Kicking into Gear

Can ag labor reform move forward?

Published online: Jan 02, 2020 Articles Kam Quarles, CEO, National Potato Council
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This column appears in the January 2020 issue of Potato Grower.

With the introduction of the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, the House of Representatives has begun another effort at immigration reform for agriculture. Though the bill is not perfect, the bipartisan work that created it is important and merits moving it forward for further improvements in the Senate.

This year’s bill (the “Lofgren Bill”) is a mirror of its predecessor that was attempted in the previous Congress. The so-called “Goodlatte Bill” was also an imperfect bill that failed to offer solutions for the entire crisis. 

However, the fact that neither this year’s nor last year’s bills were perfect at the beginning is not necessarily a negative. Both sought to start a legislative process by attempting to pass something in the House of Representatives. Without successfully completing that step, no further steps are possible. 

Agriculture deals with this situation every five years on another extremely important federal policy, the Farm Bill. Neither the House of Representatives nor the Senate has individually produced perfect Farm Bills at the beginning of their long legislative process. However, the agriculture industry still supports their efforts to move the unpolished bills toward a conference committee. At that point, leaders from both sides pick the best of each imperfect bill and meld them into a comprehensive package that serves the industry for half a decade.

As the crisis in agricultural labor continues to grow, the imperative of providing a comprehensive legislative solution is brought more into focus.

As the crisis in agricultural labor continues to grow, the imperative of providing a comprehensive legislative solution is brought more into focus. The Trump administration has sought to provide some regulatory relief, but those efforts are limited by the impaired structure of our immigration laws and the H-2A program. The fundamental structure can be changed only by Congress, so the solution requires their action.

The agriculture industry must assist that process by recognizing it has to start somewhere. Given the infirmities in both this year’s Lofgren Bill and last year’s Goodlatte Bill, the agriculture industry could not provide outright endorsements of either. But that doesn’t mean the efforts can’t be rewarded by moving legislation forward, recognizing that major improvements must be made in the Senate and finally in a conference committee. 

As of this writing, 23 Republicans have joined with 26 Democrats in co-sponsoring the Lofgren Bill. Joining Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) as co-authors are Congressman Dan Newhouse (R-WA) and Congressman Mike Simpson (R-ID). This bipartisan strength gives a signal that the bill can gain the necessary votes to move across the House floor and on to the Senate.

Requiring a perfect bill at the beginning virtually ensures stagnation. We are pushing to break out of that stagnation and keep reform efforts alive in service of an industry that deeply needs them to succeed.