraining, writing a resume, filing for unemployment and avoiding scammers when selling homes. Attendees’ faces were subdued, like listening to a doctor’s prognosis. “Your financial health is going to change,” they were told. “Don’t ignore the bank, they will not go away.” Many of the older workers don’t speak English, haven’t graduated high school and aren’t computer savvy. The last application some filled out was decades ago. “We know only working in meat for Tyson, we don’t have any other experience,” said Adan, the Kenyan immigrant.“They only want young people now,” said Juventino Castro, who’s worked at Tyson for a quarter-century. “I don’t know what’s going to happen in the time I have left.” Lupe Ceja said she’s saved a little money, but it won’t last long. Luz Alvidrez has a cleaning gig that will sustain her for awhile. Others might return to Mexico for a time. Nobody has a clear plan. “It won’t be easy,” said Fernando Sanchez, a Tyson worker for 35 years who sat with his wife. “We started here from scratch and it’s time to start from scratch again.”
Lexington Production Facilities Jobs And Careers Nebraska NE State Wire Local News For Apple Business Taxes Luz Alvidrez Race And Ethnicity Lupe Ceja Schools Industrial Products And Services Armando Martinez Alejandra Gutierrez Labor Fernando Sanchez U.S. News Lizeth Yanes Francisco Antonio Joe Pepplitsch Agriculture U.S. News Race And Ethnicity
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
45 Days That Changed Nebraska’s Football ProgramFrom Nov. 1 to Dec. 15, the shaken Huskers were hit with turmoil, losses on the field, firings off of it
Read more »
Three Takes on Dylan Raiola’s Departure From the Nebraska Football TeamClosing the book on the Raiola era.
Read more »
2027 Lineman Lands Re-Offer from Nebraska Under New OL CoachNebraska’s new offensive line coach Geep Wade makes recruiting waves by re-offering a scholarship to three-star 2027 lineman Avery Michael, signaling early priorities for the Huskers’ future.
Read more »
Husker Legacy Announces Intention to Leave Nebraska, Enter the Transfer PortalAfter three seasons in Lincoln, defensive lineman Maverick Noonan is set to find a new home.
Read more »
West Virginia Enters the Mix for Top-200 2027 WR Anthony 'Speedy' JenningsWVU sends out an offer to a talented receiver out of Florida.
Read more »
Nebraska Wrestling’s Rally Comes Up Short, but Antrell Taylor Delivers Signature WinNebraska’s comeback fell just short against Oklahoma State, but Antrell Taylor stole the spotlight.
Read more »
