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Beef processor Skylark Meats shuts entire plant, cuts 218 jobs

Food manufacturing closures are among the clearest signs of labor-market pressure.

And while a plant closure is a company decision, it quickly escalates into a local jobs problem.

When a food-manufacturing facility shuts down, the impact extends well beyond a single production line.

TheStreet has recently covered several of these shutdowns and job cuts, from cereal plants to meat-processing facilities, where companies have shut sites, cut capacity, or moved work elsewhere.

Now, a new Nebraska filing, reviewed by TheStreet, shows another major employment hit tied to a food plant closure.

Skylark Meats shuts Omaha plant

Skylark Meats is part of American Foods Group, a privately held beef processor with over 4,500 employees nationwide.

AFG sells into retail, foodservice, and international markets and describes Skylark as the country's No. 1 liver producer.

In a recent Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) notice dated June 26, Skylark Meats announced that it will shut down its entire plant at 4430 South 110th Street in Omaha.

More Layoffs:

The company said the closure is expected to be permanent and will result in the layoff of most employees at the facility.

Skylark expects affected employees to separate from employment at the end of business on Aug. 25, 2026.

The company noted that all operations at the Omaha facility will cease at that time.

The WARN notice lists 218 affected employees.

The workers are not represented by a union and do not have job bumping rights, according to the filing.

Skylark said it is encouraging employees to apply for positions at affiliated facilities.

 American Foods Group closes Skylark Meats Omaha facility.
American Foods Group closes Skylark Meats Omaha facility.

Kilito Chan / Getty Images

Closure affects wide range of jobs

The layoff list shows the closure is not limited to one department.

The largest affected group is general labor, with 72 workers listed in that classification. Another 11 general labor II roles are also affected.

The filing also includes following job cuts:

  • 17 cutters
  • 17 forklift operators
  • 11 lead brand production workers
  • 10 Multivac operators
  • 8 maintenance mechanics
  • 7 press operators
  • 7 quality assurance techs

Other affected roles include dock workers, production supervisors, maintenance supervisors, refrigeration workers, purchasing, payroll, sales support, human resources, safety, shipping, quality assurance, and plant management.

For workers, this can make the transition harder because many employees in the same local labor pool may be looking for similar production, warehouse, maintenance, or food-processing jobs at the same time.

The company did not give a reason for the closure in the WARN notice.

Food manufacturing layoffs hit Nebraska again

The Skylark closure comes amid a difficult stretch for food manufacturing workers in Nebraska.

The Nebraska Department of Labor's WARN list also includes WK Kellogg, which filed notice for plant closure in Omaha in May.

TheStreet previously covered the closure, expected to eliminate 451 jobs at the cereal maker's Omaha plant.

Nebraska has also seen major meat-processing job losses tied to Tyson Foods in Lexington.

Last year in November, Tyson filed a WARN, which stated 3,212 job cuts in Lexington, followed by an additional 294 cuts in January 2026.

Together, the Skylark, WK Kellogg, and Tyson filings represent more than 4,000 cuts in food manufacturing jobs in Nebraska since late 2025.

Meat processors face a tougher backdrop

The WARN notice did not say the closure is tied to beef-market conditions. Still, the shutdown occurs during a challenging period for the meat industry.

Consumers are paying more for beef, but higher prices do not always mean an easier environment for processors.

Tight cattle supplies, elevated cattle prices, and changing demand can pressure margins across the supply chain.

The USDA's Economic Research Service expects beef and veal prices to rise 7.5% in 2026.

It also said farm-level cattle prices were 16.9% higher in May 2026 than a year earlier, while wholesale beef prices were 15.9% higher.

Those numbers help explain why beef remains a major driver of consumer inflation, especially during grilling season.

They also show why meat processors are operating in a complicated market.

When cattle costs rise, processors may face higher input costs even as shoppers become more sensitive to grocery prices. That can make efficiency, scale, and location decisions more important.

TheStreet recently covered another meat-industry restructuring when JBS announced plans to shut two beef production facilities, impacting over 2,000 jobs.

The Skylark closure is smaller than those cuts, but it points to the same broader issue: food-production jobs remain vulnerable when companies rethink plant networks, costs, and capacity.

But for Nebraska, it has become yet another sign that plant closures are becoming a prominent part of the state's labor story this year.

Related: Another airline files for bankruptcy protection, cancels all flights

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This story was originally published July 2, 2026 at 7:33 AM.

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