Approximately
17,000 seasonal workers from Mexico, Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad-Tobago and the
Eastern Caribbean States are expected to be placed at Ontario fruit and
vegetable farms this season, says Ken Forth, president of the Foreign
Agricultural Resource Management Services.
They will work at about 1,450 farms where the
owners have been unable to find Canadians to do the work.
I find this hard to believe, especially given the recent arrival of 25,000 refugees from Syria. But, then again, the Syrians have choices about where they will work; those brought in under the seasonal worker program have only one choice - to stay and work, or be shipped back home. They cannot change employers.
It is, to my mind, close to slavery. Most - but probably not all - of the farmers treat their workers well.
If they are good enough to work here, they should be good enough to be allowed to be landed immigrants and then Canadian citizens. My father came to Canada in 1928 under a farm worker program. The farmer paid his passage from Germany and he, in return, worked for a year at half wages.
If they are good enough to work here, they should be good enough to be allowed to be landed immigrants and then Canadian citizens. My father came to Canada in 1928 under a farm worker program. The farmer paid his passage from Germany and he, in return, worked for a year at half wages.
This is
the 50th anniversary of the Seasonal Foreign Workers Program that
the federal government began in 1966 with 263 workers from Jamaica.
“We’re
extremely proud that we’ve been able to help our horticultural industry thrive
and grow over the past half century,” says Forth.
“Ontario
produces some of the highest quality fruits and vegetables in the world.
Without the supplemental labour they hire through SAWP, many of our growers
just wouldn’t be able stay viable.”
The
program provides Ontario farmers a steady source of reliable, skilled and
professional labour, says F.A.R.M.S.
“At the
same time, the program has given seasonal agricultural workers employment,
benefits and educational opportunities not available to them at home.”