JAMAICANS among 16,000 farm workers heading to Canada

Sunday, May 31, 2015    
(May, 2015) - Approximately 16,000 workers from across the Caribbean and Mexico will be travelling toOntario farms this growing season as a supplement to local labour under the Seasonal Agricultural Workers Programme (SAWP).
Farmers across Ontario are welcoming their return, which will help the province's fruit and vegetable industry thrive. Some 1,450 farms will benefit this year.
Farm workers being registered at the Ministry of Labour
 and Social Security on East Street, downtown Kingston, on
January 2. The workers left the island on January 3 to take up
 jobs on farms in the United States and Canada under the
Overseas Work Programme. (OBSERVER FILE PHOTO)
This is the 49th year the programme has operated in Ontario, allowing many farms to remain viable in the face of critical shortages of suitable and available Canadian workers.
Because SAWP is a "Canadians first" programme, supplementary seasonal farm labour is hired from other countries (Mexico, Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad &Tobago and the Eastern Caribbean states) only if agricultural operators cannot find domestic workers to fill vacancies.
"Nearly half a century after it was created, this programme continues to serve the same vital function on an even larger scale," says Ken Forth, president of Foreign Agricultural Resource Management Services (FARMS), which administers SAWP.
"Without SAWP and its steady supply of reliable labour, some operations would be forced to stop growing fruits and vegetables altogether, or move into less labour-intensive crops," he said.
A couple thousand workers have been in Ontario since mid-winter, working at greenhouses largely in the Leamington and Niagara areas. Others began arriving over the past few weeks to assist with field work, fruit tree pruning and other important jobs.
The vast majority of seasonal workers opt to return on repeat contracts because they are able to earn far more than they can at home. This allows them to provide a better standard of living to their families, pay for their children to attend school and learn skills needed to operate businesses of their own in their home countries.more

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