Many farmers once ignored the H2-A visa program because it was an expensive, bureaucratic bother and illegal laborers were plentiful. But as undocumented immigration (especially for farm jobs) has trended downward and immigration raids have increased in recent years, going the legal route has become more attractive. While undocumented workers still make up the majority of the 1 million farm laborers in the U.S., more than 200,000 H2-A visas were issued in 2017, and numbers are on track to surpass that number this year, according to U.S. Department of Labor data.
"Now the farm lobby is pushing for changes that will allow farmers to double the number of legal immigrants, permit them to stay longer and cut the overall costs associated with using them," Newkirk and Sasso report. "Some of those changes were originally in one of two immigration overhauls moving through Congress, although farming advocates say they don’t know if they’ll still be there when the U.S. House votes this week."
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/2te91uC Number of temporary farmworker visas soaring; farm lobby wants the limit doubled in upcoming legislation - Entrepreneur Generations
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