• Contact
  • GLOBALLY ABOUT POTATOES
  • About Us
  • Our NetWork <100 Language
Friday, March 5, 2021
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Register
Potatoes News
  • NEWS
  • AGROTECHNOLOGY
  • IRRIGATION
  • PROCESSING
  • FUTURE
  • ECONOMY
  • ECOLOGY
  • Our NetWork <100 Language
  • NEWS
  • AGROTECHNOLOGY
  • IRRIGATION
  • PROCESSING
  • FUTURE
  • ECONOMY
  • ECOLOGY
  • Our NetWork <100 Language
No Result
View All Result
POTATOES NEWS
No Result
View All Result
Home News Regions America

H-2A (guest workers) program strong demand

February 21, 2021
in America
Reading Time: 5min read
H-2A Program

Source: American Farm Bureau Federation

Recently released H-2A program data reveals some interesting impacts of the global COVID-19 pandemic.

For the first time since the Department of Labor began reporting quarterly data in 2013, the number of certified positions declined in the fourth quarter (July 1 – Sept. 30) of fiscal year 2020. However, the number of certified positions in the first quarter of fiscal year 2020 (Oct. 1 – Dec. 31) climbed by nearly 20 percent, suggesting that while the  pandemic has shifted the pattern of worker arrivals, it has not suppressed the overall upward trajectory of the program.

Generally, the H-2A program is discussed on a fiscal year basis (October – September). However, we can all agree that calendar year 2020 was a beast all its own, giving us a reason to look at H-2A data through a calendar year lens. We’ll start by looking at the fiscal year though, given that it is the primary basis for comparison.

H-2A (guest workers) program
Fiscal Year Basis

Overall, usage of the program in fiscal year 2020 (Oct. 1, 2019 – Sept. 30, 2020) continued its steady upward march. More than 275,000 H-2A positions were certified in fiscal year 2020, up 6.5 percent from fiscal year 2019. This was the eighth consecutive year that usage of the H-2A program set a record. As shown in Figure 1, program growth in fiscal year 2020 started off strong and then petered out as the year — and the COVID-19 pandemic — wore on.

Calendar Year Basis

When the data provided by DOL is transformed from a fiscal year basis to a calendar year basis, the impact of the global COVID-19 pandemic becomes more pronounced. As shown in Figure 2, the slight 0.02 percent decline in certified positions from July-September 2020, as compared to the same months in 2019, is followed by 19.8 percent jump in certified positions from October-December, as compared to the same months in 2019. The same pattern is observed in the number of submitted applications, as shown in Figure 3. A decline in submitted applications of 9.1 percent in April-June 2020, compared to the same months in 2019 was followed by a sizable increase of 12.5 percent in July-September 2020, compared to the same months in 2019.

210204 fig3

Keen observers of the H-2A program will immediately wonder if the slowed growth in H-2A positions was related to slow application approval. According to the same DOL data, this does not appear to be the case. Over the course of calendar year 2020, the share of applications processed in a timely manner averaged 96.6% and, as shown in Figure 4, there was little variation across quarters, less than in 2019, in fact.

Takeaways

When Figures 3 and 4 are considered together, there are two main takeaways from the data. First, it seems that the initial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic was a decline in the number of applications and subsequently the number of certified positions in the following quarter. Second, that initial decline was not the result of lack of demand, but rather uneasiness about how the H-2A program would operate as a result of COVID-19. We all remember the early months of the outbreak, when the U.S. State Department suspended routine immigrant and nonimmigrant visa processing in Mexico in mid-March 2020.

 After farmers shared their concerns that the restrictions would lead to a farm worker shortage in the U.S., the restrictions on the processing of visa applications submitted by farm workers in Mexico were quickly revised, yet challenges remained, particularly those related to transportation and ensuring worker safety when PPE was so difficult to obtain. Once the situation started to become clearer, applications from July-September rebounded by 12.5 percent and led to a nearly 20 percent increase in certified positions from October-December. Given the whopping 28.5 percent increase in the number of applications received from October to December 2020, we should expect to see a record number of certified positions from January to March 2021.

210204 fig4
New Travel Restrictions

On Jan. 26, travel restrictions to combat coronavirus infections went into effect for several countries. For some countries this was a reinstatement of previous restrictions, for others the restrictions were new. The restrictions apply to non-U.S. citizens who have been in Brazil, China, Iran, the Republic of Ireland, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the Schengen Area of Europe (Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland).

These restrictions immediately became a concern for H-2A program users, especially those who hire approximately 5,000 of these valued essential workers from South Africa, 90 from the Schengen Area, 40 from Brazil and 90 H-2A each from the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland. After outreach by the agricultural community, the State Department quickly clarified on Jan. 28 that agriculture workers from South Africa entering the U.S. qualify for national interest exceptions on a case-by-case basis. Restrictions on H-2A workers from the other countries remain in place.

Summary

Despite the challenges the pandemic has brought to farmers who rely on skilled workers from other countries, H-2A program demand continues to grow.

6501692304760679763
H-2A Program Demand Strong, Despite COVID-19

Read also: Farmer alarm – coronavirus ban for H-2A guest workers

Tags: farmersguest workers
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Contract potato prices 2021 lower – costs are higher

Next Post

Aviko’s parent Cosun posts slightly higher result in a challenging year

Related Posts

Seed potato
News

P.E.I. potato farmers named leaders in agriculture

March 5, 2021
farmer is now the nation’s top potato lobbyist
News

4-generation farmer – now nation’s top potato lobbyist

March 4, 2021
New ‘Real Dirt’ tool developed for teachers
News

New ‘Real Dirt’ tool developed for teachers

March 3, 2021
Potato Technology. A Leader in The Localization of Agriculture
America

Potato Technology. A Leader in The Localization of Agriculture

March 2, 2021
Farmer Alarm
America

Farmer alarm – coronavirus ban for H-2A guest workers

February 2, 2021
Next Post
Aviko’s parent Cosun posts slightly higher result in a challenging year

Aviko's parent Cosun posts slightly higher result in a challenging year

Categories

Tags

Agriculture center pivot irrigation Chips control soil control weeds cover crops crop rotation Drip Irrigation farmers farming research farm machinery Farm Managers fertiliser deficient fertilizers growers growing-seeds harvest irrigation market nematodes in potato fields packing pesticides Potato Chips Potato cultivation potato diseases or defects Potatoes irrigation potato farm Potato farmers potato grower Potato growers potato market potato planting Potato processing potato sector potato seeds potato seed sector Potato Storage potato varieties research retail market seed potatoes smart agricultural soil soil management Spray technology

GLOBALLY ABOUT POTATOES

Potato news from all over the World in all available languages.

ADVERTISEMENT

© 2021 POTATOES NEWS.

  • NEWS
  • AGROTECHNOLOGY
  • IRRIGATION
  • PROCESSING
  • FUTURE
  • ECONOMY
  • ECOLOGY
  • Our NetWork <100 Language
No Result
View All Result
  • NEWS
  • AGROTECHNOLOGY
  • IRRIGATION
  • PROCESSING
  • FUTURE
  • ECONOMY
  • ECOLOGY
  • Our NetWork <100 Language

© 2021 POTATOES NEWS.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In