Equipment Dealer Explains How Innovations in Cattle Handling Put Safety First

As cattle producers continue to navigate labor constraints and rising production demands, innovation in handling systems will remain a key driver of the industry’s long-term efficiency and safety goals.

NASHVILLE, TENN. (RFD NEWS) — At the Moly Manufacturing Beef & Greet celebration, industry professionals gathered to highlight new innovations in cattle handling equipment, with a focus on improving both livestock welfare and worker safety.

The event brought together producers, dealers, and industry partners to explore how equipment design continues to evolve alongside modern cattle operations. Organizers say collaboration at events like this helps drive new ideas that can be applied directly on ranches and feedlots.

A key focus of the celebration was the importance of safety in livestock handling environments, where unpredictable animal behavior and high-intensity working conditions make equipment design a critical factor.

Jill Ginn, dealer relations manager with Moly Manufacturing, says safety remains at the center of the company’s design philosophy.

Ginn emphasized that well-designed systems can reduce stress on animals while also helping protect the people working with them daily, particularly in high-volume cattle operations where efficiency and safety must work together.

Industry representatives at the event also pointed to the importance of in-person gatherings like the Beef & Greet, noting that they provide an opportunity for ranchers and equipment manufacturers to exchange ideas, evaluate new technology, and discuss challenges facing modern livestock production.

LEARN MORE: www.molymfg.com

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

The investigation does not prove wrongdoing, but it raises federal scrutiny of a major cost center for crop producers.
For decades, U.S. agriculture has planned around feeding a growing world. Experts say that trend could reverse course in the next 30 years.
Farm Bureau economist Dr. Faith Parum says agriculture still needs to see U.S. products actively moving into China.
The proposed merger between Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern would create the nation’s first transcontinental railroad connecting the East and West coasts under a single carrier.
USDA Elevates “Plant Not Plastic” Initiative and Supports Buying American Cotton Act
North Dakota State University’s Dr. Shawn Arita joins us to break down new research on U.S. ag export losses tied to retaliatory tariffs and what they signal for trade moving forward.
Agriculture Shows
RFD Network is always creating new ways for rural America to educate and to be educated. RURAL AMERICA LIVE, the network’s longest-running self-produced program, is certainly no exception.