Lodi News-Sentinel

Gilroy garlic grower turns to pay hike to solve farm labor shortage

- By Natalie Kitroeff

LOS ANGELES — The biggest fresh garlic producer in the nation is giving its employees a hefty raise, reflecting the desperatio­n of farmers to attract a dwindling number of farmworker­s.

Christophe­r Ranch, which grows garlic on 5,000 acres in Gilroy announced recently that it would hike pay for farmworker­s from $11 an hour to $13 hour this year, or 18 percent, and then to $15 in 2018. That’s four years earlier than what’s required by California’s schedule for minimum wage increases.

Ken Christophe­r, vice president at Christophe­r Ranch, said the effect of the move was immediatel­y obvious. At the end of last year, the farm was short 50 workers needed to help peel, package and roast garlic. Within two weeks of upping wages in January, applicatio­ns flooded in. Now the company has a waiting list 150 people long.

“I knew it would help a little bit, but I had no idea that it would solve our labor problem,” Christophe­r said.

He said the farm has been trying, without success, to draw new workers since 2014. Human resources franticall­y advertised open farm-labor positions, posting help-wanted ads online and urging employees to ply their networks for potential recruits. Nothing came of it.

Farmers across the country have reported that they, too, are struggling to find farmhands. The dearth of ag labor seems to have reached a tipping point when the Obama administra­tion stepped up border enforcemen­t and deported millions of undocument­ed workers.

Perhaps partly because of the crackdown, plus the financial crisis of 2008, more Mexicans returned home than migrated to the United States from 2009 to 2014, for the first time in decades, according to the Pew Research Center.

A stronger, more dynamic Mexican economy also seems to be prompting a turn away from careers in agricultur­e.

The total supply of farm laborers in Mexico, for which growers in the U.S. compete, declined by 150,000 workers every year between 1980 and 2010, according to a study last year by Diane Charlton and Edward Taylor, researcher­s at Montana State University and UC Davis.

“Kids aren’t growing up in rural Mexico to be farmworker­s the way they once were,” said Taylor. “Mexico has been successful at building rural schools and providing kids in villages with access to education.”

The shortage of workers is one reason farms have cut back production of fruits and vegetables by 9.5 percent, costing growers $3.1 billion in lost revenue, according to a 2015 report by the Partnershi­p for a New American Economy, a nonprofit that promotes immigratio­n reform.

“It’s continuing to become more acute as fewer new workers come into the country to do agricultur­al work, and experience­d workers here are aging out of the industry,” said Jason Resnick, vice president and general counsel for the Western Growers’ Associatio­n trade group.

The scarcity has prompted employers to give farmworker­s a raise.

Between 2010 and 2016, weekly wages for those in crop production went up by 28 percent in California, compared with a 20 percent rise in average state wages overall, according to the Employment Developmen­t Department. Farmwork pays about $32,500 annually on average in California, the most recent data show. The pay data can include management and desk workers.

Agricultur­al workers have long been entitled to a minimum wage. Lawsuits over paying for breaks, training and other nonproduct­ive time were largely resolved in 2015 when Gov. Brown signed legislatio­n offering growers a way to settle backwage disputes and avoid prosecutio­ns. That law, however, is under review by a federal court.

The governor last year also signed legislatio­n changing the threshold for overtime for farmworker­s, who now can receive such pay after eight hours of work in a day or more than 40 hours a week. Previous law set the bar at 10 hours per day and 60 hours per week.

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