HILO, Hawaii Island 鈥 Local pig, sheep and goat farmers can no longer use the island鈥檚 only full-service slaughterhouse, which prevents them from selling specialty meats and has prompted some businesses to import substitute cuts from the mainland.

Those affected say the sudden inability to process smaller animals into salable food quickly created impacts statewide and negated recent growth in the Big Island鈥檚 specialty meat industry. Some are even calling the recent development a 鈥渃risis鈥 that鈥檚 threatening the island鈥檚 food security.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to really hurt everybody,鈥 said Carol Fuertes, a North Kohala farmer who raises two, 10-pig litters annually.

For decades, farmers paid Kulana Foods Ltd. to slaughter their small animals at a Hilo facility that also offered USDA-certified processing, known as cut and wrap, that鈥檚 needed to produce packaged meats approved for sale to stores and restaurants.

Some of the many sheep and lambs Kurtistown farmer Emily Taaroa now cannot market due to the decision of Hawaii Island鈥檚 only small-animal slaughterhouse and processing plant to focus on cattle. Courtesy of D. Joaquin

In December, Kulana announced that it had suspended the slaughtering and processing of small animals indefinitely, choosing instead to focus on the more-profitable cattle side of its operation.聽Kulana President Brady Yagi did not respond to requests for comment on the decision.

The action follows the USDA having twice cited Kulana in as many months for inhumane violations. A federal regulator temporarily suspended small-animal slaughtering operations in November after a company employee to stun a pig and again in December in response to two customers .

The Big Island has no other full-service slaughterhouse, and farmers say they cannot overcome the government regulations and a high six-figure development cost to build their own.

Mills Stovall said he can no longer obtain local pork or lamb, which has reduced sales at his butcher shop by up to 30 percent. Courtesy of Mills Stovall

鈥淭he impacts are devastating,鈥 said Mills Stovall, who earlier this month celebrated the second anniversary of opening Waimea Butcher Shop.

Stovall, who proudly insists on selling exclusively Big Island-sourced foods, said business has dropped 20 percent to 30 percent since he became unable to get the two to three pigs and three or four lambs needed each week to meet customer demand.

鈥淚 can tell you we鈥檙e losing thousands and thousands and thousands (of dollars),鈥 he said.

Stovall said he plans to respond by adding fish, offering additional culinary classes and doing more restaurant-style food.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a really big blow to the entire state,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople want the stuff raised here on the Big Island. We鈥檝e got the best stuff in the state.鈥

Kurtistown farmer Emily Taaroa said she鈥檚 worked for more than three years to raise enough sheep 鈥 currently well over 60 animals — to begin local and export sales.

鈥淣ow we don鈥檛 have a market for them,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he only legal route to sell that to our customers was through Kulana.鈥

Taaroa and some other Big Island farmers are taking advantage of a USDA provision allowing them to do their own slaughtering and processing of animals that are pre-sold.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have too many animals for that particular market,鈥 Taaroa said of the 鈥渙n-the-hoof鈥 process that prohibits the harvested meat from being re-sold.

Honomu farmer Brittany Anderson has lost her ability to market animals like this Kunekune pig. Courtesy of Bodhi Anderson

鈥淚t鈥檚 been really difficult on the farmers because you make your money on cuts. Selling a live animal really isn鈥檛 worth it,鈥 said Honomu farmer Brittany Anderson, who was unable to get two of her sheep processed last month.

鈥淲e are facing a food crisis on the Big Island,鈥 Anderson wrote in an email, adding that it’s exposing the 鈥渇ragility of our food system.鈥

Also concerned about food security is Hilo chef Casey Halpern, who said he needs half a pig each week to supply his Caf茅 Pesto customers with kalua toppings for pizzas along with specialty dishes like pork bellies.

鈥淚t seems we love the fresh pork,鈥 he said.

But with no local supply, chefs like Halpern have reluctantly switched to importing pork.

鈥淔resh pork is always better than frozen, and I was paying two to three times the price of mainland pork to buy local,鈥 Halpern added in a text message. 鈥淭hat money is not going to the farmer now and that is the biggest tragedy of this situation.鈥

Keaau farmer Leslie Carroll said he had Kulana process 17 lambs for sale last year.

鈥淲ithout the USDA inspection, we can no longer provide these businesses with our local lamb,鈥 Carroll wrote in an email.

This mobile slaughterhouse operating in Kealakekua lacks the cut-and-wrap processing abilities that Big Island farmers need to sell their pork, lamb and goat meat. Courtesy of Hawaii Island Meat Cooperative

Hawaii Island鈥檚 only other small animal slaughterhouse is a mobile unit that鈥檚 too limited and inconvenient to fill the gap created by Kulana鈥檚 pullback. It lacks cut-and-wrap capability, preventing farmers from receiving USDA-certified cuts approved for resale. Businesses with certified kitchens may perform their own post-slaughter processing, but are limited to what percentage of the food can be sold retail.

The mobile unit actually is stationary and located in Kealakekua, which is on the opposite side of the island 鈥 a distance of up to 100 miles 鈥 from where most pigs, sheep and goats are raised. Also, it鈥檚 only open one day every two to four weeks, said Mike Amado, president of the Hawaii Island Meat Cooperative, which operates the mobile slaughterhouse.

A multiyear effort has lined up grants to cover the estimated $300,000 cost of adding a cut-and-wrap facility, but finding a suitable publicly owned site to house it has been 鈥渁n extremely long, painful process鈥 that has not been completed, Amado said.

The local specialty meat industry had benefitted from a huge push over the past two years that saw the opening of the Kealakekua mobile slaughterhouse and two Big Island butcher shops, along with numerous farmers expanding operations to fulfill customers鈥 demand, said Stovall, who was part of that movement.

鈥淭his has taken us back 10 years,鈥 Stovall said of losing the Hilo slaughterhouse.

Affected people remain 鈥渋n shock,鈥 while several farmers face imminent closure, he said.

鈥淲e鈥檝e just got to accept this horrible thing that鈥檚 happened and figure out how to move on,鈥 he said.

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