CaribWorldNews, WASHINGTON, D.C., Thurs. Feb. 7, 2008: The U.S. Department of Labor wants to overhaul the federal guest worker program for agriculture.
The plan, which failed to pass the Congress last year, proposes `modernizing` the H-2A program for employing foreign workers in temporary or seasonal agricultural jobs.
`This issue must be addressed now, or our country will see eroding competitiveness in its agricultural sector, crops being left to rot in the fields, and increasing shifting of domestic food production to overseas,` Secretary of Labor Elaine L. Chao said in a statement yesterday. `These proposed changes to the H-2A program will provide farmers with an orderly and timely flow of legal workers and increase protections for both U.S. and foreign workers."
President Bush has been a consistent supporter of the guest worker plan and immigration reform since taking office but two major attempts to get a comprehensive immigration reform bill to him, to be signed into law, fell through in the House.
The department’s proposed changes will allow farmers to apply to bring in foreign workers if they can show the supply of U.S. workers is inadequate. And it proposes a system for calculating how foreign workers are paid and centralizing the application process under the federal government.
The new regulations would be the first changes to the H-2A visa system in 20 years. About 75,000 foreign workers participated in the H-2A visa program last year. Meanwhile, 600,000 to 800,000 undocumented laborers worked on U.S. farms illegally, the Labor Department estimates. – CaribWorldNews.com