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Newspaper article

Migrant workers from Mexico undergoing more stringent tests

Date

2009

Authors

Scott Dunn

Abstract

Mexican migrant labourers are at work in Grey-Bruce now, mostly at apple orchards in eastern Grey County, as the world’s attention focuses on the swine flu outbreak first reported last week in Mexico.

Newspaper title

The Sun Times

Full text

Mexican migrant labourers are at work in Grey-Bruce now, mostly at apple orchards in eastern Grey County, as the world’s attention focuses on the swine flu outbreak first reported last week in Mexico.

Grey-Bruce farmers employed 190 Mexican migrants working last year as part of a long-standing federal initiative, the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program. About 28 are here now.

As concern of a possible world swine flu pandemic grows, the Ministry of Labour and the Public Health Agency of Canada are implementing a three-day assessment process to make sure migrant workers bound for Canada don’t have the illness before coming to Canada. They’ll need to have a fever-check by two doctors, fill out a questionnaire, and undergo a physical.

“It’s basically because you don’t know you’re sick with flu for a couple of days and you could still be excreting it,” said Dr. Hazel Lynn, the Grey-Bruce medical officer of health.

She said yesterday that she expects Grey-Bruce cases “in the next day or so,” involving locals who have recently returned from Mexico. Canada has 13 confirmed cases of the so-called swine flu — including four cases of this particular flu virus confirmed in the Toronto area.

Ken Forth, a Hamilton-area broccoli farmer who is president of the board directors of Foreign Agricultural Resource Management Services (FARMS), knows of no migrant workers who’ve fallen ill to the flu strain, which may have originated in southeastern Mexico in an area of large pig farms.

“There is still concern but there is certainly no panic,” Forth said yesterday.

FARMS is the go-between that brings migrant workers from Mexico and the Caribbean to Ontario farms under a program authorized by Human Resources Skills Development Canada.

Forth estimated 8,500 out of the 15,000 migrant workers who come to Ontario annually are from Mexico. The Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program helps place about 22,000 migrant workers in every province but Newfoundland annually, more than two-thirds from Mexico.

About 30 per cent of apple growers in the Georgian Triangle use migrant Mexican workers, while most of the rest employ Caribbean workers, said Shane Ardiel, president of the Georgian Bay Fruit Growers.

Most of those workers don’t typically arrive until the fall apple harvest, he said.

Sidney Dykstra currently employs five experienced Mexican tree pruners at his Clarksburg apple farm. They came from Mexico in mid-April.

One of his workers told him “the flu thing is really not that big of a concern for the men that are here because it is actually in three of the larger cities and these fellows live out in the country quite a bit.”

He said all of his workers are healthy and they have been in touch with their families in Mexico by phone.

Hi-Berry Farm in Port Elgin employes 10 migrant labourers from Mexico. They were planting strawberries yesterday. They’re relying on them because it’s crunch time now; all the crops are being or are about to be planted in the fields, Luke Charbonneau said.

The language barrier makes learning details of the flu outbreak in Mexico from his workers difficult, since none of his Mexican employees speaks much English. But they have communicated to him that the flu is not that great a concern to them because they too are from remote rural areas, far enough removed from big cities to avoid contact with the flu bug, they believe.

Charbonneau’s business relies on migrant workers because of the scarcity of local workers available or willing to work in the fields, he said. A program requirement is that the jobs must first be advertised locally.

He needs another 10 Mexican workers by early June, in time to harvest the strawberry crop.

If something were to happen to close the border to Mexican workers, his business would be forced to close for the season, unless he could source Caribbean workers through the migrant worker program, he said.

“We would be unable to harvest the product that we’re producing without these guys.

“It would be pretty devastating I would think to the whole industry. There’s 15,000 of these guys come every year and without them, horticulture in Ontario just doesn’t really happen.”

Forth, at FARMS, said he thinks there has been undue attention given to Mexican seasonal farm workers amid the current health scare.

He said Canadian tourists present as much if not more of a risk of bringing the flu virus back to Canada. He said 20,000 people in Kitchener-Waterloo area alone go to Mexico every year.

“How many does that mean across the province? Like a couple hundred thousand.

“They’re every bit as susceptible as the foreign workers, maybe more because the Canadian tourist is going to travel all over the darn place. Where a Mexican farm worker, especially if he’s coming up here, is probably staying with his family the last few weeks.”

Links

Economic sectors

Agriculture and horticulture workers

Content types

Documented cases of abuse

Target groups

Public awareness

Geographical focuses

Canada, Ontario, Alberta, México, Manitoba, Quebec, British Columbia, Other provinces, Federal, Nova Scotia, and National relevance

Languages

English