B4 AG DAY Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, March 25, 2020 H-2A cutoff averted as virus adds to labor worries By Dan Wheat and George Plaven EO Media Group A potential crisis pre- venting H-2A-visa agricul- tural foreign guestworkers from crossing the Mexican border into the U.S. because of coronavirus concerns has been avoided. On March 16, the U.S. Embassy in Mexico announced it would suspend processing routine immi- grant and non-immigrant visas for border crossings on March 18 in an effort to curb the spread of coronavirus. H-2A visas are non-im- migrant agricultural work visas good for up to 10 months. U.S. farm labor asso- ciations worked with the USDA and State Department and by late March 17 they received assurances H-2A visas and H-2B non-agricul- tural visas would continue to be processed. Dan Fazio, executive director of Wafla, a Wash- ington-based farm labor association, said returning H-2A and H-2B workers will be processed and most consulates are continuing to process new and returning workers. USDA and the State Department are working on a protocol so all H-2A-visa applicants can be processed, Fazio said. From Jan. 1 through March 15, Wafla provided 5,000 H-2A workers to Washington state grow- ers, mostly for pruning fruit trees. “We were lucky. We’re entering a slower period where we were only cross- ing 120 workers this week compared with 1,000 a week a few weeks back,” Fazio said. Demand ramps up in May as growers need work- ers for apple thinning and cherry harvest, he said. The last big push of the season is from Aug. 10 to Sept. 1 as growers enter apple and pear harvest, he said. A record 257,667 H-2A- visa positions were approved by the U.S. Department of Labor in 2019. Washing- ton state ranked third with 26,226 positions. Fazio said the H-2A program is well regulated and has a proven track record of handling health emergencies. For example, Fazio pointed to an outbreak of mumps at a worker camp S177496-1 in the Columbia Basin last year. He said Wafla worked quickly with the Washington State Department of Health to isolate four workers who tested positive for the ill- ness, while quarantining 100 other workers who might have been exposed. “We don’t think any of our farms are going to get COVID-19 by the time workers are coming in May,” Fazio said. “But if we don’t get them here, we don’t have an economy.” Meanwhile, agricultural employers and labor unions are emphasizing increased protections for worker health and safety. The United Farm Work- ers union sent an open letter to all agricultural employ- ers requesting “further pro- active steps to ensure the safety of farmworkers, pro- tect buyers and safeguard consumers.” Those steps include extending state-required sick pay to 40 hours or more, eliminating the 90-day wait- ing period for new farm- workers to be eligible for sick pay and offering day- care assistance for farm- worker families. Reyna Lopez, executive director of Pineros y Camp- esinos Unidos del Noroeste, or PCUN, said they are reaching out to state agen- cies to ensure employers provide multi-lingual train- ing and educational materi- als for workers. “If folks don’t understand what the threat is ... that is when we actually see people being pretty careless, or not taking precautions,” Lopez said. Lopez said she is not EO Media Group file photo Workers prune apple trees in East Wenatchee, Washington. Safeguards aimed at stopping the spread of COVID-19 coro- navirus could threaten the supply of H-2A farmworkers from outside the U.S. aware of any cases of COVID-19 among Oregon farmworkers. PCUN is Ore- gon’s largest Latino union, representing approximately 7,000 farmworkers. At Threemile Canyon Farms in Boardman, Ore., about 50 seasonal work- ers are currently on hand for the spring potato plant- ing season. A spokeswoman for the farm, Anne Struthers, said Threemile Canyon has extended its sick leave for workers by another 10 days, and is practicing social dis- tancing where possible to keep workers safe. “There is no way to know how much or how lit- tle this will affect our farm in rural Oregon,” Struthers said. “We’re going to do everything in our power to make sure everyone stays healthy.” Spring is also the peak shipping season for Ore- gon’s $995 million green- house and nursery indus- try. Jeff Stone, executive director of the Oregon Association of Nurseries, said it is already difficult to find workers willing to package products and load trucks. While few of the indus- try’s seasonal workers come from the H-2A program, Stone said the COVID-19 outbreak only adds to that pressure of agriculture’s overall labor picture. “All this really shows is the fragility of the work- force,” Stone said. “This adds a layer of worry. I feel for every business.” National Ag Day Thank you farmers and ranchers! EO Media Group file photo Not only is COVID-19 pandemic having a financial impact on cattle producers, it is also challenging the beef supply chain, industry experts say. Coronavirus brings uncertainty to the cattle and beef markets By Carol Ryan Dumas EO Media Group OTEC is proud to celebrate the people who have dedicated their lives to feeding the world. Putting Our Energy To Work For You otec.coop S178312-1 551 W Main St • John Day • 541-575-1346 S179718-1 Les Schwab supported the 2019 Grant County Youth Auction by purchasing the following Market Animals. Cattle producers are feel- ing the impact of the coro- navirus pandemic as prices fall at auction and in futures contracts. Not only is the pandemic having a financial impact on cattle producers, it is also challenging the beef sup- ply chain, Colin Woodall, National Cattlemen’s Beef Association CEO, said in the “Beltway Beef” podcast on Friday. NCBA is coordinating and talking with all seg- ments of the supply chain to keep beef moving, he said. “We all need to under- stand we need to keep beef moving throughout the chain in order to make sure this market situation is not any worse than it currently is,” he said. Right now, there aren’t any issues with pack- ing plants scaling back or inspections by USDA. Things are moving forward, he said. “But we also know that this is a very fluid situation,” he said. Almost every day brings something new. That’s why he said NCBA needs to maintain contact with all the segments of the supply chain to stay apprised of what’s happening — and if changes need to be made, NCBA can be part of that discussion to ensure beef continues to be on the shelves. “This is a high priority for NCBA, and we are working with the government, work- ing with the supply chain, working with Congress to ensure that we keep beef moving,” he said. As for the impact on cat- tle markets, there’s still a lot of clarity to be obtained in the next few weeks if not the next 30 to 45 days, Kevin Good, CattleFAX vice pres- ident, said. “We need to get confi- dence back in the markets, not only in the cattle but obviously in the financials and across the board,” he said. Live cattle futures con- tinued to freefall this past week. Cattle prices have fol- lowed suit and have been soft the last couple of weeks. Price levels now are pretty tough for yearling and cow- calf operators. “There’s no doubt about it, we’re at or below breakevens in some of those categories,” he said. The industry has done an adequate job at harvest- ing cattle year to date. Prod- uct has moved exceptionally well, and demand has been extremely strong, he said. “But unfortunately, the markets are building in a lot of uncertainty. They’re building in a lot of soft- er-type demand levels than we would expect to see,” he said. The key is to get down the road a few weeks and let markets become a little more sure of when the coronavi- rus outbreak will be con- tained and when commerce and travel are expected to be more normal, he said. The market should then recover to some degree. Hopefully, he said, that’s a shorter term duration rather than longer term. Each week, each month of uncertainty will bring some demand and economic disruption. “Hopefully, within a few weeks, we’ll have a better grasp as far as a timetable where we get back to more of a normalcy,” he said.