Fix worker mess now

By Dr Joanna Howe

IN a historic moment this week, The Nationals’ federal conference voted unanimously for the status resolution of undocumented migrants on farms.

Put simply, this means taking undocumented migrant farm workers out of a limbo world of precarity by giving them a right to legitimately work in Australia on farms.

It is highly significant the political party closest to farmers and the needs of regional communities is now speaking with one voice about the importance of this reform.

The leadership of Member for Mallee Anne Webster has been critical in drawing attention to this issue and advocating within The Nationals to adopt this status resolution policy.

The Nationals’ support for status resolution comes off the back of the government’s own independent inquiry into the future of the agriculture workforce which strongly recommended a one-off status resolution process for undocumented migrant farm workers.

The presence of undocumented workers on farms, estimated to be up to 100,000 workers, is the dark underbelly of a sector reliant on an overseas workforce to pick fresh fruit and vegetables.

This can no longer be ignored for three compelling reasons.

First, there are urgent public health reasons to incentivise undocumented farm workers to regularise their status.

Without status resolution, they will not get vaccinated as they risk deportation if they come forward to access medical treatment.

Second, status resolution will help address labour shortages.

Although the sector has struggled for many years with difficulties in recruiting and retaining harvest workers, this came to a head when border restrictions were introduced.

Although regularising the status of undocumented migrants will not increase the farm labour pool in Australia, it will improve the mobility of these workers.

They will be able to cross state borders and the vast majority of growers who do the right thing and previously would not have had access to undocumented workers will be able employ this substantial group.

Status regularisation is not a silver bullet for labour shortages on farms but will make a sizable contribution to addressing them.

The third reason for a one-off status resolution process for undocumented workers is that it is needed to remove the susceptibility of this group to exploitation.

Because undocumented migrants typically access farm work through dodgy contractors and have no right to work in Australia, they cannot report wage theft to the Fair Work Ombudsman or access help to remedy exploitation.

The main argument that opponents of status resolution raise is that it sets a bad precedent and will create a perverse incentive for illegal immigration once borders reopen.

This is a lazy argument which is not supported by the evidence.

First, this is not a proposal for a blanket amnesty but for a one-off status resolution process justified on the basis of the pandemic.

COVID-19 is clearly an exceptional, unprecedented circumstance.

If status resolution is introduced, it will have been more than 41 years since the last status resolution policy.

Who would move to a country in anticipation of living underground and working in exploitative jobs, just for the chance they’d get to start on a path to citizenship four decades later?

Second, research from other countries shows that status resolution does not lead to increased illegal immigration if a legal pathway is created and it is accompanied by strong border management. Once undocumented migrants have their status resolved, the government needs to do everything in its power to police the border, enforce labour standards on farms and expand existing visa programs so that there are legitimate, legal pathways for migrants to work in horticulture in Australia.

If agriculture is to become a $100 billion industry, expansion of existing visa programs is essential.

Third, the New Zealand experience demonstrates that the best way to stop ongoing reliance on illegal labour is for the farm industry to step up.

In Australia, the National Farmers Federation and AusVeg need to invest resources, like Horticulture NZ has done, in calling out those who have a business model of relying on dodgy contractors supplying illegal labour.

Finally, it is important to acknowledge that undocumented migrants are typically visa overstayers.

They come by plane so it is possible for government to introduce better risk management and tracing systems.

This is challenging in a country of Australia’s size and geography but border authorities should have a better handle on how offshore criminal networks exploit vulnerable temporary migrants and channel them onto farms.

With broad support for status resolution continuing to grow, it is vital to get the model right.

The evidence from abroad suggests that the status resolution framework must have a strong incentive to encourage the vast majority of undocumented migrants to come forward.

In my report, Out of the Shadows: A Case for Status Resolution for Undocumented Migrant Farm Workers, I propose a four-year temporary work visa with a pathway to permanent residency after two years.

The latter is essential to ensure the integrity of the visa, its attractiveness to undocumented migrants and to guarantee growers with a sustainable pipeline of trained, experienced and productive workers.

Although the pandemic has brought so much pain to the horticulture sector through border restrictions, The Nationals’ courageous support for status resolution means there is now an opportunity for a reset for a sector that has been beset with labour shortages and exploitation for decades.

Dr Joanna Howe is an Associate Professor at the University of Adelaide Law School

Digital Editions


  • Water restrictions as lakes near critical low

    Water restrictions as lakes near critical low

    THE New South Wales Government has imposed temporary water restrictions along the Barwon-Darling River and its northern tributaries after active storage in the upper Menindee…

More News

  • Planned burn for Patche

    Planned burn for Patche

    A FUEL reduction planned burn has been ignited in the Patchewollock State Forest to develop a fuel-reduced area to the south of adjacent dry land farms. The planned burn is…

  • More free PT

    More free PT

    FREE public transport will be extended throughout Victoria until the end of May, with half-price fares from 1 June to the end of the year. Although the free PT measure…

  • Bail granted following bail breach

    Bail granted following bail breach

    A BAIL application has been granted to a man accused of dangerous driving while on bail. The Mildura Magistrates’ Court heard earlier this month police checked the registration of a…

  • Input sought on reskilling

    Input sought on reskilling

    LOCALS who have recently had to change jobs, learn new skills, or change roles in their current workplace have an opportunity to participate in an online survey conducted by the…

  • Breastscreen truck to roll into Menindee

    Breastscreen truck to roll into Menindee

    BREASTSCREEN NSW will be in the Far West next month with the the mobile screening van stopping at Menindee on Tuesday 5 May and Wednesday 6 May BreastScreen NSW provides…

  • Guilty plea for family violence

    Guilty plea for family violence

    A MAN has been given a community corrections order after pleading guilty to family violence offences. The Mildura Magistrates’ Court heard the 25-year-old male had gotten in an argument with…

  • Builder set for $36m for rehab centre

    Builder set for $36m for rehab centre

    THE Victorian State Government has revealed the company that’ll build a proposed multi-million-dollar drug and alcohol treatment facility at Merbein. Set for the old Merbein Primary School site, the Government…

  • Meet move a one off says manager

    Meet move a one off says manager

    WHILE the first meeting of the year at Mildura Racing Club, that was set to jump on Tuesday, may have been relocated to Swan Hill – the move is a…

  • ‘Cut migration’ says Webster

    ‘Cut migration’ says Webster

    AUSTRALIA’S migration intake has erupted into a political flashpoint, with Member for Mallee Anne Webster demanding sharp cuts while Immigration Minister Tony Burke accuses the opposition of chasing votes over…

  • Drone festival to light the way for Bash

    AS a lead-in to the Mundi Mundi Bash, Broken Hill will host a free three-night light and drone festival this August, with hundreds of drones set to illuminate Argent Street…