12 CapitalPress.com November 4, 2016 U.S., West Coast ag workers hired * Labor CONTINUED from Page 1 The U.S. Department of Labor certifi ed the hiring of 13,641 H-2A workers in Washington in 2016 com- pared to 11,844 in 2015, ac- cording to the state Employ- ment Security Department. With a larger apple crop, Central Washington grow- ers were short pickers during harvest, and now shortages are continuing in the yearlong packing jobs. The shortage of packers, forklift drivers and other warehouse workers is the same as last year — or worse, said Reggie Collins, general manager of Chelan Fruit Cooperative. “A bigger crop means more shifts and more people needed. We’re short about 100,” Collins said. “I’ve talked to many shippers and I don’t know of any full and turning away help. We’re all short.” (Thousands of workers) 767.5 514.4 Dan Wheat/Capital Press Joaquin Melo Vaca and Maria Sanchez apply for packer jobs at Valicoff Fruit Co., near Wapato, Wash., on Oct. 12. The company has been short of pickers and packers in August and September for several years. Several Southern states have adopted E-verify, the fed- eral government’s electronic verifi cation of employment eligibility. This culls out those who don’t have the proper pa- perwork or who are illegal. But it’s disrupting the migratory fl ow of workers from Florida northward to other states such as Michigan, he said. Western problems Dan Wheat/Capital Press H-2A foreign guest workers take a break at Zirkle Fruit Co.’s CRO Orchard, south of Rock Island, Wash., last April. They were training tree limbs on young apple trees. Zirkle employs more H-2A work- ers than any other fruit company in Washington. H-2A workers, he said, they would be hurting. Growing numbers The Washington Employ- ment Security Department has yet to compile its 2016 labor numbers but said there was an average of 54,124 season- al ag workers each month in the state in 2015, peaking at 90,782 in June. That compares with an average of 53,667 per month in 2014. When year-round workers are added, the monthly aver- ages become 96,167 for 2015 and 93,228 for 2014. The department’s last ag- ricultural workforce report, in 2013, found the estimated av- erage annual agricultural em- ployment had grown by more than 12 percent since 2007, largely driven by increased apple production. The depart- ment once tracked worker shortages through monthly employer surveys but quit three years ago when an ana- lyst retired and funding was cut. The department was unable to provide the number of ag- ricultural jobs advertised this year through its WorkSource program. According to the USDA National Agricultural Statis- tics Service, 737,300 seasonal and year-round farmworkers were employed nationwide in 2015 at an average wage of $12.54 per hour. Of that, 162,000 were in California at an average of $13.05 per hour and 68,500 were in Oregon and Washington at an average of $13.20 per hour. Nationwide, 2015 employ- ment numbers were higher than in 2014 but less than the preceding four years. The peak was 777,300 in 2013. Loss Area in detail CONTINUED from Page 1 95 VALLEY ADAMS 55 WASHINGTON 95 Ada County 84 PAYETTE Ontario GEM BOISE 21 Nampa Idaho Ore. Boise 95 84 OWYHEE Sn 78 N 20 miles ake v Ri having to farm up against homes and having to deal with the associated traffi c and other pressure. “We’re going to Canyon County because of it,” she said. “It’s easier to farm if your neighbor’s a farmer.” Peaceful Belly Farm is a 60-acre organic operation in the Dry Creek Valley area north of Boise. The iconic operation hosts fi eld trips, grows food for the food bank, farmers’ markets and local restaurants, and rais- es about $15,000 a year for lo- cal schools through an annual “pumpkins for the schools” event. Erskine said she feels like none of that was taken into consideration when the coun- ty approved the Dry Creek Ranch development. Megan Bashan, Ada Coun- ty’s community and regional planner, said the develop- ment was approved in 2010 776.3 777.3 508.5 532.2 531.7 748.8 er ELMORE Grand View Alan Kenaga/Capital Press but the county’s new com- prehensive plan, which is be- ing updated, places a great- er emphasis on preserving farmland. During pubic outreach ef- forts, the county heard a clear message from residents that they wanted to preserve farm- land, she said. National shortage In some cases, the short- age of workers appears to be caused by an increase in the demand for labor caused by more crop production and not a decrease in the supply of workers. Agricultural fi eld work is hard, physical work and there- fore many people just don’t want to do it, many growers say. “There is an absolute short- age and as the economy picks up it will only get worse,” said Kerry Scott, program manag- er of masLabor in Lovingston, Va., the largest provider of H-2A (agricultural) and H-2B (nonagricultural) guestwork- ers in the nation. “People will take jobs in construction and other things. The last place they will work is seasonal agriculture,” he said. The company has grown from 600 to 700 clients na- tionwide two years ago to 900 to 1,000 today, providing about 15,000 H-2A and H-2B foreign workers, Scott said. He cites several reasons for fewer domestic farmwork- ers. Mexican workers who be- came legal residents through the amnesty of 1986 have aged and are retiring, and their children have gone into other occupations, he said. Fewer seasonal agricul- tural workers can or want to move with the harvests so shortages are more acute in northern states such as Wash- ington, he said. They also look for longer-time employ- ment. The Northwest tree fruit industry needs large numbers of workers for relatively short periods, making H-2A a logi- cal option, he said. “We heard it, which is why (the plan) has it as one of our top priorities,” she said. The draft update of the comprehensive plan includes several policies to preserve farmland. That includes ensuring development doesn’t restrict adjacent agricultural opera- tions, supporting the conser- vation of prime ag land and irrigated farmland and con- sidering the economic impact of ag operations in land use decisions. It also includes supporting efforts, where viable, to bring more land or farms into pro- duction. The draft plan will be presented before the coun- ty’s board of commissioners during a public hearing Nov. 9. The next day, the county’s planning and zoning commis- sion will host a public hear- ing on an amendment to the planned Dry Creek Ranch development. Erskine plans to show up to protest it and expects a lot of others will also. Seasonal labor shortages in California seemed worse this year than in recent mem- ory, said Tom Nassif, president and CEO of Western Growers in Irvine. The organization represents farmers who grow about half the produce in the U.S. “Every year we’ve been having shortages, ranging from 10 to 20 percent. I be- lieve this year it maybe as high as 25 percent,” Nassif said. While up to 1,000 illegal immigrants per day cross the border near San Diego, many Mexicans are becoming better educated and staying in their country for jobs, he said. California’s shortage is throughout the Central Coast and Central Valley, mostly in fruits and vegetables that are harvested by hand, Nassif said. In Oregon, the labor short- age for landscape nursery growers is as “severe as we’ve seen it,” said Jeff Stone, ex- ecutive director of Oregon Association of Nurseries in Wilsonville. “We have nursery growers who have emerged from the Great Recession in a posi- tion to produce and sell more plants into the national mar- ket — some growing by 20 percent or more — but will grow only 2 percent due to the unavailability of labor,” Stone said. It’s impacted greenhous- es and blueberries, become a true hardship and become the association’s top issue politi- cally, he said. Nathan Duckwall, assis- tant production manager of Duckwall Fruit in Hood Riv- er, Ore., said some growers in that area had enough pickers this year and others didn’t. “Pickers are getting pick- ier. They’re looking for eas- ier and faster picking. They shop for the best piece (wage) rate,” he said. In August, southwestern Idaho fruit and winegrape growers were paying higher wages to try to keep workers. Wolves CONTINUED from Page 1 fi nal fi gure may be higher. WDFW had planned to eliminate the entire Profanity Peak pack, which was preying on cattle in the Colville Na- tional Forest. The department suspended the operation with four wolves surviving. WDFW said the chances of attacks on livestock con- tinuing were low because the grazing season was ending. The department did enter the operation with a spending limit, Martorello said. “It’s something we think about, but money wasn’t a factor in sus- pending it,” he said. The cost exceeded the roughly $26,000 spent to shoot one wolf in 2014 and the $76,000 spent to shoot seven wolves in 2012. Cattle Producers of Wash- ington President Scott Nielsen said lethal-removal costs will continue to be an issue. “You have to remove the problem wolves if you ever want public acceptance in 712.5 737.3: Up 3.5% from 2014 478.7 506.8 82.8 79.8 85.8 82.3 170.3 160.5 158.3 163.3 73.8 160 68.5 162 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 *All labor, average yearly totals. Source: USDA NASS Growing pains Valicoff Fruit is a small company that is trying to grow to stay competitive. It packs about 1 million, 40-pound boxes of apples annually and 250,000 to 300,000 boxes of apricots, peaches and nectar- ines. It expects to double its ap- ple volume in three years from new, high-density plantings. Three years ago the company installed a new, effi cient high- tech packing line to handle the increase. The company employs an average of 130 year-round orchard and packing workers. The payroll increases to about 325 during peak harvest. “Labor continues to get tighter and tighter,” Valicoff said. This season, the company lost pickers and packers to hop growers, who paid more and needed more workers to tend a 5,000-acre overall ex- pansion in Washington, he said. Hops paid around $15 per hour. Piece rate for picking apples sometimes equaled that, depending on which va- riety was being picked, he said. Workers returned when hops were done at the end of September, the midpoint of the apple harvest. The company also hired 40 H-2A workers, its fi rst in several years. It rented apart- ments for them and is building housing for 73 H-2A workers for next year. Growers have to provide housing and pay transporta- tion costs between the job and their home country. They also have to pay workers a min- imum of $12.69 per hour in Washington and Oregon. To obtain H-2A workers, grow- ers must demonstrate to the U.S. Department of Labor that they can’t fi nd enough domestic workers. Valicoff, 29, obtained his bachelor’s degree in construc- tion management from the University of Washington and worked for a Seattle construc- tion company for two years before returning to Wapato to join his father and uncle in the family business. He is concerned about labor for the company’s future. Without Rest of U.S. Wash. and Ore. California Some are considering turning to H-2A for the fi rst time next year. Bigger need Compared to California, Oregon and Idaho, Washing- ton produces far more apples, pears and sweet cherries. The state grew $2.4 billion in ap- ples in 2015 alone. Harvest typically takes 35,000 or more seasonal workers for cherries and upward of 50,000 for ap- ples and pears. “We haven’t seen a ca- tastrophe but we have a tight labor supply and it continues to tighten,” said Jon DeVaney, president of the Washington State Tree Fruit Association in Yakima. A rapid increase in H-2A guestworkers in recent years has kept a problem from be- coming a disaster and is a key indicator of the shortage, DeVaney said. Workers are less mo- bile so rural growers have a harder time getting workers than those closer to cities such as Pasco, Yakima and Wenatchee, he said. “Labor shortages are very bad. In the last month, WA- FLA has received many re- quests from growers who were not in H-2A who are now building housing to be ready for next year,” said Dan Fazio, executive director of WAFLA in Olympia. Former- ly called the Washington Farm Labor Association, the organi- zation provided 67 percent of the 11,844 H-2A workers in Washington in 2015 through contracts with growers. The main need stretches from May to October with peaks and valleys within that and greater competition among crops for fall harvest, Fazio said. The supply of workers in hops and pears has been the tightest because the work is the hardest and the crops have among the shortest har- vest periods, he said. The availability of domes- tic workers is shrinking every year and pear, hop and as- paragus growers are turning more to H-2A than they have in the past, he said. WAFLA provided about 9,000 H-2A workers this year, mostly in Washington but also brought 500 to Or- egon and 100 to Idaho. WA- FLA did consulting work in California, Nevada and Michigan. Mike Gempler, execu- tive director of Washington Growers League in Yakima, said growers using H-2A did Dan Wheat and Alan Kenaga/Capital Press fairly well this season but some who didn’t had diffi - culty getting reliable workers and had to leave fruit un- picked. Growers were “extremely frustrated” by pickers who would pick for a few days, earn what they needed and leave, Gempler said. Reli- ability was a widespread is- sue, he said. “I spoke with people who were really scared for this season who were going to try H-2A but didn’t and at the last minute found enough people. So it was a mixed bag,” he said. Those who did OK with domestic help paid well and offered fairly long employ- ment, he said. Cherry and apple growers had the most shortages, and H-2A saved the season, he said. Zirkle Fruit Co. in Se- lah hired 2,889 H-2A work- ers in 2015 directly from Mexico without using WA- FLA. Stemilt Growers in Wenatchee hired 750 H-2A on its own this year, said West Mathison, president. “You need high-value fruit to justify the expense. We’re defi nitely growing our H-2A and investing in (picking) platforms” that make pick- ers more effi cient, Mathison said. The picker shortage was felt most during the Honey- crisp, Gala and Golden har- vests in August and Septem- ber, he said. Cass Gebbers, president of Gebbers Farms, Brewster, said the company hired about 1,800 H-2A workers this year and had World Relief refugees counted as domes- tics. World Relief is an in- ternational evangelical relief program that works with the federal government to settle refugees. The shortage was about the same as last year, Geb- bers said. “You felt it but orchards were getting picked,” he said. Dave Taber, a grower near the Washington-Canada bor- der town of Oroville, said everything was picked in a timely manner there but only because H-2A workers con- stituted one-third of the labor force. “If it were not for H-2A, we would have extreme prob- lems,” Taber said. “Grow- ers are happy to have it but shocked with the expenses. Orchard wages are so high that it’s pulling from ware- houses and warehouses are short.” “You have to remove the problem wolves if you ever want public acceptance in this area.” Scott Nielsen, Cattle Producers of Washington president this area,” said Nielsen, a Ste- vens County rancher. “To say, ‘never kill a wolf,’ that is not a reasonable position.” The state could authorize ranchers to remove wolves that are attacking livestock, he said. “We would work col- lectively,” Nielsen said. “It would cost the state nothing.” Martorello said he did not have any proposals for cut- ting the cost of killing wolves. He noted that WDFW spends more on non-lethal measures to prevent wolf attacks on livestock, an expense ranch- ers are expected to share. The department’s two-year budget adopted last year in- cluded $750,000 for non-le- thal measures. Amaroq Weiss of the Cen- ter for Biological Diversity said the money spent shoot- ing wolves would have been better used to move cattle off grazing allotments and paying for supplemental feed. “I think the vast majority of the public would be very supportive of doing some- thing like that, instead of kill- ing wolves,” she said. Wolves are not federally protected in the eastern one- third of Washington. The state’s policy calls for shoot- ing wolves when measures such as putting more people on horseback around herds fail to stop depredations. Ranchers are eligible for compensation for livestock attacked by wolves. Ranchers say many attacks go uncon- fi rmed by the department and that compensation doesn’t address all the problems that have been created by wolves returning to Washington. “I do not raise cows to feed to the department’s pred- ators,” Nielsen said. “That is not responsible husbandry.”