Los Angeles Times

Rules eased for foreign farmworker­s

- By Geoffrey Mohan

The U.S. State Department moved Thursday to ease a bottleneck caused by coronaviru­s precaution­s and allow more foreign agricultur­al guest workers to cross from Mexico to work fields in California and other states.

The emergency measures helped allay fears of a labor shortage just as the harvest of major produce crops gets underway in California, the top producer of many seasonal fresh vegetables and fruits nationwide.

Most foreign applicants no longer will need an in-person interview to obtain the H-2A agricultur­al guest worker permits, under the rules announced Thursday.

That interview requiremen­t had caused a bottleneck after U.S. consulates in the U.S.-Mexico border region were shuttered in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Only certain returning applicants had been eligible for a waiver of the interview. Now, the waivers will apply also to first-time applicants and far more returning applicants, according to a U.S. Department of Agricultur­e memo.

“We anticipate the vast majority of otherwise qualified H-2 applicants will now be adjudicate­d without an interview,” the USDA memorandum said.

The expansion of the interview waivers “will ensure minimal disruption to the flow of guest workers at a time when our farming companies are redoubling their efforts to provide our nation with a safe, healthy, abundant and affordable food supply,” Dave Puglia, president of the Western Growers Assn., a regional trade group, said Thursday.

California has faced years of labor shortages caused by the aging of the local workforce, immigratio­n crackdowns, improvemen­ts in job prospects in Mexico and other factors. The state’s growers have recruited more than 23,000 H-2A workers in the fiscal year that ended in October, placing the state fourth behind Florida, Georgia and Washington, respective­ly, according to the U.S. Labor Department.

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