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Changes should make it easier to hire migrant farm workers


 

By DOUG GRAVES

Ohio Correspondent

 

COLUMBUS, Ohio — As of Oct. 21, new rules on getting visas for temporary foreign workers will allow agricultural employers to pay immigrant workers an hourly wage based on what other domestic workers employed in the same position in the area are paid.

“Hiring migrant farm workers will become cheaper and easier as a result of several changes to this process,” said Joyce Chen, a labor economist and an associate professor in Ohio State University’s College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences (CFAES).”This should help keep costs down for farmers. The changes to the rules on wages for migrant workers will create more opportunities for both workers and employers to operate through official channels.”

 According to Chen, the current formula for calculating wages requires farms to average the hourly wages of both U.S. supervisors and their field workers to generate an hourly wage for temporary foreign workers in a country.

 For example, if a domestic apple picker in Sandusky County is paid $10 an hour and a supervisor is paid $15 an hour, the temporary migrant worker not in a management position has to be paid at least $12.50 an hour, the average of those two hourly wages.

 “The new rules will allow farmers to hire temporary migrant field workers for less than they do now,” Chen said. “But they’ll still be required to pay a wage in line with domestic workers doing the same job get.”

 Agricultural industries in Ohio and surrounding states depend heavily on an ever-shrinking number of migrant workers from Mexico and Central America, many of them undocumented. The rule changes that that U.S. Department of Labor is putting in place likely will increase the number of temporary migrant workers brought to the U.S. and might reduce the number of undocumented workers, Chen said.

 Employers seeking to hire migrant laborers have to apply for an H-2A visa for each person they hire. That visa allows a migrant laborer to work on a U.S. farm for up to a year.

 Chen said as part of the application process for those visas, employers are required to hire all qualified and willing U.S. workers for a certain period, which will be shortened when the new rules go into place. Under the changes, agricultural employers will be required to hire U.S. workers for the first 30 days of when the visas for their migrant workers begin.

 Currently, farms have to hire U.S. qualified workers who seek the work for at least half of the duration of the visa. So, if a farm owner pursues a six-month visa for a migrant worker, he or she has to hire all qualified and willing U.S. workers for the first three months.

 “The change to 30 days might not be advantageous for domestic farm laborers,” Chen said. “Workers seeking jobs later than in the season, after the first 30 days, are more likely to find that no positions are available.

 “Administrative changes to the H-2A visa process will likely make it easier for farmers to apply for the visas,” Chen said.

 Under the new rules, agricultural employers will have to file only one application to hire temporary workers, even if they bring on crews at different times in the season. The current system requires a farm owner to file a separate H-2A visa application each time he or she wants another set of workers, even within the same growing season.

 The new process also requires that all applications be filed electronically rather than through paper applications, which typically take longer to process.

“Overall, this will be positive for farmers and will help streamline some of the bureaucracy for hiring migrant workers, as well as give them more flexibility in hiring throughout the season,” Chen said.

11/7/2019