CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL FARM LABOR SHORTAGE DRIVE IMMIGRATION CHANGES?”
There has been some dispute over
whether the labor shortages California farmers reported over the last few years
are real. It turns out they are very real, but that doesn’t quiet the skeptics.
“We are told that unless we allow
criminals, illegal aliens, freedom to take American jobs, our agriculture will
be destroyed,” wrote the conservative blogger Steve Frank, a former president
of the California Republican Assembly, last year. “Like most other statements
of the lamestream media, that is a downright lie.”
He used the fact that this state’s
farm profits were up in 2011 – from $11.1 billion the previous year to $16.1
billion – to call the reported shortage “phony.” Those profit numbers came from
the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
But the USDA also reports on crop
production (http://usda01.library.cornell.edu/usda/current/NoncFruiNu/NoncFruiNu-01-25-2013.txt),
and some of those numbers tell a different story, while also implying that the
added profits may have been a result of smaller supplies.
For example, California growers
produced 1.5 million tons of raisin grapes last year, compared with 1.8 million
in 2011, causing prices to increase while grape-harvesting expenses dropped.
Prices were also up for table grapes,
from $306 per ton to $358, while the price of canned apricots went from $330 to
$419 per ton, while production was down. So there’s more to the farm profit
picture than just the bottom line. The price per pound or ton also counts for a
lot. And both wholesale prices and profits rose last year, making it an
outstanding one for agriculture.
With 2011-12 a relatively wet winter,
there was only one reason for production of anything to be down last year, with
prices at or near peaks for almost all crops: A shortage of labor. This was
caused in part by stricter enforcement of immigration laws, with the Obama
administration already having deported more illegal immigrants than the George
W. Bush administration did in its full eight years.
Farm labor problems persisted in 2012, although they’ve sometimes
been hard to quantify. The Western Growers Association said last fall that its
members were reporting 20 percent fewer laborers available than the year
before. At the same time, the California Farm Bureau Federation put the
shortage between 30 per cent and 40 percent of the workforce needed. Those
numbers are not official, but the group said American workers were not taking
the vacant jobs.
That was consistent with the results of an experiment conducted
several years ago by Democratic U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, who had every
Employment Development Department office in the state list farm jobs as
available. Fewer than 10 unemployed U.S. citizens applied for that work, even
though it paid well over the state’s hourly minimum wage.
One Santa Barbara County farmer with crops as varied as lemons and
strawberries reported that he had to leave some of his produce to rot in the
field last summer and fall. Similar waste occurred in locales like Kern, Butte
and Riverside counties, among others.
One reason: A large percentage of
California fruit and vegetable pickers are illegal immigrants. Farm bureau
organizations in other states report similar labor shortages. So farmers want
any immigration changes coming from Washington, D.C. this year to include a
guest worker program.
Agriculture organizations that usually
support Republican politicians have pushed several years for a system allowing
temporary hiring of foreign workers if employers cannot find U.S. citizens or
legal residents to take the jobs they offer.
Organized labor has long opposed such
a revival of the old Bracero program that allowed American employers to bring
in unskilled foreign workers during and after World War II, the unions claiming
it could deprive U.S. citizens of work.
But the nation’s largest labor group,
the AFL-CIO, has now worked out a deal with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and
other business interests that would allow workers to be imported as needed to
fill jobs that otherwise go unfilled. The proposed new visa would not specify a
single employer for each worker, so that employers could no longer discipline
migrant workers by threatening to have them deported if they’re not docile. It
would also include wages above the federal minimum and require decent working
conditions.
The Chamber also agreed to the unions’
idea of setting up a new government bureau to curtail work visas when
unemployment rises to as-yet unspecified levels.
Two things are clear from all this:
It’s highly likely that any major immigration change legislation passing
Congress this year will have a guest worker component. And that this is
happening mainly because of the labor shortages here and in other big farm
states.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
No comments:
Post a Comment