The Labor Crisis Facing U.S. Dairy

Article by Karen Bohnert on Dairy Herd Management

In the rolling plains of the Texas Panhandle and the volcanic soils of Idaho’s Magic Valley, a silent crisis is brewing. It isn’t a disease outbreak, a drought or a sudden crash in milk prices. Instead, it is the steady, quiet disappearance of the human hands required to keep the nation’s dairy industry running.

As the U.S. dairy sector has modernized and expanded, it has hit a paradoxical wall: The more technologically advanced the farms become, the more they find themselves tethered to a labor market that is increasingly broken.

For states like Texas and Idaho — two titans of U.S. milk production — the labor shortage is no longer a seasonal inconvenience; it is a structural deficiency that threatens the long-term viability of the industry and the economic health of the rural communities that depend on it.

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