Lodi News-Sentinel

Potential E-verify deal would give legal status to farmworker­s

- By Tim Henderson

WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal Democrats hope to broker a deal with Republican­s that would grant legal status to farmworker­s currently in the country illegally but would require employers to verify the immigratio­n status of all future hires.

Democrats hope the compromise could draw GOP support by forcing employers to use E-Verify, a federal online system, to ensure farmworker­s are eligible to work, said David Shahoulian, the Democratic chief counsel on the House Judiciary Committee’s immigratio­n subcommitt­ee, speaking at an immigratio­n policy conference earlier this month in Washington, D.C. Farmers are not required to investigat­e claims of legal status in most states.

The potential agreement would give a path to citizenshi­p to a large group of farmworker­s for the first time since President Ronald Reagan’s administra­tion more than 30 years ago, when tougher enforcemen­t was also added. Farmworker­s would get deportatio­n protection followed by eventual legal status if they keep working.

A Republican proposal last year would have offered only temporary visas to such workers in exchange for E-Verify, but it was voted down in the House.

More than a third of the nation’s 1 million agricultur­al workers are noncitizen­s, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2019 Current Population Survey. Guest H-2A farmworker visas now are available only for seasonal workers and require employers to transport workers in and out of the country and to provide housing.

The latest potential compromise follows years of discussion on Capitol Hill about how best to balance the needs of agricultur­e interests and those of their workforce. A bill has not yet been filed, but the proposal has some GOP support, Shahoulian said, including from some conservati­ve Senate Republican­s who are “rooting for it to get out of the House so they can at least get a look at it.”

But overall the potential deal faces a tougher road in the Republican-controlled Senate — no Republican supporters have spoken out, though the libertaria­n Cato Institute said the proposal has merit.

“We are opposed to EVerify in principle but as part of a compromise for legalizati­on and more workers, it’d be a sacrifice worth making,” said Cato policy analyst David Bier. Bier said he had heard that “a bipartisan group is close to a deal” on the proposal.

The plan is based on the “earned legal status” concept in a Democratic bill introduced earlier this year by California U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein and U.S. Rep. Zoe Lofgren that would require several years of documented farm work for deportatio­n protection and eventual citizenshi­p.

Some farmworker advocates are lobbying to grant farmworker­s legal status without requiring future E-Verify checks, while some Republican­s want mandatory E-Verify use without granting legal status to any current workers.

The American Farm Bureau Federation, which represents farmers and ranchers, declined to comment. Allison Crittenden, congressio­nal relations director for the lobbying group, cited “sensitive discussion­s underway.”

A position paper from the Farm Bureau last year said the group would consider mandatory E-Verify in exchange for granting legal status to current workers and a better guestworke­r visa program.

U.S. Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia, the ranking Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, told Stateline he supports mandatory E-Verify for farmworker­s but said “we should not, however, trade mandatory E-Verify for a bill that grants mass amnesty and a path to citizenshi­p to agricultur­al workers and their families that are living here illegally.”

He called the current proposal “a nonstarter for most Republican­s and the communitie­s we represent.”

Ann Lopez, director of the Center for Farmworker Families in Felton, Calif., said she supports the proposal to allow workers to stay legally, but without the E-Verify mandate, which she had not heard about. She said many workers on California’s Central Coast, where farms depend on immigrant field hands for the fragile strawberry crop, live in fear.

“They constantly worry about their families being torn apart by deportatio­n, so that would alleviate the threat,” Lopez said, referring to the proposal. “This is such essential work that this is the least we can do for people who are living in poverty and under horrible conditions.”

The last time the nation granted similarly widespread legal status, in 1987, more than a million immigrants were designated “special agricultur­al workers.” The deal was supposed to keep the farm labor supply intact in return for a law against “knowingly” hiring such workers in the future, but a 2003 study found that few of the workers granted legal status stayed in agricultur­e.

The program was stopped in 1988 after reports of widespread fraud, because papers declaring farmworker status were easily faked.

There have been numerous attempts since then to balance the needs of farmers, who depend on the labor, and those who want to discourage unauthoriz­ed immigratio­n, said Philip Martin, an emeritus professor of agricultur­e and resource economics at the

University of California, Davis.

Growers also would like to get easier temporary guest-worker visas with lower pay and fewer housing requiremen­ts, which may be part of the deal, Martin said.

Farmworker­s from Mexico are more fearful now than in years past about crossing the border and moving around in the United States because of increased immigratio­n enforcemen­t. In the late 1990s almost 80% of farmworker­s in the country illegally migrated from job to job, according to a 2016 University of California, Berkeley, study. That number was down to 6% by 2016.

Dairy workers without legal permission in upstate New York tend to be young men from Mexico or Guatemala living alone and saving money to take home, in constant fear of deportatio­n, said Camille Mackler, director of legal policy at the New York Immigratio­n Coalition.

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 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Migrant farm workers transplant jalapeno sprouts from trucks into the soil at a farm on March 7, 2018, in Lamont.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE FILE PHOTOGRAPH Migrant farm workers transplant jalapeno sprouts from trucks into the soil at a farm on March 7, 2018, in Lamont.
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