
Proposed H-2A Rules Changes Will Benefit Farmers, Oregon Farm Bureau Notes
Earlier this fall, the U.S. Department of Labor proposed significant changes to the federal H-2A policy. While details still need to be determined, Austin McClister with the Oregon Farm Bureau says these changes are good news for the state’s Ag industry. McClister said the Oregon farming sector has been struggling for quite some time.
“We say 69% of farms are operating in net cash loss," McClister said. "What this does is it decreases your labor costs upwards of like 20% is what we're looking at for that H-2A program. So, we have that AWER, the adverse effect wage rate sitting at like $19.82 an hour. This is going to drop that down. It'll never be lower than the state minimum wage. But it's going to drop it down to a point where, for some counties, you're going to see $15.25 an hour for that H-2A wage rate.”
The H-2A Rate Is More Than The Paycheck
The Labor Department’s proposal also looks at dividing jobs up by skill levels, which McClister said will benefit the farming industry as well. He said the H-2A program has become so expensive over recent years that many producers don’t use the program unless it's absolutely necessary.
“You have to provide housing, you have to provide transportation," McClister said. "You know, when you do the math on what that looks like and you say like housing is 30% of your income and transportation is another 10%, if you add that on top of this wage rate, you say like, you know, some farm workers are making upwards of $27 an hour. That's what the farmers are paying them to use this program. So I don't know if it increases the use of the H-2A program because the program itself is so expensive.”
Domestic Workers Will Still Have Opportunities
So, if this lower rate makes the H-2A program more palatable for Oregon farmers, will that hurt local workers trying to get a job?
“This is not taking the jobs of domestic farm workers because a farmer has to hire a domestic worker over an H2A worker, and that's called the drive up," McClister said. "So if somebody drives up to an H2A job and wants that job, that farmer has to hire that person.”
McClister stressed that these changes will fix a problem that has existed for a long time, pushing labor rates extremely high.
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