advertising
print page Print  email page Email 


Other Articles

A Q&A with Jennifer Sizemore

Jennifer Sizemore is vice president and editor-in-chief of Redmondbased MSNBC.com and an executive...


The First Declines

The nation continues to flirt with recession, hammered by problems in the financial services...


Time Bandits

It's time to rein in e-mail use and reclaim our real lives


Hit the Deck

New and unusual options in outdoor dining


Auto Biography

We love our cars and showing them off. Do you drive something cool? Classic? Out of this world?...


How the Best Was Won

A roundup of the 2008 Best Companies to Work For in Washington and what makes them great places to...


Green Washington Awards

Visit our photo gallery from our first Green Washington Awards banquet. Spot the Senator.


Bookend

Executive Decision

Megan Murphy

What book should every businessperson be reading right...


Tour Vancouver

Take a slideshow tour of Vancouver, Wash., Washington's fourth-largest city, with additional...


Farm labor shortage may worsen

A Bush administration plan for combating illegal immigration will exacerbate a shortage of farm workers in the Northwest, agricultural groups are complaining.

"Right now, there's an immense level of fear – panic – in the worker community," United Farm Workers spokeswoman Alisha Rosas tells the Capital Press, an agriculture newspaper based in Salem, Ore.

The new rules, announced in August, came after Congress failed to reach an agreement on a broader immigration bill. They require that all workers have a Social Security number that matches their name. Farmers submit both to the Department of Homeland Security. If the name doesn't match the number, a 90-day clock starts ticking, during which the worker must either provide valid documents or get fired.

If the worker leaves before then, the farmers still must prove to federal officials they tried contacting the worker, or face penalties including possible jail time.

There was already a shortage of farm workers in the Northwest. The Tri-City Herald reported in July that state farmers plowed under an estimated 7.5 million pounds of asparagus – worth $9 million – because they couldn't find workers to pick it. Shortages were also affecting the harvest of cherries, raspberries and blueberries, and work tending onions and hops was not getting done.

Comments

Leave a Reply


If you can't read the word, click here.

CAPTCHA image for SPAM prevention

advertising

© Washington CEO Magazine 2008