FRESNO, California (AP) – Farmers already scrambling to find workers in California fear an even greater labour shortage under President Barack Obama’s executive action to block some five million people from deportation.
California is the leading United States grower of fruits, vegetables and nuts.
Thousands of the state’s farmworkers, who make up a significant portion of those who will benefit, may choose to leave the uncertainty of their seasonal jobs for steady, year-around work building homes, cooking in restaurants and cleaning hotel rooms.
“This action isn’t going to bring new workers to agriculture,” said Jason Resnick, vice president and general counsel of the powerful trade association Western Growers. “It’s possible that because of this action, agriculture will lose workers without any mechanism to bring in new workers.”
Although details of the president’s immigration policy have yet to be worked out, Resnick said the agricultural workforce has been declining for a decade. Today, the association estimates there is a 15 to 20 per cent shortage of farmworkers, which is driving the industry to call for substantial immigration reform from Congress, such as a sound guest worker programme.
“Hopefully there will be the opportunity for comprehensive immigration reform,” said Karen Ross, secretary of the California Department of Food and Agriculture. “That’s the right thing to do for this country.”
California’s 330 000 farmworkers account for the largest share of the 2.1 million nationwide, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics. Texas comes in a distant second with less than half of California’s farmworkers.
Once Obama’s executive action starts going into effect next year, it will protect the parents of legal U.S. residents from deportation and expand a 2012 programme that shields from deportation people brought into the U.S. illegally as children.
Manuel Cunha, president of the Fresno-based Nisei Farmers League, estimates that 85 per cent of California’s agricultural workers are using false documents to obtain work.
Cunha, who has advised the Obama administration on immigration policy, figures that 50 000 of the state’s farmworkers who may benefit from the president’s executive action could leave the fields and packing houses in California’s $46.4 billion agricultural industry.
“How do I replace that?” he said. “I think we’re going to have a problem.”
Many farmworkers are paid above minimum wage, earning more hourly than they will in other industries, but he said that workers that leave will gain year-around jobs and regular paychecks, rather than seasonal employment.
