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  1. #1
    Senior Member FedUpinFarmersBranch's Avatar
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    CO-Farming jobs being picked clean by U.S. residents

    Farming jobs being picked clean by U.S. residents
    posted by: Jeffrey Wolf written by: Anastasiya Bolton 18 hrs ago

    LAFAYETTE - It is hot, there is no shade from the unforgiving Colorado sun, other than the hats that protect their faces.



    Three people are helping Jason Condon and the Isabelle Farm grow organic radishes, lettuce, tomatoes and potatoes for sale mainly here, in Colorado.

    Anne-Marie Cory got this part-time job at the Lafayette farm last year. This is her job away from her other part-time office gig.

    "I have to have my hands in the dirt," Cory said.

    Cory loves this job, a job that's becoming increasingly competitive.

    Farmers can use what's called the H-2A program to recruit foreign workers to do temporary or seasonal work here in the U.S.

    From July to September of 2008, there were 171 H2-A jobs posted. Thirty-nine Americans applied for those positions.

    The very next quarter, in the final three months of 2008, 887 Americans applied for the 981 H-2A available. And as unemployment jumped at the beginning of 2009, so did applications from Americans; 1,799 applied for 726 jobs. That means instead of the jobs being filled by foreign or migrant workers, they are mostly going to U.S. residents.

    "A lot of the American workers are now applying for farm jobs that maybe they may not have applied for in the past," said Olga Ruiz, state monitor advocate with the Colorado Department of Labor and Employment. "People who started out in agriculture or even field labor who got out of that field maybe went into construction or other types of work, who maybe got laid off for whatever reason, decided they wanted to go back to farm work, because it's a paycheck and they need it."

    Condon posted two farm hand positions on Craigslist in April. He said he had to turn people away. Thirty-eight people applied.

    "We had people with doctorates, we had people with masters degrees we had people with all sorts of different career backgrounds," he said. "Carpenters, people who've worked on farms in other countries, people who have managed museums, all sorts of things you would never suspect you would find on a farm labor application."

    Condon says it's great for his small organic farm.

    "Growing food for people is kind of a powerful thing and once you kind of do it, it's surprisingly addictive," he said.

    Condon says he's kept some of those applications for the time he might need extra help.

    Those looking for the available jobs on farms can find listings at their local workforce centers.

    You can learn more about Condon's farm at www.isabellefarm.com or visit the state unemployment Web site at http://www.coworkforce.com/.


    http://www.9news.com/news/article.aspx? ... &catid=339
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  2. #2
    Senior Member agrneydgrl's Avatar
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    I can remember working in the fields durning the summer for vacation money. There were alot of high school and college kids working in the fields. There is nothing wrong with harvesting. I think that the current financial crisis is waking people up and they are going back to taking jobs that once went to Americans. We never use to have foreigners pick our crops.

  3. #3
    Senior Member Richard's Avatar
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    My boarding junior high had an organic farm and working on it is a highlight of alumni week.
    I support enforcement and see its lack as bad for the 3rd World as well. Remittances are now mostly spent on consumption not production assets. Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  4. #4
    Senior Member tinybobidaho's Avatar
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    Ah Ha! So Americans WILL do those jobs.
    RIP TinybobIdaho -- May God smile upon you in his domain forevermore.

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  5. #5
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    We are taking our country back, when people with doctorates are applying for these jobs. It really doesn't matter any more when there is a family to feed and a roof to be kept overhead.
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  6. #6
    Senior Member redpony353's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by agrneydgrl
    I can remember working in the fields durning the summer for vacation money. There were alot of high school and college kids working in the fields. There is nothing wrong with harvesting. I think that the current financial crisis is waking people up and they are going back to taking jobs that once went to Americans. We never use to have foreigners pick our crops.
    Me too.... during the summer in high school. I used the money to go places during the summer. And I kind of liked working to pick food. I learned a lot and enjoyed being outdoors.

    Of course it paid better at that time. We got paid by the hour or by how much we picked...whichever was more. More Americans would choose this type of work if it paid living wages and benefits of some type.

    Also ...to apply for the job americans have to feel like they have some chance at getting the job. For quite some time everyone knows that illegals are preferred because of thier illegal status and lack of power to assert their rights on the job.
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