Good Fruit Grower

May 1

Issue link: https://read.dmtmag.com/i/668668

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 5 of 47

6 MAY 1, 2016 GOOD FRUIT GROWER www.goodfruit.com Del Monte celebrates a century in Yakima, Washington. by Ross Courtney F or 100 years, Del Monte Foods has operated the fruit processing plant at 108 Walnut Street in Yakima, Washington. Bill Cawley has worked there nearly half that time. Cawley, 78, has held jobs as cook room laborer, bin repairer, greaser and now forklift driver, stacking and restacking 120,000 bins in the seemingly infi nite bin yard. "They treat you nice," said the 48-year employee. Cawley, dozens of fellow employees, suppliers and about 200 growers will gather May 11 to celebrate the centennial anniversary of the Del Monte name on the Yakima plant, the biggest pear processor in the nation. David Withycombe, chief operations offi cer at the pro- cessing giant's Walnut Creek, California, headquarters may attend, said Mike Fuerst, the company's director of fruit operations. Del Monte, the company, started in 1886 in San Francisco. The Walnut Street facility was built in the early 1900s as an apple dehydrator. The two married in 1916 as part of the merger that formed the California Packing Corporation, of which Del Monte became the primary brand. Since then, Del Monte has grown to process 60,000 pears per year, about half the Northwest's total, and employ 600 people during pear season from August to November. Del Monte's Yakima plant is the largest pear processor in the United States and most likely the world, said Jay Grandy, the recently retired longtime manager of the Washington-Oregon Canning Pear Association. The facility also cans some cherries and apples. Overall, the company has 7,800 employees and gener- ated $1.7 billion in net sales in 2015. However, longtime growers who sell fruit to Del Monte claim the corporation's size doesn't get in the way of relationships and common-sense deals. "Tolerant and fl exible," they were called by third-gen- eration Del Monte grower and shipper Gary Wells in Hood River, Oregon. For example, Del Monte allows the Wells family orchard company, Viewmont Orchards, to use Del Monte bins for apple harvest in exchange for storing them. "They actually listen to growers," said Chris Morton, a third-generation Del Monte grower in the Yakima area. Morton, who also grows apples, cherries and stone fruit, considers his contracts with Del Monte among the safest, surest portions of his business. Prices are negotiated with the Washington-Oregon Canning Pear Association and the fi rm pays growers half their returns within 30 days of harvest and the rest usually within 60 days with few price adjustments, Morton said. Morton and Wells are members of the Yakima-based association, which represents growers in contract price negotiations. Industry consolidation over the past 10 years has left only three pear canners in the Northwest, all in Washington — Del Monte, Seneca Foods Corp. in Sunnyside and the Neil Jones Food Co. in Vancouver. The association also negotiates contracts with Del Monte and Jones; the price is $3.40 per ton this year and will rise to $3.60 in 2017. The industry has changed drastically in the past 100 years, employees said. Things previously done by hand — dumping bins, peeling and coring pears — are now handled by machines, allowing capacity to soar. "The plant, it's so different than when I fi rst started," said Paulette Fahnestock, who has worked at the Yakima facility since 1975 with only a four-year break in the early 1980s. "When I fi rst started it was like the Dark Ages." The self-described Jill-of-all-trades plans to retire in a little more than a year. Del Monte and the industry face challenges. Consumer preference has swung toward fresh fruits and vegetables instead of canned, while modern transportation and storage methods have made more high-quality fresh fruits available in stores year-round. In the early 1990s, nearly 75 percent of Northwest Bartlett pears — the most common canning variety — were canned. Today, fresh and canned have roughly a 50-50 split while new varieties go only to the fresh market. The canners collectively sell 5 percent to 10 percent of their canned pears to the U.S. Department of Agriculture for distribution to schools, prisons and the military, Fuerst said. • A lot of cans in 100 YEARS ROSS COURTNEY/GOOD FRUIT GROWER Longtime employee Bill Cawley, 78, moves bins and pallets in March at the Del Monte Foods processing facility in Yakima, Washington. The Yakima plant, recognizable from a distance by the green water tower at right, is celebrating 100 years under the Del Monte name. Cawley has worked there for 48 years. HISTORICAL PHOTOS COURTESY OF DEL MONTE FOODS A 1951 photo shows the sign above the Del Monte Foods offi ce at the Yakima, Washington, processing facility. The offi ce, with the same windows, is still there today. The photo above, taken around 1950, shows workers dumping peaches by hand. Below, trucks line up to deliver peaches in 1948.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Good Fruit Grower - May 1