Posted on 10/08/2007 6:32:46 PM PDT by SteveMcKing
SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Farmers in and around the Bay Area are starting to feel the pinch from tighter border security and visa requirements, NBC11's Daniel Garza reported Monday.
Some farmers told Garza they expect some of their fields to remain unpicked.
Some said they believe their fields will end up filled with rotting produce.
The Bush administration has learned of the possible loss of millions of dollars for thousands of farmers throughout the country, and is attempting to loosen visa requirements for workers.
However, farmers told Garza the attempt is "too little too late."
(Excerpt) Read more at nbc11.com ...
On another note, it IS the government's responsibility for taking millions of Americans out of the work force that would qualify for just this type of work.
Return welfare to the private (religious) realm where it belongs, and the bums will be shamed into doing some work (or starve: he who will not work, nor shall he eat).
THE post of the day.
The numbers are pretty clear and inarguable regarding unskilled and semi-skilled construction labor: illegal aliens have reduced the average gross wage rate by 20 to 50 percent compared to 1976-1979.
I personally spent come time doing research on this based on comments I heard from Steve Camarata of the Center For Immigration Studies during a radio interview. It turns out that Camarata and I both did construction labor during our college summers at just about the same time (late-70's), and for just about the same hourly rates ($6 to $8 per hour).
Camarata stated - and I have verified - that any of the major statistical measures would have construction laborers making a 1970's-normalized $18 to $29 per hour on today's job site. But we all know anecdotally that illegals are being paid about 80 percent to as little as 50 percent of those normalized rates (e.g., $12 to $16 an hour for illegals).
I would imagine that agricultural and all other unskilled and semi-skilled jobs are likewise paying substandard wages compared to the rates of 30 years ago.
When American businesses stop paying for this marginally cheaper but illegal commodity (peasant Mexican labor), Americans will most certainly take the jobs that employers now just don't feel like paying at livable wages.
Sorry, but American employers need to be reminded with "the big stick" that what they are doing is not merely unethical, not merely subversive to the U.S. economy, but a federal felony that can land them in very hot water.
It has an elegance to it, that’s for sure.
Well, duh. All the years of farm subsidies have taught nothing? When they were paid to NOT overproduce? And now they’re crying foul?
They can’t have it both ways. I’ve seen the failure stats and more and more family farms are being bought and sold to corporations because, yeah, they’re expensive to run.
I’d like to know why we import stuff from Mexico and Chile, if there’s so much produce in California!
ping
paraphrased from
Pastor Martin Niemöller
Border enforcement is improving?
I’m sure there are a few high school kids, not to mention homeless folks in general, who would be thrilled if the farmer said:
Come to my field and pick for a day.
You get to keep ten percent of what you pick.
Then the pickers take it to the local Farmers market and sell what they got at the going rate.
This program was far from perfect. Too many Mexican stayed behind and many brought families up here
Ever hear of Operation Wetback? This cleaned up the bracero mess
If its fall its time for the anual “produce is rotting in the fields” agitprop from the Mercedes Benz farmers.
You are exactly right.
This happening because the government has been refusing to do their job. The more this happens the more of our produce will be grown in Mexico, China, and other third world countrys.
This is what I was thinking. What crops are still waiting to be harvested? This is mid-October. What's the crop? Christmas trees? This is just another of the many BS stories planted to try to justify the need for more illegals.
Some said they believe their fields will end up filled with rotting produce
too bad......
now pay a higher wage to Americans.
We also could use incarcerated illegals to pick the crops, with money from farmers being put into government accounts to offset the cost of their incarceration and deprtation....
Most prison inmates are US citizens.
Put this guy in jail for aiding and abetting illegals KNOWINGLY, and in violation of Federal Law.
I think you had better start putting the people who created this problem in jail first. Who? The United States Congressional members. Because it is they who made the laws that said it was against the law to ask if someone was a legal resident of the U.S. And, I could go on and on.
I do not give a rat’s ass, Go Out Of Business!!!
The MURDERERS that are flowing freely into what was The United States must be stopped. Citizens have pretty much had enough of Jorge Bush and his extended family.
That was once said about harvesting corn and cotton.
The simple truth is the ready availability of cheap serf/slave/bracerro labor stifles innovation.
Sounds about right, yorkie.
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