The Citizen (Gauteng)

Seasonal workforce needs

HARVEST TIME: HOW FARMERS CAN ENSURE PRODUCTION, LOGISTICS REQUIREMEN­TS ARE MET

- William Pienaar

Using the services of a TES provider is a win-win scenario for farmers and workers. Seasonal workers are complex to manage

Obtaining sufficient workers during harvest season is incredibly complex and challengin­g. On many smaller farms, seasonal workers are the friends and family of permanent staff. Larger farms work with community leaders to recruit workers for them, for the payment of a fee, and also make use of labour recruiters.

While most of these recruiters are registered, many are not, which makes them cheaper but exposes farmers to the risks associated with being non-compliant.

Each of these sources only has limited capacity, which means farmers are using a complicate­d combinatio­n of various sources to get the workforce they require.

Farmers also have their own requiremen­ts, costs and methods, which significan­tly adds to the complexity of the process.

Further to this, the nature of seasonal work is manual and labour-intensive, often in gruelling conditions such as solar heat.

Global compliance legislatio­n also mandates that contracts, informatio­n and statutory benefits be loaded onto an employment system, adding further time and complexity. Adding to this, many seasonal workers are “unbanked”. Cash is typically paid directly to workers, which is again a complex and dangerous process.

Logistics and planning challenges

Adding to the complexity for farmers is the planning, logistics and time management involved around harvest season.

To use a vineyard as an example, prior to the harvest, the farmer will sit with the viticultur­e specialist and will, for example, plan to harvest 50 tonnes of grapes per day. This is then communicat­ed to the sellers, who will in turn plan to receive this and ensure the logistics are in place to process it. The farmer must then procure the vehicles, overseers and workers to complete this harvest.

In order to harvest the 50 tonnes per day, they may need 120 workers in the field. If only 50 arrive, vehicles will stand still, logistics processes grind to a halt, targets are not met, the entire chain is affected and produce is at risk of spoiling because it cannot be harvested in time. The weather adds to the challenge since rain may cause delays. The next day, additional grapes will need to be harvested to make up for the shortfall from the day before.

Farmers need to dynamicall­y scale their workforce in order to meet production and logistics requiremen­ts. However, harvest is not just about speed but about quality. If workers are not careful with the produce they are picking, they could cause it to become bruised and spoiled. This is often an issue when the workers are paid “piece work” which means their wages are tied to the volume they harvest.

Working with a TES provider

A Temporary Employment Services (TES) provider specialisi­ng in agricultur­e and farming can solve all of the challenges around a seasonal workforce.

A TES provider has an extensive database of workers and can provide the dynamic scalabilit­y required to ensure seasonal workforce needs are met every day and that farmers only pay for the workers they need, when they need them. A TES provider also assists with vetting and verifying workers to ensure they are suitable for the tasks. Utilising the services of a TES provider dramatical­ly simplifies the process, as farmers can obtain all of their workers from one provider who is 100% compliant and who has all of the administra­tive processes in place to ensure wages are always paid on time and fairly.

Using the services of a TES provider is a win-win scenario for farmers and workers.

Farmers have access to a fully compliant, entirely scalable workforce without any of the administra­tive hassles.

Workers are ensured fair wages and on time payment, and can also leverage the potential for additional seasonal work for other farmers by being part of a TES provider’s database. TES providers also work to ensure skills developmen­t and ongoing upskilling of candidates, so there is potential to take on more managerial roles over time.

Compared to the traditiona­l approach of obtaining seasonal labour, a TES provider can save days, even weeks of administra­tive effort while easing the intricacy associated with using multiple contractor­s and employment methods.

For large commercial farmers, the extensive reach and broad databases of a TES provider are especially beneficial. Farmers have the ability to deal with a single contractor and one rate to ensure compliant and dynamic workforces for all of their farms, regardless of location or timing of the harvest season.

This leaves farmers to focus on their core business of bringing in the harvest and ensuring it continues through the logistics process, saving time and money while improving efficiency and reducing complexity.

William Pienaar is an Agri-Business Developmen­t Specialist at Workforce Staffing

Harvest is not just about speed but about quality

 ?? Picture: iStock ??
Picture: iStock

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa