Briefing Papers Number 12, December 2011 | Page 8

States with Highest Farm and Contract Labor Expenses, 2002 California Florida Washington Texas Oregon North Carolina Wisconsin Michigan Minnesota New York Pennsylvania Illinois Iowa Nebraska Idaho 5,983 1,580 1,143 1,043 683 618 536 505 489 479 472 447 440 438 403 0 1,000 2,000 3,000 4,000 $ million 5,000 6,000 Source: ERS analysis of 2002 Census of Agriculture data. farms that have the same migrants coming back year after year … they are good to their workers,” said Theresa Hendricks, director of the Michigan Migrant Legal Assistance. Michigan farm worker Pasqual Hernandez said he earns $8 an hour and enjoys working in agriculture as his father did in Chiapas, Mexico. He sends some of his earnings to his family in Mexico for food and medicine, but he’s unable to visit them. Like many immigrants, Hernandez planned to work in the United States for a couple of years, save up money, and return home. But the dangers of crossing the border have dissuaded him from going back, at least for now: “I changed opinions because I saw that a lot of people were going…and there are some that do not return; they die in the desert.” Regardless of the quality of their relationships with their employers, the primary concern of most unauthorized farm laborers is their legal status. Among the states that employ large numbers of unauthorized farm workers, Michigan is one of the more hospitable, but the fear of being deported is pervasive here, too. “The biggest difficulty is the fear one has of being captured and being sent back to Mexico,” Hernandez said. Robert Sierra, a farm field manager, described the difference between being authorized and unauthorized to work in these terms: “Nothing is ever sure with the undocumented. You don’t live peacefully; it’s hard to sleep at night. You are fearful of investing in anything because if you are sent back to Mexico, all that you have saved for will stay here.” Research indicates that most workers stay in agriculture for 10 or fewer years. But some immigrant farm workers say that if the working conditions and pay are decent, they wouldn’t want to do anything else. A much larger share of the population earns a living in agriculture in Mexico than 8 Briefing Paper, December 2011 in the United States—less than 2 percent of Americans work in agriculture. Many rural Mexicans, when they can’t make ends meet, end up moving to Mexican cities. But some opt to leave the country for the United States, and they often end up living and working in rural America.32 Sierra, 40, said he began working in agriculture at age 12 in Querétaro, Mexico. He came to the United States because he couldn’t make a living in rural Mexico. “I have always been used to working in the fields and it’s what I know best,” he said. “You become accustomed to it. You feel you have more freedom than in construction or warehouses.” Georgia Agriculture (which includes fishing, forestry, and hunting) is a $3.9 billion industry in Georgia. In 2009, fruits, nuts, vegetables and ornamental horticulture—all heavily dependent on immigrant workers—accounted for 27 percent of the state’s total farm income.33 In April 2011, Georgia passed one of the most aggressive state immigration-enforcement laws. The legislation may seem like a resounding victory to those opposed to the presence of unauthorized immigrants in the state, but Georgia farmers see things much differently. “The worker shortage really translates into a monetary loss,” said Gary Butler [pseudonym], a fifth-generation Georgia farmer, “about a 1520 percent loss of revenues [for my farm].” “There’s no question that we’ve seen a pretty severe shortage,” said Bryan Tolar, president of the Georgia Agribusiness Council. “Fifty percent of the labor force that we’ve relied on… to get those fresh fruits and vegetables to the market [has left].” Georgia’s growers have a history of alarmist rhetoric on the subject of labor shortages. But in this case, Latino advocates in the state agree that the law has deterred Andrew Wainer Figure 5 A worker at a cantaloupe packing warehouse in south Georgia.