United States of America

United States of America

May Day 2017: Why immigrant labor is more important now than ever

May Day 2017: Why immigrant labor is more important now than ever

On Monday, tens of thousands were expected to walk out of their jobs and take to the streets for a national Day Without Immigrants strike. The strike was predicted by organizers to be the largest single-day labor strike in over a decade. The message of Monday’s protest was… Read More

Farmer Creates Local Jobs — With Help of Migrant Labor

Farmer Creates Local Jobs — With Help of Migrant Labor

Jack Hedin is the owner and operator of Featherstone Farm, a four-season farm in Rushford, Minnesota, that specializes in organic vegetable production. The $1.8 million business employs 15 workers year-round and as many as 35 seasonally, the majority of whom come from Mexico on the H-2A temporary work visa. “That… Read More

Americans Don’t Apply, Wisconsin Dairy Farmer Says

Americans Don’t Apply, Wisconsin Dairy Farmer Says

Paul Fetzer is the fourth-generation owner of his family’s dairy farm, Fetzer Farms, which he operates with his brothers in Elmwood, Wisconsin. With 1,350 cows, the business requires 26 full-time employees, and today 18 of those employees are immigrants. “We’ll put ads out locally trying to attract American-born workers, and… Read More

Without More Foreign Workers, Oregon Vintner Asks, ‘What Will We Do?’

Without More Foreign Workers, Oregon Vintner Asks, ‘What Will We Do?’

In the 1970s, when Patricia Dudley and her husband left academic jobs to grow pinot noir grapes, they ran the small vineyard with family co-owners. “We wanted to be more connected to the natural world and the earth,” says Dudley, president of Bethel Heights Vineyard, in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. “In… Read More

Minnesota Farms Depend on Immigrant Workers and Foreign Students

Minnesota Farms Depend on Immigrant Workers and Foreign Students

Jim Riddle is the owner of Blue Fruit Farm in Winona, Minnesota, where he raises organic perennial fruits on a 5-acre plot of land. Riddle and his wife keep the operation small so they can get by on their own labor and that of crew leaders and a handful of… Read More

Guatemalan Immigrant Works to Boost Earnings for Small U.S. Farms

Guatemalan Immigrant Works to Boost Earnings for Small U.S. Farms

Reginaldo Haslett-Marroquin was born and raised in Guatemala and came to the United States in 1992 after his wife, Amy, who was born and raised in the United States, enrolled in a master’s degree program at the University of Minnesota. “We had made education part of our promise to each… Read More

Utah Farmer: ‘Not Once’ Has an American Applied to Milk My Cows

Utah Farmer: ‘Not Once’ Has an American Applied to Milk My Cows

In November 2016, shortly after the presidential election, Ron Gibson had to reduce his Utah dairy farm’s milking schedule from four times a day to three times a day. There weren’t enough people on staff to do the work, as many immigrant laborers had disappeared from the area after the… Read More

A Meatpacker’s Son Now Helps Other Nebraska Youth Succeed

A Meatpacker’s Son Now Helps Other Nebraska Youth Succeed

Growing up in Lexington, Nebraska, in the 1990s, Luis Sotelo witnessed a cultural transition when Latin American workers arrived to fill a demand for labor in a new meatpacking plant. “And today we are seeing a new wave of immigrants in Lexington,” says Sotelo, who serves as chief diversity officer… Read More

A Career Economist Makes the Case for Immigrants

A Career Economist Makes the Case for Immigrants

Economist Ann Markusen has spent three decades studying what makes the U.S. economy tick. And a recent teaching post in Canada re-affirmed her view that a welcome approach to immigrants is good for a nation’s bottom line. “Canada’s liberal immigration policies and the nonprofit sector’s efforts to find housing… Read More

No Immigrant Workers Means No Grapes — or Wine — Say Growers

No Immigrant Workers Means No Grapes — or Wine — Say Growers

During the recent recession, there was good money to be made in agriculture jobs in Oregon’s Rogue Valley. Yet, despite hourly rates that reached $20 an hour, few American workers applied. “Despite the huge pool of unemployed people, no one came out,” says Jeffrey M., the owner of a prominent… Read More

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