What
an excellent idea. However, before we get too carried away i suggest
that the charge out rates match minimum wages with a properly measured
distribution for piecework. Paying m8inimum wages against the the top
performer is nonsense, but against the average quite reasonable. There
has to be built in motivation and that should do it. What i am saying is that i want all migrant laboprers to be fairly treated to completely eliminate gaming thesystem.
What needs to be understood is that whatever is here regulated will be passed on to the consumer including labor fairness. Again import protection also needs to be in place to block advantageous dumping. As you can see, this whole sector has been a sore spot in our agricultural economy for a long time. It does need real reform matching wage and general income reforms. Otherwise it becomes the discounting base that drives out local workers who cannot seriously compete.
And do recall that families can do work arounds and will to get the work. I saw the whole professional office cleaning industry transform because of just that. For a family, minimum wage happens to be a book entry.
Saturday, May 13, 2017
Earl Garcia
http://www.naturalnews.com/2017-05-13-robot-fruit-pickers-to-put-migrant-agricultural-laborers-out-of-work.html
Natural News) Some of the biggest fruit orchards in the U.S. may soon use robots in harvesting fruits,
as two robotics firms are currently developing machines that could
accelerate fruit picking. Mechanical harvesting has become a staple
practice in many farms for crops such as wheat, corn, green beans,
tomatoes and others. However, the harvesting of fragile,
easily-perishable crops — such as apples, berries, table grapes and
lettuce — are still done through manual labor. Fruit orchards in
Washington state alone require thousands of farm workers to do the
harvesting.
Israel-based
FFRobotics noted that human pickers are getting scarce, with many young
people shying away from farm work. The firm also stressed that elderly
pickers are slowly retiring. In line with this, the company is currently
working on a machine with three-fingered grips designed to grab fruit
and twist or clip it from a branch. According to company co-founder Gad
Kober, the machine will feature between four and 12 robotic arms, and
can harvest as many as 10,000 apples an hour. The machine would also be
able to harvest 85 to 90 percent of the crop off trees. The remaining
crops could then be manually harvested by workers, Kober noted. On the
other hand, California-based Abundant Robotics is developing a machine
that makes use of suction technology to vacuum apples off trees. Plans
for machine production were discussed in February at an international
convention of fruit growers. The company aims to launch the robotic
harvesters in the market before 2019.
The two robotics companies
are likely to achieve their production targets, with both prototypes
projected to be released this fall, according to Karen Lewis. Lewis is a
Washington State University cooperative extension agent who assessed
the use of robotics in fruit orchards. Lewis also noted that while the
machines will serve as game changers in harvesting, fruit orchards
across the country may be required to cultivate fruits in new trellis
systems to allow the machines to see and harvest the crops.
Experts raise flags on potential losses in migrant laborers
Despite
the agricultural advances, the announcement did not sit well with many
agricultural experts. According to experts, robot pickers will negatively impact the livelihood
of farm workers especially the migrant labor sector, many of whom have
been illegally working in the U.S. An analysis by the Pew Research
Center revealed that unauthorized immigrant workers accounted for 17
percent of the workforce in the U.S. agriculture industry in 2014.
Washington
has long suffered from human power shortages, and has greatly depended
on immigrant workers from Mexico to harvest many crops. According to
Erik Nicholson, an official with the United Farm Workers union, the
eventual loss of jobs among human pickers will have huge implications.
Nicholson estimated that about half of Washington’s farm workers are
illegal immigrants. However, he stressed that many of them have settled
in the state and were productive members of the society. “They are
scared of losing their jobs to mechanisation [sic]. A robot is not going
to rent a house, buy clothing for their kids, buy food in a grocery and
reinvest that money in the local economy,” Nicholson was quoted in
DailyMail.co.uk.
President
Donald trump’s hard-hitting policies against illegal migrant workers
have had farms and orchards scrambling for alternative harvesting
methods. Some farms have purchased new equipment in order to cut back on
human resources. Other farms have even lobbied with federal officials
for deals that would limit the negative effects of recent policies on
their livelihoods. Jim McFerson, head of the Washington State Tree Fruit
Research Centre, stressed that the recent immigration conundrum is now a
matter of survival for many farmers.
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