Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Rural Population Losses Add to Farm and Ranch Labor Shortage
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 4 years ago on
August 16, 2021

Share

OMAHA, Neb. — Rural America lost more population in the latest census, highlighting an already severe worker shortage in the nation’s farming and ranching regions and drawing calls from those industries for immigration reform to help ease the problem.

The census data released last week showed that population gains in many rural areas were driven by increases in Hispanic and Latino residents, many of whom come as immigrants to work on farms or in meatpacking plants or to start their own businesses.

“We’ve struggled on this issue for a long time to try to come up with a more reasonable, common-sense approach,” said John Hansen, president of the Nebraska Farmers Union, which is part of a group lobbying Congress for new immigration laws. Vilifying immigrants “just makes it harder to get there.”

Growth in Nebraska Driven by Diversity

The population trend is clear in Nebraska, where only 24 of the state’s 93 counties gained residents. Of those 24, just eight reported an increase in the white population, suggesting that most of the growth was driven by minorities, said David Drozd, a research coordinator for the University of Nebraska Omaha’s Center for Public Affairs Research.

Drozd crunched the census data and found that Nebraska counties with the greatest racial diversity are a “who’s who of where the meatpacking plants are,” even though many plants are in rural areas that are often perceived as mostly white.

“In the rural areas, if you didn’t have the Latino growth, employers would be struggling even more just to fill those positions,” Drozd said.

Desperate for Laborers, New Mexico Boosts Wages

In New Mexico, populations declined across 20 rural counties that stretch from the Great Plains at Oklahoma to the U.S. border with Mexico. Desperate for laborers for its annual chile harvest, the state this week pledged up to $5 million in federal pandemic relief to subsidize wages for pickers and workers at chile-processing plants — boosting available wages as high as $19.50 an hour.

Some Republican state legislators blamed the labor scarcity on supplemental unemployment benefits, which they say create a disincentive to work because they pay more than some low-wage jobs. Democrats see a persistent labor crisis.

The New Mexico Chile Association trade group says the industry is short about 1,350 seasonal laborers of the 3,000 workers needed.

Rural Workers Migrating to Building and Construction

The problem is just as bad for poultry farmers in North Carolina, where meat processors help power the economies of many rural counties. Half of the state’s 100 counties have lost residents since 2010, the census data showed.

Bob Ford, executive director of the North Carolina Poultry Federation, predicted that labor shortages at poultry plants will only worsen as people continue to leave rural communities and migrant workers gravitate to other industries, such as building and construction.

He said higher pay for workers and better health care and housing benefits could help alleviate widespread labor shortages, but broader changes to immigration policy are probably the best solution.

Providing Immigrants a Legal Pathway to Citizenship

The National Pork Producers Council is pushing federal lawmakers to change the H-2A visa program so that migrant workers can remain employed longer.

Bladen County, North Carolina, is home to the world’s largest pig slaughterhouse, Smithfield Foods’ Tar Heel plant. Between 2010 and 2020, the county’s population dropped by 15.9%. Bertie County, which is home to a large Perdue Farms poultry processing facility, saw a population decrease of 15.7%.

In Kansas, some rural Republicans say Congress needs to find a practical solution.

Nancy Weeks, secretary of the Haskell County Republican Party in southwestern Kansas, said if immigrants living in the United States illegally want to move to the area and work, they should be provided a way to gain legal status “so that they pay taxes like I do.”

“I don’t have a problem with them coming here as long as they get legal,” Weeks said. “It’s the ones that don’t get legal that I have a problem with.”

Latino Leaders Hope Census Will Bring Change

The challenge is exacerbated in Midwestern states that already have many of the nation’s lowest unemployment rates, said Al Juhnke, executive director of the Nebraska Pork Producers Association. Juhnke said his group would like to see changes that would allow seasonal immigrant workers to stay in the country longer.

“These folks buy houses. They bring their families. They go to our churches. They earn money and spend it locally,” he said. “It’s really a win-win-win for these communities.”

In Iowa, Latino leaders eagerly awaited the census numbers in hopes that they would show population growth that would translate into more political clout for their communities and better conditions in the food production and construction industries.

Ag Communities Cannot Survive Without Immigrants

Republican politicians often try to tie reforms at the U.S.-Mexican border to pathways to citizenship for workers already here, said Joe Henry, political director for the League of United Latin American Citizens local council in Des Moines. But Henry said the two issues need to be separated, and agricultural companies understand that they cannot survive without immigrants.

“They know they need that labor,” he said.

Rachel Gantz, a spokeswoman for the National Pork Producers Council, said her group will continue to press Congress for changes.

“Simply put, pork producers are drawing from a rapidly diminishing pool of applicants,” she said. “Our producers fear — and the recent census data suggests — that this trend is unlikely to change anytime soon.”

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Life-Threatening Meals: Restaurants Would Identify Food Allergens for Diners Under This Proposed Law

DON'T MISS

Iran Threatens to Strike US Bases in Region if Military Conflict Arises

DON'T MISS

Trump Has Cut Science Funding to Its Lowest Level in Decades

DON'T MISS

Fresno Measure C Transportation Tax Talks Continue Amid Renewal Uncertainty

DON'T MISS

Judge Bars Trump Administration From Detaining Mahmoud Khalil

DON'T MISS

Is a Waxed Apple ‘Ultra-Processed?’ CA Bill Could Trigger a Lawsuit Barrage

DON'T MISS

Edmunds: These Five Vehicles Are Hidden Automotive Gems

DON'T MISS

GM to Invest $4 Billion to Shift Some Production From Mexico to the US

DON'T MISS

How Your Air Conditioner Can Help the Power Grid, Rather Than Overloading It

DON'T MISS

Hundreds of Laid-off CDC Employees Are Being Reinstated

UP NEXT

US Stocks Drift Near Their Record Following an Encouraging Inflation Update

UP NEXT

Wall Street Ends Higher as Investors Track Progress of US-China Trade Talks

UP NEXT

Wall Street Mixed as US-China Trade Talks Begin

UP NEXT

California’s Stubborn Problems Keep Thwarting Its Ballooning Budget

UP NEXT

Wall Street Gains Ground Following a Solid Jobs Report

UP NEXT

California’s Deficit Dilemma: Cut Spending, Borrow Money or Raise Taxes?

UP NEXT

Procter & Gamble Slashes Workforce as Tariffs Drive Up Costs

UP NEXT

US Weekly Jobless Claims Rise for Second Straight Week

UP NEXT

US Trade Deficit Narrows Sharply in April; Imports Post Record Drop

UP NEXT

Silver Surges Past $35/oz Level to Hit a More Than 13-Year High

Fresno Measure C Transportation Tax Talks Continue Amid Renewal Uncertainty

57 minutes ago

Judge Bars Trump Administration From Detaining Mahmoud Khalil

1 hour ago

Is a Waxed Apple ‘Ultra-Processed?’ CA Bill Could Trigger a Lawsuit Barrage

1 hour ago

Edmunds: These Five Vehicles Are Hidden Automotive Gems

1 hour ago

GM to Invest $4 Billion to Shift Some Production From Mexico to the US

1 hour ago

How Your Air Conditioner Can Help the Power Grid, Rather Than Overloading It

2 hours ago

Hundreds of Laid-off CDC Employees Are Being Reinstated

2 hours ago

National Guard Troops Have Temporarily Detained Civilians in LA Protests, Commander Says

2 hours ago

This Israeli Government Is a Danger to Jews Everywhere

3 hours ago

Bass and Other California Mayors Call for End to Immigration Raids

3 hours ago

Life-Threatening Meals: Restaurants Would Identify Food Allergens for Diners Under This Proposed Law

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. If Kim Nickols eats dairy, peanuts or wheat, her blood pre...

14 seconds ago

14 seconds ago

Life-Threatening Meals: Restaurants Would Identify Food Allergens for Diners Under This Proposed Law

9 minutes ago

Iran Threatens to Strike US Bases in Region if Military Conflict Arises

52 minutes ago

Trump Has Cut Science Funding to Its Lowest Level in Decades

57 minutes ago

Fresno Measure C Transportation Tax Talks Continue Amid Renewal Uncertainty

1 hour ago

Judge Bars Trump Administration From Detaining Mahmoud Khalil

1 hour ago

Is a Waxed Apple ‘Ultra-Processed?’ CA Bill Could Trigger a Lawsuit Barrage

1 hour ago

Edmunds: These Five Vehicles Are Hidden Automotive Gems

1 hour ago

GM to Invest $4 Billion to Shift Some Production From Mexico to the US

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend