Immigrant farm workers in US prepare for Trump mass deportation plan
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About half of hired farm workers nationwide lack legal immigration status.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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Immigrant farm workers are preparing for incoming United States President Donald Trump’s promise of mass deportations, including by assigning guardians for their children if they are detained, according to groups providing them legal support.
Rising demand for such legal services reflects anxiety that Trump will follow through on a campaign vow to deport millions of undocumented immigrants once he is sworn in to office on Jan 20, something that could have an outsized impact on the country’s agricultural sector, which heavily relies on their labour.
About half of hired farm workers nationwide lack legal immigration status,
“The administration is not yet sworn in, but people are already afraid,” said Ms Sarait Martinez, executive director of the Centro Binacional para el Desarrollo Indigena Oaxaqueno (CBDIO), an organisation that supports indigenous Mexican farm workers in the Central Valley of California.
Representatives of four US rural and legal advocacy organisations, including CBDIO, told Reuters they have seen as much as a tenfold increase in interest from immigrant farm workers in workshops and resources they provide on what to do if confronted by immigration officials and how to ensure their family’s security if they are detained.
The workshops can include role-play confrontations with immigration officials and instructions on how to prepare for potential enforcement: like filling out forms assigning temporary guardians to their children, assigning an alternate to pick up pay, or giving permission for their children to travel internationally in the event they are deported.
Alfredo, a farm worker in Washington State who asked to be identified only by his first name due to concerns he could be targeted, said he is taking part in some of the trainings so he can pass along what he learns to fellow workers.
“We are definitely very concerned,” he told Reuters. “We really take pride in doing farm work, but it’s becoming very hard to look forward to going out to work.”
Against the clock
In his first administration from 2017-21, Trump’s government conducted worksite raids at poultry processing plants and produce processing facilities in Nebraska.
The incoming Trump administration has said it will prioritise the deportation of people in the country illegally who pose a public safety or national security threat, but has not ruled out extending deportations more broadly to undocumented farmworkers.
“President Trump will enlist every federal power and coordinate with the state authorities to institute the largest deportation operation of illegal criminals, drug dealers, and human traffickers in American history while simultaneously lowering costs for families and strengthening our workforce,” said Ms Karoline Leavitt, spokeswoman for the Trump administration transition team.
Farm industry trade groups are worried about the potential impact on food production, and especially in California.
A third of US vegetables and three-quarters of fruits and nuts are produced in the state, along with huge quantities of dairy and livestock, according to the California Department of Food and Agriculture.
All that food is harvested and processed by about 400,000 farm workers, according to state employment data. And about 75 per cent of those are undocumented workers, according to the University of California-Merced Community and Labour Center.
Despite the high proportion of undocumented immigrants, there is little access to appropriate legal services for farm workers in some of the state’s largest agricultural counties, said Ms Ivette Chaidez Villarreal, civic engagement programme director at Valley Voices, a workers’ rights and voter education group in the Central Valley.
Since November’s US presidential election,
Farm workers often struggle to access legal services because of their rural location, said Ms Patricia Ortiz, immigration legal director at California Rural Legal Assistance, which is developing resources for farmworkers.
“It puts them in a more precarious situation than other workers,” she said.
Undocumented workers who have US-born children are particularly worried about being separated from their families, said Ms Martinez of CBDIO. About 4.4 million US-born children live in a household with at least one unauthorised immigrant parent, according to the Pew Research Centre.
Ms Martinez said many of the workers her group is helping speak languages like Mixteco and Zapoteco, and not Spanish or English, and are seeking help with immigration paperwork and securing passports for their US-born children.
Across the country in upstate New York, the Cornell Farmworker Program has increased its immigration workshops tenfold since before the election, and expects to soon hold one every day, said director Mary Jo Dudley.
Using role-play, trainers show workers ways to respond to immigration officials if stopped on the street or approached at their homes, Ms Dudley said.
“We’re working against the clock,” she said. REUTERS

