January 16, 2015 CapitalPress.com 13 Will usage of H-2A workers continue to grow? H-2A from Page 1 Growers are evaluat- ing whether they can afford $12.42 per hour based on how well they did with their 2014 harvests, he said. But he pre- dicted usage of H-2A work- ers will continue to grow by double digit percentages in Washington, California and Oregon for the foreseeable future regardless of AEWR and immigration reform. Central Washington tree fruit growers have used more H-2A workers in recent years to offset labor shortages. When the 2015 AEWR was announced a month ago, some said they will continue to hire more H-2A workers because they can’t afford not to. Most pickers make more than the AEWR anyway on piece rate because of their speed of picking. Still the increase in AEWR causes piece rates to go up, said Tom Riggan, general manager at Chelan Fresh Marketing. The U.S. Department of Labor approved 9,077 H-2A workers in 2014 for Wash- ington, up from 6,221 in 2013 and 4,546 in 2012. Of the total, about 94 percent were in tree fruit and 6 percent in other crops. About 80 percent are recruited for growers by WAFLA. California had 6,043 H-2A workers in 2014, up from 4,200 and Oregon had 238. “I think California will be explosive in the next cou- ple of years because it needs more labor and the only guar- anteed way is H-2A,” said Lee Wicker, deputy director of the North Carolina Grow- ers Association. Historically, California and the West Coast haven’t needed H-2A workers be- cause of an abundant supply of illegal immigrants cross- ing from Mexico, Wicker said. The Southeast has strug- gled with farmworker short- ages longer because it is far- ther away from the Mexican border, he said. Now fewer cross the border because it is expensive and dangerous, he said. Washington is surpassed in H-2A workers only by North Carolina at 14,502, Florida at 13,544 and Geor- gia at 10,387. North Carolina’s AEWR increased 45 cents to $10.32 for 2015. Florida dropped 7 cents to $10.19 and Georgia stayed at $10. North Carolina’s usage of H-2A workers in tobac- co, fruits and vegetables has been increasing at 18 to 20 percent a year and there’s no indication of slowdown, Wicker said. “We have growers calling every day saying send me an application package,” he said. The AEWR in North Car- olina has increased an aver- age 3.7 percent a year for the past 25 years, Wicker said. This year it went up 4.6 per- cent. Bird fl u barrier forces Washington ‘The quarantine will only be in place long enough to tell if we have hatchery to kill healthy chicks enza showing up in two back- yard fl ocks in Benton County, Wash., and one in Douglas County, Ore. Previously, a wild duck and captive falcon near Lyn- den, about 27 miles from Bellingham, were found to have had bird fl u. The virus struck 11 B.C. poultry farms and one non-commercial fl ock between Dec. 1 and 19. But it was the cases of bird fl u that struck 290 miles away in the southern end of Wash- ington that caused problems for Rock Creek Farms, which has no way to feed or water the chicks. For several days, Pellebo- of eggs, poultry and other poultry products from the zone, according to WSDA. Exemptions will be made for operations that obtain permits from the WSDA. “The quarantine will only be in place long enough to tell if we have successfully contained the virus, so we could lift if in a matter of weeks,” WSDA spokesman Hector Castro said. The quarantine will not prevent anyone selling eggs inside the zone to continue to do so if customers come to them, he said. “The risk is with the movements be- tween the properties.” A 140-bird flock near Benton City was identified Dec. 31 with the virus, the first time highly pathogenic bird flu had ever been diag- nosed in domestic birds in Washington. About a week earlier, ducks from that flock had been transferred to another backyard flock 9 miles away. Some 500 birds in that flock were eu- thanized Jan. 6. A backyard flock next to the first flock was tested Area in detail 28 Moses Wash. Lake 90 Potholes Res. 26 17 Othello 26 24 Quarantine zone 260 b Riv ia Young chicks are seen in this fi le photograph. FLU from Page 1 m Courtesy of USDA ARS successfully contained the virus’ lu Co A Bellingham, Wash., hatchery was forced to euth- anize 22,000 healthy chicks Jan. 9 because of trade re- strictions imposed by Can- ada after bird fl u was found in non-commercial fl ocks in south-central Washington. Canadian authorities re- laxed the ban Jan. 13 and allowed 65,000 imperiled chicks to be delivered to a Chilliwack, British Columbia, poultry farm owned by the same parent company, K&R Poultry. “It was a big sigh of re- lief,” said Harvey Pellebo- er, manager of the hatchery, Rock Creek Farms. Pelleboer said he was shocked to learn Jan. 7 that the Canadian Food Inspec- tion Agency wouldn’t let the chicks across the border. The hatchery produces about 100,000 chicks a week, he said. The next day, the agen- cy announced all birds, raw meat and poultry products raised, processed or shipped from Washington and Oregon would be barred until further notice. The ban was a response to highly pathogenic avian infl u- er was uncertain whether he would have to euthanize the 65,000 chicks and 20,000 more chicks due to hatch by week’s end. “It was a nightmare,” he said. “Here I am, sitting with 65,000 chicks.” On the afternoon of Jan. 13, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said it had re- solved the problem. By 5:30 p.m., Pelleboer’s chicks were able to cross the border. USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service and the Washington Department of Agriculture worked with the Canadian agency to re- solve the issue, according to USDA spokeswoman Joelle Hayden. Canadian authorities have now limited their restrictions to parts of Benton and Frank- lin counties, the vicinity of the two infected non-commercial fl ocks. The hatchery can now ship chicks to Canada, she said in an email. Efforts to obtain comment from CFIA were unsuccess- ful. Pelleboer said he tests reg- ularly for bird fl u and credited the USDA with intervening on the farm’s behalf. “They’re doing a phenom- enal job, trying to help us,” Pelleboer said. 395 ve r Capital Press Richland e R i By DON JENKINS k Sn a Pasco 82 124 Kennewick 12 N 221 82 h. Was e. Or Alan Kenaga/Capital Press but is free of bird flu, Cas- tro said. WSDA and U.S. Depart- ment of Agriculture are dis- infecting both sites. Castro said the owner of the first flock occasion- ally sold birds. He said he didn’t know of any busi- ness activity by the owner of the second flock. The outbreak of bird flu here is part of the global spread of highly pathogen- ic H5N2 and H5N8 viruses. Officials believe the virus is being transmitted to do- mestic birds in Asia, Eu- rope and North America by migrating waterfowl. The wild birds are able to sur- vive the virus, which has been deadly to a variety of domestic birds. A die-off of domesticat- ed guinea fowl in Douglas County in Southern Oregon in mid-December led to the discovery of an infected backyard flock. Wild ducks in Whatcom County, Wash., and Butte County, Calif., were found infected by H5N2. The appearance of high- ly pathogenic bird has caused some countries to impose restrictions, partic- ularly on poultry and poul- try products from Oregon and Washington. U.S. officials say the virus has not been found at commercial operations and that the virus has not caused any human illness. Highly pathogenic H5N2 forced 245,600 birds to be culled at 11 British Columbia, Canada, poultry farms in December. See www.agr.wa.gov/ lawsrules/rulemaking for the complete WSDA quar- antine rule and a map of the quarantine zone. 3-5/#4N