Farm worker advocates sound alarm on overtime pay

Bottom line: Despite all the efforts advocates make, workers are still making less money.

Farm worker advocates are sounding the alarm on overtime pay. One legal expert warns that this push could add more strain to an industry already facing major challenges.

“My thing with the overtime is it hurts the employee,” explained Shawn Packer, principal at JPH Law. “It hurts the employer, too, but it hurts the employee because you’re limiting the hours that they’re working, so that you’re not paying the overtime, so they’re actually making less money.”

Packer added that while there is a lot of advocacy surrounding the prevailing wage lawsuit, it ultimately takes money out of the pockets of farm workers.

When it comes to regulations, such as the heat rule, Packer said that it only adds to the problem.

“One of the things, especially when we started looking at the heat rule and everything else, that’s amazing to me is you’ve got these advocacy organizations that are pushing so hard to keep piece rate, but then we have these regulations that tell us to stop working. And the workers, that’s all they want to do is they want to make that piece rate.”

Bottom line: Packer says that despite all the efforts advocates make, the workers are still making less money.

Related Stories
Hiring may ease slightly, but labor shortages remain persistent.
While social media has labeled the possible event a “Godzilla El Niño,” experts say the intensity remains uncertain—but the signal for a stronger pattern is there.
Missoula lab combines controlled testing with field data to improve wildfire response
Farm Bureau economist Danny Munch discusses the USDA’s request for feedback on data and research, how such requests work, and what farmers should know about submitting comments before the Thursday, April 9 deadline.
Farm Bureau groups in Arkansas and Mississippi are working together to provide training and resources to rural communities.
This third-generation seafood family transitioned from shrimping and now produces millions of oysters each season along Texas’ Gulf Coast.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Bass Pro Shops Launches Outdoor Programming on RURAL RADIO. New weekly live show features interviews with the experts covering the latest information about fishing,
RURAL RADIO on SiriusXM Hosts the World’s Largest Parade of Pickup Trucks at the Iconic Home of the Indy 500
Join the founder of My Pillow, Mike Lindell, and learn about his new towel line and what makes them so unique.
Monty’s proprietary humic technology makes their product the most active and soluble available in the marketplace, and is formulated to the ideal humic to fulvic ratio to maximize yields and success.
This 24/7 satellite radio channel, found exclusively on SiriusXM, is the home of original radio programming dedicated to the needs and interests of rural America.
RURAL RADIO Sets New Guinness World Record at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for World’s Largest Parade of Pickup Trucks