Trump reassures farmers
immigration crackdown not aimed at their workers
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[May 15, 2017]
By Mica Rosenberg and Kristina Cooke
WASHINGTON/SAN
FRANCISCO (Reuters) - President Donald Trump said he would seek to keep
his tough immigration enforcement policies from harming the U.S. farm
industry and its largely immigrant workforce, according to farmers and
officials who met with him.
At a roundtable on farm labor at the White House last month, Trump said
he did not want to create labor problems for farmers and would look into
improving a program that brings in temporary agricultural workers on
legal visas.
"He assured us we would have plenty of access to workers," said Zippy
Duvall, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, one of 14
participants at the April 25 meeting with Trump and Agriculture
Secretary Sonny Perdue.
During the roundtable conversation about agriculture, farmers and
representatives of the sector brought up labor and immigration, the
details of which have not been previously reported. Some farmers told
Trump they often cannot find Americans willing to do the difficult farm
jobs, according to interviews with nine of the 14 participants.
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They said they were worried about stricter immigration enforcement and
described frustrations with the H-2A visa program, the one legal way to
bring in temporary seasonal agricultural workers.
The White House declined to comment on the specifics of the discussion,
but described the meeting as "very productive." The U.S. Department of
Agriculture did not respond to a request for comment on the April
meeting.
About half of U.S. crop workers are in the country illegally and more
than two-thirds are foreign born, according to the most recent figures
from the U.S. Department of Labor's National Agriculture Workers'
Survey.
During the roundtable, Luke Brubaker, a dairy farmer from Pennsylvania,
described how immigration agents had recently picked up half a dozen
chicken catchers working for a poultry transportation company in his
county.
The employer tried to replace them with local hires, but within three
hours all but one had quit, Brubaker told the gathering at the White
House.
Trump said he wanted to help and asked Secretary Perdue to look into the
issues and come back with recommendations, according to the accounts.
While other issues such as trade, infrastructure and technology were
also discussed, participants were more positive after the meeting about
the conversation on foreign labor "than about anything else we talked
about," said Bill Northey, a farmer and Iowa's secretary of agriculture.
RED TAPE
Tom Demaline, president of Willoway Nurseries in Ohio, said he told the
president about his struggles with the H-2A guestworker program, which
he has used for 18 years.
He told Trump the program works in concept, but not in practice. "I
brought up the bureaucracy and red tape," he said. "If the guys show up
a week or two late, it puts crops in jeopardy. You are on pins and
needles all year to make sure you get the workers and do everything
right."
While use of the program has steadily increased over the past decade, it
still accounts for only about 10 percent of the estimated 1.3 million
farmworkers in the country, according to government data. In 2016, the
government granted 134,000 H-2A visas
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U.S. President Donald Trump arrives at Joint Base Andrews outside
Washington, U.S., after a day trip to Lynchburg, Virginia, May 13,
2017. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas
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Employers who import workers with H-2A visas must provide free
transportation to and from the United States as well as housing and food
for workers once they arrive. Wage minimums are set by the government
and are often higher than farmers are used to paying.
Steve Scaroni, whose company Fresh Harvest brings in thousands of
foreign H-2A workers for growers in California's Central valley, says,
however, that he could find work for even more people if he had more
places to house them.
For a related photo essay click on: http://reut.rs/2qdtfnb
Trump recently signed another executive order titled "Buy American, Hire
American," calling for changes to a program granting temporary visas for
the tech industry, but not to visas used by farmers and other seasonal
businesses, including Trump's own resorts.
FARMER CONCERNS
Trump also signed two executive orders, just days after taking office,
focused on border security that called for arresting more people in the
United States illegally and speeding up deportations.
Roundtable participants said that many farmers have worried about the
effect of the stepped up enforcement on their workforce, but Trump told
them his administration was focused on deporting criminals, not
farmworkers.
"He has a much better understanding about this than some of the rhetoric
we have seen," said meeting attendee Steve Troxler, North Carolina's
agriculture commissioner and a farmer himself.
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The farmers at the meeting said they stressed to the president the need
for both short-term and permanent workers. They said there should be a
program to help long-time farmworkers without criminal records, but who
are in the country illegally, to become legal residents.
Last Tuesday, Democrats in the House and Senate said they would
introduce a bill to give farmworkers who have worked illegally in the
country for two consecutive years a "blue card" to protect them from
deportation.
Brubaker, the Pennsylvania farmer, said he liked what he had heard about
the bill and hoped it would get the president's support to make it a
bipartisan effort.
"The administration has got something started here," he said of the
meeting with farm leaders. "It's about time something happens."
(Reporting by Kristina Cooke in San Francisco and Mica Rosenberg in
Washington; Additional reporting by Julia Love in Salinas, California;
Editing by Sue Horton and Mary Milliken)
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