U.S. sheep herders sue employers for cartel-like wage suppression
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[June 02, 2022]
By Leah Douglas
(Reuters) - Sheep herders in the U.S. West
have banded together to sue their employers, accusing them of operating
an illegal cartel that artificially suppresses their wages, according to
court documents filed Wednesday in Nevada.
The case could have implications for how antitrust laws are applied to
labor markets, according to legal experts, as the Biden administration
pushes for greater competition in every sector of the economy.
The suit alleges that ranches coordinate through the Western Range
Association (WRA), a ranching trade group, to suppress sheepherder wages
and avoid competing for labor.
Herders apply to jobs through the WRA which then assigns them to
ranches, leaving no room for the herders to negotiate or shop around
among ranches, the complaint said.
The arrangement violates the Sherman Act, a 130-year-old antitrust law
that prohibits wage-fixing agreements among employers, the suit alleged.
"Even workers who make some of the lowest wages in our economy should be
able to benefit from the fair competition that our antitrust laws
ensure," said David Seligman, executive director of Towards Justice,
which brought the suit.
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Sheep eat in their enclosure at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines,
Iowa, U.S., August 11, 2019. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Ellen Jean Winograd, WRA's general counsel, said the
suit's allegations "appear to lack merit," but that the group could
not comment in more detail.
Sheepherders are typically men from rural Peru who come to the
United States on agricultural H-2A visas and live in isolated areas,
according to the complaint. Their wages have stagnated even as pay
for other agricultural labor has risen in recent years, the
complaint said.
An earlier version of the suit was dismissed by the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Tenth Circuit in 2017 because the court said the
herders had not sufficiently proven collusion. Several antitrust
experts have argued the case was wrongly decided.
There are around 100,000 sheep farms in the United States that sell
about $750 million of sheep, lambs, and wool annually, according to
Department of Agriculture data.
(Reporting by Leah Douglas; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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