The Arizona Republic

Farm industry pushes guest-worker program

Farmers, ranchers rely on undocument­ed laborers as they struggle to find people willing to work

- Alan Gomez JACOB FORD/ODESSA AMERICAN VIA AP John-Walt Boatright Florida Farm Bureau

Among the worst-kept secrets in America’s agricultur­e business is that about half of the country’s 1.4 million field workers (47 percent, or 685,000 workers) are undocument­ed immigrants.

Dane lamented Lang, Iowa, that a stood co-owner he outside had of employed Yarrabee his family the Farms farm undocument­ed outside last week Brooklyn, and immigrant charged in the slaying of 20-year-old Mollie Tibbetts. ❚ Then he was asked if any other non-U.S. citizens were among the 10 employees on the dairy farm. ❚ “I don’t think I can comment to that,” Lang said. ❚ That vague answer highlights the worst-kept secret in the agricultur­e business: Roughly half of the nation’s 1.4 million field workers (47 percent, or 685,000 workers) are undocument­ed immigrants. And that estimate, from the Labor Department, is a conservati­ve one: Labor experts cite far higher percentage­s.

While presidents have approached undocument­ed immigrants living in the U.S. in vastly different ways, Republican­s and Democratic administra­tions – under heavy lobbying from the agricultur­al industry – have always treated undocument­ed farm workers differentl­y.

As the federal government was herding more than 100,000 Japanese immigrants into internment camps during World War II, it also was administer­ing the Bracero Program, which allowed millions of Mexicans to enter the U.S. to work on farms.

When President Ronald Reagan signed a landmark immigratio­n law in 1986 that granted amnesty to nearly 3 million undocument­ed immigrants, those who worked on farms were given the easiest path to U.S. citizenshi­p.

A bipartisan immigratio­n reform bill that passed the Senate (but not the House) in 2013 would have created a

Farmers and ranchers want nothing more than to be able to attain their workers legally. But we cannot have E-Verify without a workable, functionin­g, accessible guest-work program in place.”

special “blue card” just for agricultur­al workers and their immediate families that granted them legal status and the chance to become U.S. citizens.

And now, many Republican­s are citing Tibbetts’ death as a reason to pass a bill requiring all U.S. companies to use the federal E-Verify system to check the immigratio­n status of all job applicants. But even that bill – the Legal Workforce Act filed by Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas – gives farmers 21⁄2 years before they must start vetting their field workers, the only such exception.

Chris Chmielensk­i, deputy director of NumbersUSA, a group that advocates for lower levels of legal and illegal immigratio­n, said that history reflects the power of the agricultur­al industry and the willingnes­s of politician­s to help it out.

He says the easiest solution would be to require that all U.S. business use EVerify, which allows employers to check the immigratio­n status of job applicants using a government website. The Iowa farm that employed Cristhian Bahena Rivera, who is charged with first-degree murder in Tibbetts’ death, initially said it used that program to screen Rivera but later backtracke­d and conceded that it had used a different system not designed to flag immigratio­n violations.

“That would have a pretty big impact on future flows of illegal immigratio­n,” Chmielensk­i said.

But farmers, ranchers and other business owners who rely on undocument­ed immigrants say passing an EVerify bill would cripple their industries. Already struggling to recruit enough Americans to do the backbreaki­ng field work and operating under the constant threat of raids by U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, they say implementi­ng E-Verify with no other changes to the immigratio­n system would put untold numbers of companies out of business.

That’s why the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said it would support mandatory electronic worker verificati­on only if it’s coupled with an overhaul of the country’s guest-worker programs. The American Farm Bureau Federation goes further, arguing that passing E-Verify alone would cause production to drop by $60 billion and food prices to increase by 5 percent to 6 percent.

“Farmers and ranchers get that we have immigratio­n laws in our country, and they want nothing more than to be able to attain their workers legally,” said John-Walt Boatright, national affairs coordinato­r for the Florida Farm Bureau. “But we cannot have E-Verify without a workable, functionin­g, accessible guest-work program in place.”

Farmers across the country saw exactly what would happen if the government took an enforcemen­t-only approach after Arizona passed an anti-immigratio­n bill in 2010, leading a halfdozen states to follow suit. The laws, which included the requiremen­t that all businesses use the E-Verify system, sent undocument­ed immigrants out of those states in droves.

Alabama’s immigratio­n law pushed up to 80,000 workers out of the state, according to a study by the University of Alabama.

Georgia’s immigratio­n law led to more than $140 million in unharveste­d crops in 2011 because so many workers fled the state, according to a report commission­ed by the Georgia Fruit and Vegetable Growers Associatio­n.

The solution, farmers say, is a guestworke­r program that improves on the H2A visa program that has been a headache for farmers for decades.

Those visas are designed for temporary, seasonal workers and have been used more frequently in recent years. The number of H2A visas approved has increased from 74,192 in 2013 to 161,583 in 2017, State Department data show.

Boatright said the H2A program is overloaded with regulation­s that often require farms to have immigratio­n attorneys on staff just to fill out paperwork. And because the visas cannot be used for year-round workers, Boatright said, it makes dairies, nurseries and livestock ranches ineligible.

Chmielensk­i said his organizati­on is willing to consider a tandem bill that includes mandatory E-Verify with improvemen­ts to the agricultur­al guestworke­r program.

“We acknowledg­e the fact that H2A could be cleaned up,” he said. “We’re willing to work with them on that and to give them a pool of foreign workers they can tap into when there’s not an American worker willing to do that for a decent wage.”

 ??  ?? Migrant workers pass watermelon down a line to a produce trailer in a watermelon field in Coyanosa, Texas.
Migrant workers pass watermelon down a line to a produce trailer in a watermelon field in Coyanosa, Texas.
 ?? BRIAN POWERS/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Dane Lang didn’t say if more undocument­ed immigrants work on his farm.
BRIAN POWERS/USA TODAY NETWORK Dane Lang didn’t say if more undocument­ed immigrants work on his farm.

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