A Florida Immigration Law Is Turning Farm Towns Into ‘Ghost Towns'

the cac mamba

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Thats why florida is getting rid of Child Labor laws? To allow teenagers to work up to 40 hours a week, with no lunch break.....Youre such a dumb ass Cracka.

"everyone should make 15 dollars an hour" :hula: "exploiting illegals makes us the noble party"

:laff:
 

Robbie3000

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"everyone should make 15 dollars an hour" :hula: "exploiting illegals makes us the noble party"

:laff:

$15 dollar an hour minimum wage should be paid for all jobs. Even if that is the case, Americans wouldn’t take the jobs. That’s why migrant workers are doing them in the first place.

If there is anything we know for certain about Americans is that they don’t like doing hard jobs. That’s why they slavery existed in the South, Mass immigration from Europe to build cities in the north and Chinese to build railroads out west.

Forced/cheap labor is as American as apple pie.
 
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the cac mamba

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$15 dollar an hour minimum wage should be paid for all jobs. Even if that is the case, Americans wouldn’t take certain. That’s why migrant workers re doing them in the first place.
this is a bunch of bullshyt. migrants are just people. americans are just people :dead: without illegals, jobs would eventually get filled
 

Robbie3000

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this is a bunch of bullshyt. migrants are just people. americans are just people :dead: without illegals, jobs would eventually get filled

You don’t know what the fukk to you are talking about.

Migrant workers from the south of the border have been coming to the United States, especially to free states, since at least 1848.

In the confederate states, black codes were created to limit black people to agricultural and domestic work. These laws were passed due to labor shortages resulting from the end of slavery and refusal of whites to do hard work.

Pick up a book you illiterate son of a bytch and step up your vocub.
 

voiture

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They will roll these laws back when a Republican becomes president and then pretend it's only a problem when a democrat gets back in office.
Someone of you fall for this immigration game knowing full well it won't be fixed.
 

the cac mamba

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You don’t know what the fukk to you are talking about.

Migrant workers from the south of the border have been coming to the United States, especially to free states, since at least 1848.

In the confederate states, black codes were created to limit black people to agricultural and domestic work. These laws were passed due to labor shortages resulting from the end of slavery and refusal of whites to do hard work.

Pick up a book you illiterate son of a bytch and step up your vocub.
:russell: alright, AOC
 

the cac mamba

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They will roll these laws back when a Republican becomes president and then pretend it's only a problem when a democrat gets back in office.
Someone of you fall for this immigration game knowing full well it won't be fixed.
i dont want the democrats to "fix" it, i just want them to stop pandering. it's fukking embarrassing

even the worst bootlicking shill cant defend this :mjlol: do we have to cut back on services for people who emigrate here legally? no, we fukking do not




this dude is CUTTING DMV FUNDING.... for ILLEGAL. IMMIGRANTS
 

theworldismine13

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i dont want the democrats to "fix" it, i just want them to stop pandering. it's fukking embarrassing

even the worst bootlicking shill cant defend this :mjlol: do we have to cut back on services for people who emigrate here legally? no, we fukking do not




this dude is CUTTING DMV FUNDING.... for ILLEGAL. IMMIGRANTS


People supporting illegal immigration are straight clowns
 

theworldismine13

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You don’t know what the fukk to you are talking about.

Migrant workers from the south of the border have been coming to the United States, especially to free states, since at least 1848.

In the confederate states, black codes were created to limit black people to agricultural and domestic work. These laws were passed due to labor shortages resulting from the end of slavery and refusal of whites to do hard work.

Pick up a book you illiterate son of a bytch and step up your vocub.
Gibberish
 

bnew

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A year later, Florida businesses say the state's immigration law dealt a huge blow​

APRIL 26, 20245:01 AM ET

Jasmine Garsd

LISTEN· 6:33

6-Minute Listen PLAYLIST



039_plantcity_slide-647ca980fac2338c3a8d7eb5b9ba98aaf875ca91-s1100-c50.jpg

Carolina reviews the strawberry pints picked by farmworkers in a Sanchez Farm field in Plant City, Fla., on Feb. 28.

Eva Marie Uzcategui for NPR

PLANT CITY, Fla. — It's early morning in this small agricultural town in Central Florida and the pickers are already hunched over the bushes, plucking strawberries, the main crop out here.

Fidel Sanchez instructs his workers to get rid of the fruit that fell and rotted on the ground.

There's a lot of it.

Like other farmers out here, Sanchez is worried about how long he will be able to keep his business going.

About a year ago, Florida Governor and then presidential candidate Ron DeSantis passed one of the toughest crackdowns on immigration in the country.

SB1718 punishes employers who use undocumented labor and forbids undocumented people from having a driver's license.

Many local Florida businesses say the new law has led to workers leaving the state, hurting their bottom line. "A lot of people are scared," says Sanchez. "A lot of people went north and never came back."



Sales are way down at a Florida flea market. A new immigration law could be to blame.


POLITICS

Sales are way down at a Florida flea market. A new immigration law could be to blame.

The Federal government estimates that nationwide over 40% of farmworkers are undocumented.

Sanchez says the effect of the law was immediate.

Families he'd worked with for 20 or 30 years were gone from one day to the next. "The government doesn't seem to care," he says. "Maybe they think the crops are gonna pick themselves."

093_plantcity_slide-56629870293b294b78282569ae50f7d0b32179d4-s1100-c50.jpg

Fidel Sanchez, owner of Sanchez Farm, poses for a photo at a Sanchez Farm field in Plant City, Florida, U.S., February 28, 2024.

Eva Marie Uzcategui for NPR

084_plantcity_slide-05bf0d6f62498a3429e61863caffd0349b0c6e6b-s1100-c50.jpg

Fidel Sanchez, owner of Sanchez Farm, holds damaged pineberries at a Sanchez Farm field in Plant City, Fla., on Feb. 28.

Eva Marie Uzcategui for NPR

The Florida Policy Institute estimates this immigration law could cost the state's economy $12.6 billion in its first year. That's not counting the loss of tax revenue.

A spokesperson for Florida Governor Ron DeSantis told NPR, "Governor DeSantis signed the most ambitious anti-illegal immigration law in the country to protect Floridians." They also stated that Florida can "still maintain a robust economy."

Ron Hetrick, a senior economist at Lightcast, a labor market analytics company says the problem is the state has a serious labor shortage.

The Pew Research Center estimates there are close to one million undocumented people.

Even if just a fraction of them were to leave, Hetrick says, "how do these cities get built? How do the houses get built? We all know very well how these things are being built."

Hetrick says what Florida is facing is symbolic of the larger reality in the country — where there is an aging population and politicians framing immigration as a threat rather than fixing a broken system.

"The future ... if you look at census projection for the growth of this country, once this boomer population goes through in the next, you know, 15 years ... without immigration, we shrink."

A spokesperson for DeSantis told NPR that businesses are still free to hire immigrants, as long as it's done legally.

In 2023 Florida hired thousands more H-2A guest workers than the year before. But farmers NPR spoke to said the bureaucracy, and the cost of applying for these work permits, is crippling. There have also been widespread reports of lack of oversight and exploitation of H2A workers.

012_plantcity_slide-6a2c90852cc406f3c705bbb2106d24e21dcb9040-s1100-c50.jpg

Farmworkers pick strawberries at a Sanchez Farm field in Plant City, Florida, U.S., February 28, 2024.

Eva Marie Uzcategui for NPR

069_plantcity_slide-ff57b6b22f2c76d46748034f4a2f01862730c823-s1100-c50.jpg

Gary Wishnatzki, third generation owner of Wish Farms, poses for a photo at Wish Farms in Plant City, Florida, U.S., February 28, 2024.

Eva Marie Uzcategui for NPR

"The H-2A system is absolutely broken," says Gary Wishnatzki, head of Wish Farms, also in Plant City.

This is one of the largest strawberry growers in the nation. His field harvesters in Florida are on H-2A visas.

"It's the only means of getting workers at the farm right now", says Wishnatzki. "But it's totally outdated."

Even for a company as large as it is, the cost has become crushing, he says.

It has to pay a recruitment company, visa fees, housing workers, pay for meals, and transportation.

Unless something changes soon, he says, "berries are going to become an item that's going to be a luxury, not something people buy every time they go to the grocery store like they do now."



To keep immigrants from fleeing, Florida GOP focus on immigration law loopholes


NATIONAL

To keep immigrants from fleeing, Florida GOP focus on immigration law loopholes

The shortage of workers is not just impacting agriculture.

NPR spoke to hoteliers, construction business owners, and restauranteurs who said Florida's labor shortage, combined with arthritic national immigration policies, is hurting the bottom line.

"Years ago, you'd put an ad in a newspaper, you'd have you'd have a bunch of applications filled out. You'd have people lined up outside your door," says David Crowther, owner of CFS Roofing Services in Fort Myers.

Because Florida is in the path of hurricanes, roofing is in high demand here. In recent years, Fort Myers has been especially hard hit and Crowther says it's been a challenge to find workers at all levels, from management to roofers.

Crowther's company lost about 10 percent of its workers after Florida passed the SB1718 immigration bill in 2023. These workers were scared for the safety of their undocumented family members, he says.

Crowther says if he could hire more immigrant labor, it would ultimately trickle down into more jobs for American workers.

"If I knew I could get an unlimited supply of labor, I then would start hiring estimators and salesmen over to start promoting more work. It's a domino effect."

Crowther, along with the National Roofing Contractors Association, has been petitioning for an expansion of the H2B program, which provides temporary non-agricultural visas.

Crowther says business is good. But it could be so much better if only he could find more workers.

For others in Florida, SB1718 brought a hard hit and threw the labor market into turmoil.

The law created a climate of fear that many had no option but to leave the state.

A few miles north, at a fruit market, a woman sitting in the cool shade of her fruit stand says, she dreams of leaving.

Ana Maria Perez got to Florida 20 years ago, but things have changed.

As a Latina and a business owner, she says it makes no sense to stay.

"It's real," she says. "Farms don't have the workforce they used to. So now the cost of fruit rose for us."

frutas_custom-3bec1c7819763200af4407560c52477bdc9741bf-s1100-c50.jpg

Ana Maria Perez says, SB1718 dealt a blow to her business, and gave way to a rise in anti-immigrant sentiment.

Jasmine Garsd/Jasmine Garsd/NPR

Perez started as a fruit picker when she came from Mexico. She says it was physically exhausting, so she stopped after she became a legal resident.

The fruit stand was supposed to be a step up, but once the law went into effect, "you should've seen it. The mangos and mameys falling to the ground. No one to pick."

Perez says next year, when her kid graduates college, she's planning to leave Florida. She's done. She shakes her head and gets back to packing some limes.

"We all lost out here," she says. "We all lost." `
 

Dameon Farrow

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Tlr knowitalls said undocumented workers were taking jobs from people.

Yet article says people somehow someway weren't falling over themselves to become farmworkers once the jobs opened up.

What gives? :sas2:
 
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