American Agri-Women urges Congress
to act on ag labor legislation
Washington, DC, (AgPR),
June 13, 2008 -- Agriculture is uniquely in crisis regarding
the need for a legal workforce is the message American Agri-Women (AAW) conveyed
at meetings with their congressional delegates this week in the nation’s
capital. Congress must act. The Emergency Agriculture Relief Act (EARA) was
proposed as an amendment to the supplemental spending bill to fund military
activities in Iraq and Afghanistan, but was removed, so now agriculture
organizations are working hard to get the EARA moved forward on its own.
“The cost of waiting is to lose
production and our food stability and security. The EARA is a solution within
reach that avoids controversy and effectively addresses the problem on an
emergency basis,” stated AAW president Marcie Williams, and is the message
these ag leaders want their legislators to understand. “Our crops are rotting
in the field and farming operations are moving to Mexico and we need relief
now.”
This legislation is not amnesty. It does not provide a path to citizenship or a
green card but would grant temporary, limited immigration status for experienced
farm workers who would be required to continue to work in American agriculture
for the next five years.
The bill also reforms and streamlines the H-2A program.
AAW appreciates the work of several members of the Senate Appropriations
Committee who showed their strong bipartisan majority support: Democratic
Senators Inouye (HI), Leahy (VT), Harkin (IA), Kohl (WI), Murray (WA), Mikulski
(MD), Feinstein (CA), Durbin (IL), and Johnson (SD), and Republican Senators
Stevens (AK), Specter (PA), Domenici (NM), Bond (MO), Bennett (UT), Craig (ID),
and Brownback (KS).
American Agri-Women is the nation’s largest coalition of farm, ranch and
agribusiness women, with 50 state, commodity, agribusiness affiliate
organizations and collegiate chapters throughout the country. AAW is an all
volunteer organization, working to provide reliable information about
agriculture to the public since 1974.
For more information about AAW’s positions on a wide range of agricultural
topics, contact Marcie Williams, President, president@americanagriwomen.org,
or visit the web site at http://www.americanagriwomen.org.