Action on immigration reform long overdue
By Frank Priestly, Idaho Farm Bureau president Friday, January 18, 2008 5:14 PM CST
American Farm Bureau President Bob Stallman may have summed up our nation’s immigration situation best this week saying up to $9 billion in agricultural production and the nation’s food security are at risk if immigration laws are not reformed.
“Either we can make it possible for temporary foreign workers to help us grow the food in the U.S. or they will stay in their country and grow food for the U.S.,” he said.
In political circles, this topic is off-limits right now because of the controversy it generates and the current presidential election cycle. But farmers and ranchers don’t enjoy the convenience of putting off difficult tasks because it’s an election year. We’ve been waiting years for a solution to our workforce challenges.
AFBF economists have outlined three major points that American agriculture needs from immigration reform. First, a simplified guest worker program must be developed to allow 500,000 to 750,000 legal migrant and stationary foreign agriculture workers every year. The current H-2A program is burdened with bureaucratic red tape and unrealistic expectations. Second, agriculture needs an effective guest worker wage set in accordance with the prevailing market wage. A lot of farm workers are being courted by higher wages in the construction and hospitality industries. Third, a compromise is needed with labor rights groups to allow a reformed guest worker program to work and to help farms operate.
Here in Idaho we have seen the social burden a large population of illegal immigrants creates. We don’t condone illegal immigration and we certainly don’t think an increased tax burden on legal citizens is justified in order to pay for the health care and many other expenses brought forth by a large population of illegal immigrants. However, we can’t ignore the reality that across this country the farm workforce needs 3 million workers. And with employment alternatives and worker preferences, those jobs will never be filled by legal citizens.
Agriculture may have already lost this fight. The court of public opinion indicates the talk show rhetoric supporting the round ‘em up and kick ‘em out option has lots more support than reforming our immigration laws. This rhetoric, coming from people who either don’t understand, or don’t care where their food comes from, has turned this issue into a political tar baby that Congress doesn’t want to touch, especially during an election year.
So where do we go from here? Barring wholesale legislative reform, some of what’s needed can be accomplished through piecemeal changes to the existing federal H-2A guest worker program. What farmers and ranchers would like American citizens to give consideration to is where the majority of your food supply comes from today and where you would like it to come from tomorrow. Without a reliable workforce, our domestic food supply faces an uncertain future.
Frank Priestley is president of the Idaho Farm Bureau.
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BethD wrote on Mar 14, 2008 10:55 AM:
Post your name.
Six kids. Includes a set of twins. And they are a blended family. Not that anyone should ever have to apologize for their procreation choices to you - you sound like a liberal. You prefer legislating birth control? Take your level and plumb and move to China.
The problem is - with all your wonderful skills, the appetite for cheap labor outweigh the appetite for straight walls. Ask all your Tancredite-fans if they'd go back and pay an extra $5K or more for their house if it meant you could have a nicer car. The answer is no. Because when it comes to buying a house... everybody wants that bottom dollar. Cold hard fact, mister.
Conversely, I find that Hispanic patients pay without complaining as long as we communicate the expectation up front and treat them well. On the other hand - there are plenty of people running around complaining about their $15 copay and advocating universal health coverage... yeah, like the Europeans got THAT right.
If you can't even post your name, then perhaps you're too tender and cowardly to handle a little truth, and we have enough of your kind running around. Save your contraceptive advice for your wife. "