Otago Daily Times

No change in seasonal worker shortage

CENTRAL OTAGO

- JARED MORGAN jared.morgan@odt.co.nz

DESPITE lobbying the Government for more action in recruiting workers to the horticultu­re and viticultur­e sectors, there is little movement on Central Otago’s orchards and vineyards.

Alexandrab­ased industry recruiter Seasonal Solutions chief executive Helen Axby put the situation bluntly.

‘‘Nothing has changed.’’ Seasonal work shortages, an annual problem, have become a crisis due to border closures because of the Covid19 pandemic.

‘‘I think everyone who is involved have been putting the case to [Government] ministers

— industry groups, ourselves, and individual growers.

‘‘We are working with a number of agencies including MSD [the Ministry of Social Developmen­t].’’

Although recruiters continued to work closely with MSD to fill gaps with New Zealand workers, there remained an acute shortage, Ms Axby said.

‘‘What we are actually lacking to do is to replace our usual cohort of backpacker­s on working holiday visas. It’s gone from 70,000 to somewhere in the region of 11,000.

‘‘It is filling the gap left by backpacker­s that is the critical factor.’’

To address this, Seasonal

Solutions was targeting students at university campuses nationwide, and having a presence at events to try to entice wouldbe workers to Central Otago’s vineyards and orchards.

That was in tandem with other recruitmen­t measures such as MSD’s Work the Seasons.

The sectors were also feeling the loss of recognised seasonal employer (RSE) scheme workers, only 120 of them remaining in the district, Ms Axby said.

‘‘They will be sorely missed because they are skilled. I think there is a level of resignatio­n among the growers that to do the actual harvest they will have to get through that without the RSE workers.’’

That left agencies such MSD to find solutions.

MSD’s Work the Seasons website was establishe­d in 2018 and was designed to make it easier for seasonal workers to find the job and for employers to find the right person.

The website was a partnershi­p between MSD and Auckland technology company Joy Business Academy (JBA).

JBA chief executive James Coddington said it built and maintained the site for MSD and referred all questions to the ministry.

An MSD spokesman said it was working on a response to allay the concerns of growers.

 ?? PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON ?? Fruitful? A billboard in Great King St, Dunedin, advertisin­g the Work the Seasons scheme which was first introduced in 2018, before Covid19.
PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON Fruitful? A billboard in Great King St, Dunedin, advertisin­g the Work the Seasons scheme which was first introduced in 2018, before Covid19.

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