Lake County Record-Bee

Thousands of farmworker­s will get pay raises thanks to lawsuit

- By Melissa Montalvo CalMatters

Tens of thousands of California’s guest farmworker­s and U.S. farmworker­s will see pay increases in 2022, which advocates say comes thanks to their lawsuit to stop a Trump-era wage freeze.

The wage increase is based on the USDA’s annual survey findings on farm labor, released on Nov. 24. The survey and its findings are used to determine the rate of pay for temporary, seasonal agricultur­al workers employed through the H-2A program.

The wage increase was in jeopardy because of a wage freeze proposed under former President Donald Trump that aimed to help farmers, many of whom lost profit and laid fallow their land due to the impact of the shutdowns in early 2020. Farmworker advocates sued the Department of Agricultur­e over the proposed wage freeze and secured an injunction to stop the ruling.

“We are pleased that the federal court overturned the Trump Administra­tion’s regulation that would have frozen wages for U.S. and foreign farmworker­s at employers that use the H-2A agricultur­al guestworke­r program,” said Bruce Goldstein, president of the Washington D.C.-based Farmworker Justice, in an email statement to The Fresno Bee.

Advocates credit lawsuit for wage increase Starting in April 2020, the Trump administra­tion announced that it was considerin­g reduced wages for guest farmworker­s as a way to help farmers who saw their business disrupted during the pandemic shutdown.

Then, in November 2020, the Trump administra­tion formally announced a wage freeze for guest farmworker­s, which was celebrated by top agricultur­al officials.

The ruling would have locked in the 2019 minimum wage employers must pay foreign agricultur­al workers with H-2A visas and was estimated to save farmers and growers an estimated $1.6 billion in labor costs over 10 years.

Earlier this month, Fresno County announced that 2020 was a record year for total gross production of the value of its plants and livestock, at more than $7.98 billion.

Advocates said that the wage freeze was unfair since farmworker­s, who were officially declared essential workers during the pandemic, were putting their lives on the line to work. Growers say the wage freeze was essential to keep farms operating and grocery stores stalked as the pandemic shutdowns disrupted the food supply chain.

In response to the proposed wage freeze, Farmworker Justice and its cocounsel, on behalf of the United Farm Workers union and the UFW Foundation, won an injunction late December last year to stop the Trump wage freeze regulation arguing that farmworker­s already live on low incomes. The group has been critical of the H-2A program, saying that the program fails both U.S. and foreign workers.

In a related case, the UFW and the UFW Foundation also sued the Department of Agricultur­e last fall to reverse a Sept. 30 order from the USDA to halt the government’s collection of farm labor worker data that helps determine wages and eligibilit­y for family assistance programs. The union argued that wages for guest workers would decline sharply without the survey collection because the Department of Labor would not have data to establish new wage rates other than state minimum wages.

 ?? FILE PHOTO BY DAVID RODRIGUEZ — THE SALINAS CALIFORNIA­N ?? A fieldworke­r wearing a hat with the golden eagle, the official bird of Mexico, as he uses it to shield his face from the sun while he picks strawberri­es on Saturday, April 25, 2020.
FILE PHOTO BY DAVID RODRIGUEZ — THE SALINAS CALIFORNIA­N A fieldworke­r wearing a hat with the golden eagle, the official bird of Mexico, as he uses it to shield his face from the sun while he picks strawberri­es on Saturday, April 25, 2020.

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