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Farms to destroy 2M chickens due to plant staffing shortages

BALTIMORE (AP) — Coronavirus-related staffing shortages at chicken processing plants will lead farms in Maryland and Delaware to destroy nearly 2 million chickens.

The Baltimore Sun reported Friday that the plants are unable to keep pace with the number of birds that are ready for harvest. They had been placed into poultry houses as chicks several weeks ago. The chickens will not be processed for meat.

The trade group the Delmarva Poultry Industry said that every poultry plant on the Delmarva Peninsula has struggled with a reduced worker attendance. The reasons include workers being sick with the virus and people following guidance to stay home if sick.

America 250: Theodore Roosevelt’s 14,000-mile journey changed the future of public lands

In the spring of 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt became the first sitting president to tour what would later become some of America's most celebrated natural wonders. The trip came the same year the Wright brothers achieved their first powered flight in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, and four decades before Roosevelt's cousin, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, became the first commander in chief to travel by air.
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