Search Site   
Current News Stories
National register looking for biggest trees in the country
Next full moon is May 12
Farmers making progress despite inclement weather
Increases in wheat production lead to Illinois check-off program
Benchmark Class III milk price down from March, up from year ago
Questions, answers about breeding mules
Time to prepare calves for weaning this fall
Seedstock Sale is still the hallmark of the Ohio Beef Expo
Despite funding uncertainty research continues for SAF production
56 percent of farm advisors in survey expect cover crop acres to grow
Meat from Sale of Champions animals will be donated to Illinois food banks
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
USDA gathers survey data about Illinois farm labor
 
SPRINGFIELD, ILL. – The USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) will conduct its biannual Agricultural Labor Survey during the second half of April. The survey will collect information about hired labor from more than 1,400 Illinois farmers and ranchers.
“The beginning of the year is the time when agricultural producers plan out the rest of their growing seasons and it is a great time to assess on-farm labor needs,” said Mark Schleusener, NASS Illinois Statistician. “The data that farmers provide through NASS’s Agricultural Labor Survey allow federal policymakers to base farm labor policies on accurate information.”
USDA and the U.S. Department of Labor use statistics gathered in the survey to establish minimum wage rates for agricultural workers, administer farm labor recruitment and placement service programs, and assist legislators in determining labor policies.
In the survey, NASS asks participants to answer a variety of questions about hired farm labor on their operations, including total number of hired farm workers, the total hours worked, and total base and gross wages paid for the weeks of Jan. 10-16 and April 11-17. Survey participants can respond online at agcounts.usda.gov or by mail.
“By asking about two separate time periods each time we collect data during the year, we are able to publish quarterly data and capture seasonal variation,” Schleusener said. “This approach reduces the number of times we survey farm businesses while ensuring that accurate and timely data are available.”
NASS will compile, analyze, and publish survey results in the May 26 Farm Labor report. All previous Farm Labor publications are available online at https://usda.library.cornell.edu/concern/publications/x920fw89s. For more information on NASS surveys and reports, call the NASS Heartland Regional Office at (800) 551- 1014.

3/22/2021