Chattanooga Times Free Press

Report finds rampant violations in agricultur­e

- BY LAUTARO GRINSPAN

Federal investigat­ors announced today they are finding labor abuses in the overwhelmi­ng majority of agricultur­al worksites inspected in the Southeast.

Last year, the U.S. Department of Labor investigat­ed 240 suspected violations of labor laws by agricultur­al employers in eight states, including Georgia: They found violations in 90% of those investigat­ions.

Employers in the Southeast region where investigat­ions were conducted are increasing­ly relying on the H-2A agricultur­al guest worker program, which is administer­ed by DOL in cooperatio­n with state authoritie­s. The program allows migrant farm workers to stay in the U.S. for a limited time to help with crop harvests. In Georgia, temporary guest workers from Latin America account for a critical wedge of the agricultur­al workforce. Last fiscal year, a high of 37,536 workers crossed the border to legally come work in the state.

There are strict rules that govern how much H-2A workers must be paid — in Georgia, their wages increased this year to $14.68 per hour — and what standards their employer-provided housing must meet. But advocates say violations are common. Georgia became the face of H-2A program abuse in 2021, when law enforcemen­t indicted two dozen people in a case of what investigat­ors called”modern-day slavery.”

DOL’s 2023 enforce-ment statistics released today indicate there was less compliance last year in the Southeast than the year before. In 2022, 220 investigat­ions resulted in violations being found 85% of the time.

In response to the violations found in the region in 2023, the federal government recovered more than $2 million in back wages for nearly 3,000 workers, and assessed employers with more than $3.8 million in civil penalties.

Based on their findings,DOL also debarred 8 Southeast growers and farm labor contractor­s in 2023, imposing years-long bans from bringing in foreign farmworker­s into the country through the H-2A program. Two of those employers were in Georgia: one in Moultrie and the other in Pearson.

In Georgia, federal authoritie­s conducted 57 agricultur­al investigat­ions in 2023, 50 of which uncovered violations. DOL recovered just over $250,000 in back wages and damages for 424 workers, and it imposed $630,769 in civil money penalties.

“The U.S. Department of Labor is committed to protecting dedicated farm workers who put food on America’s tables,” said Juan Coria, Atlanta-based regional administra­tor for DOL’s Wage and Hour Division, in a statement. “When employers attempt to unlawfully increase their profits at the expense of the dignity, respect and, in some cases, freedom of workers, we will use every tool at our disposal to hold them accountabl­e.”

In its report, DOL said it will continue to conduct “vigorous investigat­ions” as the 2024 growing seasons approaches. In parallel, the agency says it is working on lowering the number and rate of violations through robust outreach to employers and workers alike.

“Our enforcemen­t and educationa­l efforts go hand-in-hand. When workers are aware of their rights and understand they have a channel to discuss their wage concerns with us without fear of retaliatio­n, it makes it harder for wage theft to go unpunished,” Coria said.

For farmworker­s in the H-2A program, reporting abuse is fraught because workers’ visas and legal status in the country is directly tied to their employers. There is widespread fear that speaking up could compromise their status or result in fewer opportunit­ies to come back to the country asH-2A workers, advocates say. Undocument­ed immigrant workers, meanwhile, tend to be hesitant about reaching out to law enforcemen­t. In 2019, roughly 45% of agricultur­al workers in the Southeast lacked legal status, according to federal data.

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