WG Urges Governor to Maximize Capture and Conveyance of El Nino Precipitation

November 13th, 2015

In light of the strengthening El Niño weather pattern, Western Growers delivered a letter to Governor Brown last week calling on his Administration to “capture as much precipitation as our infrastructure will allow.” The letter reinforces the fact that we cannot afford to let a drop of wasted water flow out to sea this wet season and encourages the Brown Administration to develop a plan in partnership with the federal government to “establish El Nino protocols for the Delta pumping plants that result in the state and federal pumps being operated at their designed maximum capacity to convey water to storage facilities south of the Delta in major runoff/flood conditions.”

READ THE FULL LETTER HERE

We encourage you to add your voice to the discussion by sharing this letter on your social media platforms. 

WG Members Participate in ‘Walk of the Farmworker’ Tour

November 6th, 2015

Yesterday, Western Growers’ Board Member Sonny Rodriguez (The Growers’ Company — Somerton, Ariz.) and WG associate member, Phil Townsend, (Sunlund Chemical — Yuma, Ariz.) participated in the ‘Walk of the Farmworker’ tour on Arizona’s San Luis border. Hunter Moore from Arizona Governor Doug Ducey’s office and congressional staff from the offices of Arizona Congresswoman Martha McSally (AZ-2) and Arizona Senators John McCain and Jeff Flake also joined them. The tour was followed by ‎a meeting with local growers to discuss labor and H-2A issues, as well as water and food safety issues.  

For more information on the tour and meeting, contact AnnaMarie Knorr at (602) 451-0658.

November Lunch & Learn Webinar — Using ET Information for Irrigation Decisions

November 6th, 2015

Evapotranspiration (ET) is still an abstract term for many irrigation practitioners, though recent education efforts are starting to change this perception. ET can provide an accurate estimate of potential crop water use, and can also assist with irrigation management decisions.

Western Growers invites you to join our monthly informational Lunch & Learn webinar that will discuss the use of ET as a tool for managing irrigation. Two experts will provide practical examples of ET’s application in the field and describe two ET-based tools currently used by some producers. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn more and share your thoughts about this emerging tool.

Webinar Details

Using ET Information for Irrigation Decisions Lunch and Learn Webinar

Thursday, November 19, 2015

11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

REGISTER NOW!

Speakers:

Michael Cahn, Irrigation and Water Resource Advisor for University of California, Cooperative Extension

Forrest Melton, Senior Research Scientist, CSUMB/NASA Ames Research Center

For more information, contact Sonia Salas at (949) 885 2251.

Cox Assumes Chairmanship of Western Growers at 90th Annual Meeting

November 10th, 2015

Larry Cox, owner of Lawrence Cox Ranches in Brawley, California, became the new chairman of Western Growers. Cox assumed the reigns from Vic Smith, President and CEO of JVSmith Companies in Yuma, Arizona. The transition took place at the board meeting yesterday which occurred during the 90th Annual Meeting being held in San Diego. He will officially take over the duties of chairman at the conclusion of the Annual Meeting. Cox was first elected to the board in 2009. 

Cox founded Lawrence Cox Ranches in 1984 expanding a 70-acre cotton field in Imperial Valley into an operation that now farms on 3,300 acres and produces all types of lettuce, melons, onions, asparagus, wheat alfalfa, grains, hay and seed crops.  The company also has farming operations in Mexico.

Cox received a bachelor’s degree in crop science from California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo.

The Board also selected Samuel Duda, vice president of Duda Farm Fresh Foods, Inc., Salinas, California as Senior Vice Chairman; Craig Reade, partner at Bonipak Produce, Santa Maria, California as Vice Chairman; Garland Reiter, CEO of Reiter Affiliated Companies, Santa Barbara, California as Secretary; and Carol Chandler, partner at Chandler Farms, Selma, California as Treasurer.

UFW Distributes Minimum Wage and Piece-rate Leaflet

November 13th, 2015

The following article is being reprinted courtesy of the Ventura County Agricultural Association:

Please find a leaflet that is being left on employee’s vehicles at worksites or along public roads by representatives of the United Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO (UFW).

The leaflet seeks to inform agricultural employees as to whether they have heard about the “new wage law.”  They also claim that “thanks to the UFW, we have a new law that protects wages for farm workers that work by piece rate.”

The leaflet goes on to say that effective January 1, 2016, it is required that each employee is paid for their non-productive time (e.g., travel time between fields, training, exercises, etc.) based upon the minimum wage.  It also states that it is required that your employer allow you to take paid rest periods even though you work by piece rate based upon the average hourly rate earned.

Before December 15, 2016, the leaflet requests that if your employer has not given you retroactive pay, you should demand it for the last four years the employer failed to pay.  It goes on to state that you could be eligible for $8 more per day, up to $48 per week.

Lastly, the leaflet asks employees to remember not to sign documents that waive their right to this money.  This last reference is to retroactive release agreements between employers and employees to cover retroactive wages not paid such as non-productive time, rest or heat recovery periods or overtime.

There are several misstatements in this leaflet.  For example: (1) The UFW was not a party to the negotiation process; (2) Workers cannot demand unpaid wages beyond three years unless they are part of a class action lawsuit with a cause of action for restitution under the California Business and Professions Code; (3) There is no law that currently requires an employer to pay retroactive non-productive time and rest periods.  However, AB 1513, which becomes effective on January 1, 2016, permits employers to voluntarily make such payments to avoid potential class action lawsuits.

It should be noted that these leaflets may be passed out with Notices of Intent to Take Access by UFW organizers to your workplace.  If the UFW files a valid Notice of Intent to Take Access and files it with the ALRB, they will be permitted to take access to your business operations during three specified periods in the workday.  During such periods, they may be able to distribute such leaflets and speak with your employees concerning its content.

Do not attempt to restrain UFW representatives in passing out leaflets to your employees during lawful access.  Also, do not question your employees about what the UFW representatives discussed during the access periods.

If UFW organizers are accessing private property to put the leaflets on employee vehicles, you may intercede and inform the organizers that they are on private property, they are trespassing, and ask them to remove the leaflets.  To enforce your demand, you should take a photo of the individual placing the leaflet, as well as his/her car and license plate.

If they persist in not leaving your private property, contact the local police or sheriff’s office.

Please contact Jason Resnick (949) 885-2253 for more information.

Register for the November 19 Lunch & Learn Using ET Info for Irrigation Decisions Webinar

November 13th, 2015

Evapotranspiration (ET) is still an abstract term for many irrigation practitioners, though recent education efforts are starting to change this perception. ET can provide an accurate estimate of potential crop water use, and can also assist with irrigation management decisions.

Western Growers invites you to join our monthly informational Lunch & Learn webinar that will discuss the use of ET as a tool for managing irrigation. Two experts will provide practical examples of ET’s application in the field and describe two ET-based tools currently used by some producers. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn more and share your thoughts about this emerging tool.

Webinar Details

Using ET Information for Irrigation Decisions Lunch and Learn Webinar

Thursday, November 19, 2015

11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

REGISTER NOW!

Speakers:

Michael Cahn, Irrigation and Water Resource Advisor for University of California, Cooperative Extension

Forrest Melton, Senior Research Scientist, CSUMB/NASA Ames Research Center

For more information, contact Sonia Salas at (949) 885 2251.

2016 California Minimum Wage Increase

November 18th, 2015

On January 1, 2016, the minimum wage will increase to $10 per hour. In 2013, Governor Jerry Brown signed into law the bill that would increase California’s minimum wage in two phases. For the first phase, the minimum wage for California employees rose from $8 per hour to $9 per hour beginning July 1, 2014.

The minimum wage increase also affects piece-rate employees. Piece-rate workers must be paid at least minimum wage for each hour worked. AB 1513, which goes into effect on January 1, 2016, requires nonproductive time for piece-rate employees be separately paid at the minimum wage or contracted hourly rate. Rest and recovery periods for piece-rate employees must be paid at the average hourly rate for the workweek.

The increases in the minimum wage may also cause some employees to fall outside the “white collar” overtime exemptions under California law. Under these exemptions, an employee must receive a monthly salary that is no less than two times the California minimum wage for full-time employment (40 hours per week). The current minimum salary is $37,440 ($3,120 per month or $18 per hour). Starting in January 2016, exempt employees will have to be paid an annual salary of at least $41,600 ($3,446.67 per month or $20 per hour).

The new minimum wage impacts certain employer notice and posting requirements:

  • California’s official Minimum Wage Order (MW- 2014) poster already includes the increase for January 1, 2016.
  • Labor Code Section 226 requires California employers to provide each employee with an itemized statement at the time wages are paid. The itemized wage statement must include, among other pieces of information: the amount of gross or net wages paid to the employee for the pay period and all applicable hourly rates in effect during the pay period and the number of hours that the employee worked at each hourly rate.
  • California employers must provide each employee with a written notice of pay information at the time of hire pursuant to California Labor Code § 2810.5 with certain pay information including:
    • The employee’s rate of pay;
    • Any overtime rates of pay; and
    • Any allowances, such as meal or lodging allowances, claimed as part of the minimum wage.

Employers must notify employees, in writing, of any changes to the items required in the notice within seven days of the changes, unless those changes are contained in a regular wage statement or other written notice required by law.

This increase in the minimum wage rate provides a good opportunity for Western Growers members to review their pay practices and ensure that they are in compliance with all wage and hour laws.  Examination of pay practices involving piece-rate employees is especially important to ensure compliance with AB 1513 which codifies recent court decisions holding that such employees must be paid at least minimum wage for all hours worked.

For more information, contact Jason Resnick at (949) 885-2253.

EPA Releases Final Revisions to Worker Protection Standard

November 18th, 2015

On Nov. 2, 2015 the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published its final revisions to the Worker Protection Standard (WPS). Western Growers submitted comments on proposed changes to the WPS in September 2014. Some of Western Growers’ concerns with the proposal were addressed in the final revisions. EPA states that the revisions to the WPS are intended to “enhance the protections provided to agricultural workers, pesticide handlers, and other persons under the Worker Protection Standard (WPS) by strengthening elements of the existing regulation, such as training, notification, pesticide safety and hazard communication information, use of personal protective equipment, and the providing of supplies for routine washing and emergency decontamination.”

There are a number of new obligations resulting from the rule described below, mostly related to record keeping and training. Many growers are already implementing record keeping and training similar to what is required by the standard.

EPA’s fact sheet is available here, and a comparison of the new standard to the existing standard is available here. EPA will be releasing additional information and guidance. Staff will provide more information as it becomes available, including resources for implementing procedures to meet new requirements.

View Western Growers Fact Sheet

For more information, contact Ben Sacher at (202) 296-0191.

THIS THURSDAY’S Lunch &Learn Webinar — Using ET Info for Irrigation Decisions

November 18th, 2015

Evapotranspiration (ET) is still an abstract term for many irrigation practitioners, though recent education efforts are starting to change this perception. ET can provide an accurate estimate of potential crop water use, and can also assist with irrigation management decisions.

Western Growers invites you to join our monthly informational Lunch & Learn webinar that will discuss the use of ET as a tool for managing irrigation. Two experts will provide practical examples of ET’s application in the field and describe two ET-based tools currently used by some producers. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn more and share your thoughts about this emerging tool.

Webinar Details

Using ET Information for Irrigation Decisions Lunch and Learn Webinar

Thursday, November 19, 2015

11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

REGISTER NOW!

Speakers:

Michael Cahn, Irrigation and Water Resource Advisor for University of California, Cooperative Extension

Forrest Melton, Senior Research Scientist, CSUMB/NASA Ames Research Center

For more information, contact Sonia Salas at (949) 885 2251.

Bayer CropScience Seeking Produce Innovation Applicants

November 18th, 2015

Bayer CropScience, one of Western Growers’ Annual Meeting Platinum Sponsors, is looking to honor a grower whose thinking, practices and use of technology enhance the role of produce in creating better lives. Do you know anyone who fits that description? 

Specifically, the award will focus on growers whose innovations:

  • Improve yield and quality of produce to help ensure that more nutrient-rich foods are available;
  • Increase accessibility of produce to a broader group of people; or
  • Increase demand for produce by expanding awareness and appreciation for the health benefits of fruits and vegetables, including tree nuts and potatoes.

Information on the award and the award requirements

Click here to submit an entry electronically. All entries must be submitted by January 8, 2016

View the official contest rules

For more information, contact Sonia Salas at (949) 885-2251.

FDA Webinar — Final Rules for FSVP and Third Party Auditors

November 19th, 2015

FDA is holding a webinar next week on Wednesday November 23, 2015, on the Final Rules for the Foreign Supplier Verification Program (FSVP) and Third Party Auditors. These rules make importers accountable for the safety of the food they bring into the U.S.

Webinar Details

Monday, November 23, 2015
10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. EST (please connect by 9:45 a.m.)
Final Rules for Foreign Supplier Verification Program (FSVP) and Third Party Auditors
 

Agenda

Welcome 
Moderator Kari Barrett, Office of Foods & Veterinary Medicine

The New Import Paradigm under FSMA
Sharon Mayl, Senior Advisor for Policy, Office of Foods & Veterinary Medicine

Presentation on the FSVP Final Rule 
Brian Pendleton, Senior Policy Advisor, Office of Policy

Presentation on the Third-Party Auditors Final Rule
Charlotte Christin, Senior Policy Advisor, Office of Foods & Veterinary Medicine (on-detail)

Questions & Answers
Moderator Kari Barrett, Office of Foods & Veterinary Medicine

To view the slide presentation during the webinar:
https://www.mymeetings.com/emeet/join/index.jsp?customHeader=mymeetings&netId=PW5836233&netPass=FSMA&netType=conference&acceptTerms=on  

Slides from each webinar will be available for download. Recordings will be made available for each webinar.

If you have questions on the webinars, please contact Catherine McDermott. For questions regarding FSMA or any of the FINAL rules, please contact Sonia Salas at (949) 885-2251.

USDA Announces Nearly $5 Million in Farm to School Program Grants

November 19th, 2015

The United States Department of Agriculture recently announced $4.8 million in grants for 74 projects spanning 39 states that support the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) efforts to connect child nutrition programs with local farmers and ranchers through its Farm to School Program.

“Farm to school programs work—for schools, for producers, and for communities,” said USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack. “By serving nutritious and locally grown foods, engaging students in hands-on lessons, and involving parents and community members, these programs provide children with a holistic experience that sets them up for a lifetime of healthy eating. With early results from our Farm to School Census indicating schools across the nation invested nearly $600 million in local products, farm to school also provides a significant and reliable market for local farmers and ranchers.”

The California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) took the opportunity today in its Planting Seeds blog to share information on California’s nine grant recipients who together will receive a total of $672,795.    

The USDA’s press release listed all grant recipients including, one recipient from Arizona and two from Colorado.

ACT NOW — Deadline to Purchase ACA Dashboard is December 1

November 25th, 2015

If you are interested in purchasing PCMI’s ACA Dashboard to help you with your Affordable Care Act (ACA) reporting requirements in 2016, please be aware that the last day for us to receive your signed proposal is next Tuesday, December 1, 2015.

Time is ticking and your window is closing on this service to help you with your IRS reporting requirements. Contact us today at (866) 930-7264 or [email protected] to learn more about the program or get a quote before time runs out.

PRESS RELEASE: Western Growers Urges Immediate Senate Action on Western Water Bill

November 5th, 2015
IRVINE, Calif. (October 27, 2015) — Statement by Western Growers President and CEO Tom Nassif urging the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee to act on Western drought legislation prior to the Thanksgiving recess:
 
“We join forces with more than 100 regional and state organizations – representing the spectrum of agricultural and urban and rural water users in the West – in calling for immediate Senate action on legislation aimed at alleviating the short- and long-term impacts of the drought gripping the Western states. While we are encouraged by several Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee hearings during the year, bill mark-up must occur before the Thanksgiving recess if any meaningful legislation is to be passed and signed into law before the end of the year. 
 
As part of a broader package benefitting the Western states, we want to bring attention to several requirements for California that must be included in the final bill. First, operational restrictions applied to the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta pumping plants must be loosened, within the limits of the Endangered Species Act rules, to allow more available water to reach family farms and the communities dependent on these businesses. This is time sensitive: With an average or wet winter predicted for California, this provision must be in place in time to prevent flood waters being wastefully directed out to sea. Secondly, excessive red-tape that prevents Western states from building additional surface water storage, including exhaustively-studied dams and reservoirs in California, must be cut and the process streamlined. Finally, this legislation must provide the federal government with greater flexibility in the funding of water infrastructure projects.
 
With multiple bills on the Western drought already introduced, the framework is in place to advance compromise legislation that addresses the needs of both agriculture and the environment. All that is left is for our elected leaders to take decisive action to ensure the future viability and prosperity of the West.”

Letter to  Chairwoman Murkowski, Ranking Member Cantwell, and Members of the Committee:

October 27, 2015

The Honorable Lisa Murkowski
Chairwoman
Senate Energy & Natural Resources Commitee
304 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510

The Honorable Maria Cantwell
Ranking Member
Senate Energy & Natural Resources Committee
304 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510

Dear Chairwoman Murkowski, Ranking Member Cantwell, and Members of the Committee:

We appreciate your leadership in conducting the Oct. 8, 2015, hearing on Western drought legislation. On behalf of the thousands of Western farmers, ranchers and businesses we represent, as well as the millions of urban, suburban and rural residents that our organizations collectively provide water to, we urge that Westerners in the Senate put aside partisan differences and work together to produce compromise legislation that can be passed by both the Senate and the House, and signed into law by the president this year.

Your committee can draw upon a strong foundation to create this legislation. Over the course of this year your committee has heard a multitude of bills that would address short, medium and long-term aspects of the drought both on a West-wide as well as state specific scale. Your October drought hearing looked at legislation that would impact New Mexico as well as two bills – H.R. 2898 (introduced by California Rep. David Valadao) and S. 1894 (introduced by California Sen. Dianne Feinstein) – that could have positive impacts in California and other Western states. Further strong leadership will be required in order to find consensus on this legislation intended to address the drought in California and across the West.

Water challenges in the West are significant and daunting. The Colorado River Basin has experienced the driest 15- year period since the 1960s with above-average flows in only three of the last 15 years.1 According to research evaluating tree rings the ongoing drought in California is the worst to hit the region since the 13th century.2 Drought conditions in the Pacific Northwest are the worst seen in decades with no end in sight. Drought also exacerbates already declining forest health, increases the risk and severity of devastating mega-fire and threatens the origin of water supplies for millions in the West.

In order to respond to current and future water shortages, Congress must provide federal agencies with more flexibility under existing environmental laws and regulations to encourage a more cooperative approach toward achieving multiple goals. And, where such flexibility currently exists in laws, Congress should demand that agencies use those flexibilities to act with the urgency and promptness that this drought crisis demands.

Western drought legislation should shift the regulation of water resources away from the current adversarial structure that regards agriculture as a harmful activity that must be minimized in order to maximize environmental benefits. We must move toward an approach that encourages cooperation and innovation to produce better results for both agriculture and the environment. This includes promoting the use of new technology in water management. Real-time monitoring and data collection can be used to more closely align water supply operations to actual fishery and environmental needs.

As a nation we must invest (and reinvest) in the Western water infrastructure necessary to meet current and future demands. Our existing water infrastructure in the West is aging and in need of rehabilitation. We need new water storage in order to adapt to a changing hydrology and develop usable and sustainable supplies to meet growing demands for water. Failing to improve infrastructure and expand useable supplies will inevitably result in more conflict as pressure grows to ‘solve’ urban and environmental water problems by taking water from agriculture.

Streamlining permitting processes and alignment of regulatory agencies will help increase water storage and improve water management. The federal government can continue to be a partner in solving these water problems in the West by using financing mechanisms that have a very low cost to the Treasury and make water resources investment more attractive and affordable for non-federal interests.

Both H.R. 2898 and S. 1894 are intended to address counter-productive regulatory practices and expedite new water storage projects, and both measures would facilitate the use of water management tools such as voluntary transfers. While the House and Senate bills take sometimes starkly different approaches to achieving their common goals, these differences should not be irreconcilable for members of Congress working together to bring effective relief to the West as quickly as possible.

While many of the above ideas are found in the separate bills your committee has heard, multiple competing bills are of no help to the drought-stricken West. We need the committee to bring these ideas together in a single, effective compromise bill that can be signed into law before the end of the year. We’re counting on you to work together to make that happen. We’re counting on you to ensure that Western water users have every tool available to survive and recover from the current drought and to prepare for the hard, dry years that the future may hold.

We stand ready to assist you in any way that leads to a unified legislative response to the critical drought crisis our communities are facing.

Sincerely,

National and Regional Organizations
American Farm Bureau Federation
Family Farm Alliance
Klamath Water Users Association (CALIFORNIA / OREGON)
National Cattlemen’s Beef Association
National Onion Association
National Potato Council
National Water Resources Association
Northwest Horticultural Council
Pacific Northwest Vegetable Association
Public Lands Council
Rocky Mountain Farmers Union Rural & Agriculture Council of America
United Fresh Produce Association
Western Alfalfa Seed Growers Association
Western Agricultural Processors Association
Western Growers Association
Western Plant Health Association

Arizona
Agribusiness & Water Council of Arizona
Arizona Cotton Growers Association
Arizona Farm Bureau
Arizona Nursery Association
Salt River Project
United Dairymen of Arizona
Wellton-Mohawk Irrigation and Drainage District

California
African American Farmers of California
Agricultural Council of California
American Pistachio Growers
Almond Hullers and Processors Association
Association of California Egg Farmers
Association of California Water Agencies
California Agricultural Irrigation Association
California Alfalfa & Forage Association
California Association of Wheat Growers
California Bean Shippers Association
California Cattlemen’s Association
California Chamber of Commerce
California Citrus Mutual
California Cotton Ginners Association
California Cotton Growers Association
California Farm Bureau Federation
California Forestry Association
California Fresh Fruit Association
California Grain and Feed Association
California League of Food Processors
California Milk Producers Council
California Pear Growers Association
California Seed Association
California State Floral Association
California Warehouse Association
California Women for Agriculture
Central Valley Project Water Association
Friant North Authority
Friant Water Authority
Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District
Nisei Farmers League
North Bay Water Reuse Authority
Northern California Water Association
Pacific Egg & Poultry Association
San Joaquin River Exchange Contractors Water Authority
San Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Authority
Santa Ynez River Water Conservation District, ID No.1
Sonoma County Water Agency
South Valley Water Association
Tehama-Colusa Canal Authority
United Ag
Valley Ag Water Coalition

Colorado
Colorado Association of Conservation Districts
Colorado Association of Wheat Growers
Colorado Cattlemen’s Association
Colorado Corn Growers Association
Colorado Dairy Farmers
Colorado Farm Bureau Colorado Fruit and Vegetable Growers Association Colorado Onion Growers Association Colorado Pork Producers Council Colorado Potato Administrative Committee Colorado State Grange Dolores Water Conservancy District Fulton Irrigation Ditch
Northern Colorado Water Conservancy District Southwestern Water Conservation District

Idaho
Idaho Farm Bureau
Idaho Oregon Fruit and Vegetable Association
Idaho Potato Commission
Idaho Water Users Association

Kansas
Kansas Water Congress

Montana
Montana Farm Bureau

Nebraska
Central Nebraska Public Power and Irrigation District
Nebraska State Irrigation Association

Nevada
Nevada Cattlemen’s Association
Nevada Farm Bureau
Truckee-Carson Irrigation District

New Mexico
Elephant Butte Irrigation District
Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District
New Mexico Farm Bureau

Oregon
Deschutes Basin Board of Control
Oregon Association of Nurseries
Oregon Cattlemen’s Association
Oregon Dairy Farmers Association
Oregon Farm Bureau
Oregon Potato Commission
Oregon Seed Council
Oregon Water Resources Congress
Oregonians for Food and Shelter

Utah
Davis and Weber Counties Canal Company
North Ogden Irrigation Company
Ogden River Water Rights Committee
Ogden River Water Users’ Association
South Ogden Conservation District
Utah Farm Bureau
Utah Water Conservancy District
Utah Water Users Association
Weber-Box Elder Conservation District
Weber River Water Users Association

Washington
Columbia Basin Development League
Hop Growers of Washington
Washington Asparagus Commission
Washington Association of Wheat Growers
Washington Blueberry Commission
Washington Cattle Feeders Association
Washington Farm Bureau
Washington Friends of Farms & Forests
Washington Mint Growers Association
Washington Red Raspberry Commission
Washington State Council of Farmer Cooperatives
Washington State Grape Society
Washington State Hay Growers Association
Washington State Potato Commission
Yakima Basin Joint Board

Wyoming
Wyoming Association of Conservation Districts
Wyoming Farm Bureau
Wyoming Stock Growers Association

cc:
Senator John McCain
Senator Barbara Boxer
Senator Dianne Feinstein
Senator Michael Bennett
Senator Michael Crapo
Senator Jon Tester
Senator Dean Heller
Senator Harry Reid
Senator Tom Udall
Senator Jeff Merkley
Senator Orrin Hatch
Senator Patty Murray
Senator Michael Enzi

Citations
1 US Bureau of Reclamation, “US Bureau of Reclamation Upper Colorado Region,” 11 July 2014. [Online]. Available: http://www.usbr.gov/uc/water/crsp/cs/gcd.html.

2 Evidence Suggests California’s Drought is the Worst in 1,200 Year, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, News Release, Dec. 14, 2014 found at http://www.whoi.edu/news-release/California-drought.

About Western Growers:
Founded in 1926, Western Growers represents local and regional family farmers growing fresh produce in Arizona, California and Colorado. Our members and their workers provide half the nation’s fresh fruits, vegetables and tree nuts, including nearly half of America’s fresh organic produce. For generations we have provided variety and healthy choices to consumers.

                                                                          ###

PRESS RELEASE: PRESS CALL WEDNESDAY: Conservative Leaders Show Depth of Support for Immigration Reform

November 5th, 2015
WASHINGTON, D.C., (October 27, 2015) —  In advance of the House Republicans’ election for the next speaker and the GOP presidential debate in Boulder, conservative leaders are joining a telephonic press conference on Wednesday to voice their support for immigration reform.

These national and local leaders are remaining focused on the long-term need for immigration reform and voicing their deep conservative support for candidates and members of Congress to move forward with a responsible, humane conversation on immigration.

WHAT:    Telephonic press call with conservative leaders to underscore the need for a responsible conversation on the need for immigration reform.

WHO:     Rev. Randy Buursma, Pastor of First Christian Reformed Church in Grand Rapids, Mich.
Barrett Duke, Vice President for Public Policy and Research, Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention
James Lopez, Division Chief (Retired), Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department
Tom Nassif, President and CEO of the Western Growers Association
Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, President of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference
    
WHEN:     11 a.m. ET Wednesday, Oct. 28

WHERE:     1-888-219-1412; Conference ID: 2174170  

                               ###

PRESS RELEASE: Western Growers Supports Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement; Nassif applauds deal as beneficial for U.S. fresh produce growers

November 5th, 2015
IRVINE, Calif. (November 5, 2015) — Today, negotiators released the entire text of the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) Agreement. The agreement, once implemented, addresses two issues of particular concern to the fresh produce industry.
 
In response to the text release, Western Growers President and CEO Tom Nassif issued the following statement:
 
“I applaud U.S. negotiators for crafting a deal that benefits the fresh produce industry. This agreement, most importantly, strengthens the consistent and scientifically based enforcement of Sanitary and Phytosanitary measures among TPP partners. The effectiveness of new mechanisms TPP provides for producer recourse when unfair SPS measures are imposed will be the greatest indication of TPP’s long term success for the fresh produce industry.
 
Additionally, the increased market access this agreement provides into significant markets such as Japan, and the new agreements it creates with emerging export markets like Malaysia, New Zealand, and Vietnam, is a good opportunity for U.S. producers. The United States faces a trade deficit in the produce sector. Without expanded export opportunities, the balance of trade will only get worse.
 
Farming is a risky business, one dependent upon Mother Nature and worsened this year by the parched earth throughout the western United States. Exporting products to eager foreign markets allow farmers to soften those risks. In the years farmers produce a large crop, they sell first in the United States and the rest to buyers in other countries. In some years, the export market may be the only hedge between profit and loss.”

About Western Growers:
Founded in 1926, Western Growers represents local and regional family farmers growing fresh produce in Arizona, California and Colorado. Our members and their workers provide half the nation’s fresh fruits, vegetables and tree nuts, including nearly half of America’s fresh organic produce. For generations we have provided variety and healthy choices to consumers.

                                                                 ###

Lessons from the Pope

November 4th, 2015

Although I am an ordained deacon in the Antiochian Orthodox Church, I am observant of the wisdom offered by religious leaders of many other denominations.  Oftentimes, the spiritual guidance provided by leaders of different faiths tenders valuable insight into our own personal conduct, as well as the character of our social institutions.  This was most certainly true during Pope Francis’ recent visit to the United States, which included stops in Washington, D.C., New York, and Philadelphia.  During his six-day trip, the Bishop of Rome shared moments of profoundness that should provoke some soul searching among our elected leaders.  I would like to highlight one theme of particular importance that emerged during his time in our country.

While in Washington, D.C., Pope Francis became the first pontiff ever to appear before a joint meeting of Congress.  This historic address generated perhaps the greatest media buzz during his trip, and not just because he brought then-Speaker John Boehner and Senator Marco Rubio to tears.  In his speech, Pope Francis covered a wide-range of politically divisive topics, including immigration, religious liberty, environmental protection, social justice and the sanctity of human life.  Nonetheless, almost to a person, members of Congress from both parties took to social media to post photos of the Pope and join in the chorus of praise for his wisdom.  They all wanted to be seen in the center of this historic event.  The question is, will the Pope’s message have a shelf life of more than a week?

We would be wise to remember the main point of the Pope’s message.  Juxtaposed in his call to action on moral issues was an impassioned plea for both unity and action among politicians, as one is insufficient without the other.  Pope Francis rightly noted that the “challenges facing us today call for a renewal of that spirit of cooperation, which has accomplished so much good throughout the history of the United States.”  Continuing on, he reminded our representatives that their responsibility as members of Congress is to enable our country, through their legislative activity, “to grow as a nation.”  Note that Pope Francis didn’t say, “legislative inactivity.”

So, why are our political leaders not accomplishing much good today?  Why are we seeing discord among our representatives?  In short, because of the growing ideological rigidity found in both parties. With many Republicans and Democrats pandering to their respective fringes, the spirit of compromise that has allowed our country to become a “shining city upon a hill” is on life support.  On some of the most intractable issues that demand action by Congress, our politicians must rediscover the courage that has, on so many occasions in our nation’s history, allowed legislators on all sides to lead their constituents to embrace beneficial compromise rather than to be led by them into a stalemate of endless partisan warfare.

I believe that if we are to make America great again, our elected leaders must approach their office in a manner described by Pope Francis, seeking pragmatic compromise where persistent inaction is inexcusable.  This almost certainly means some element of bipartisan accord to help our nation and its people grow.  As we know so well, nowhere is this leadership more urgently needed than on the issue of immigration.  All members of Congress know that to accomplish immigration reform—including border security—will require support on both sides of the aisle.  So if our politicians agree that reform is necessary, then they must take a leap of faith and cooperate.

Growing the Perfect Citrus Variety

November 4th, 2015

CA Member

Tom Mulholland

Mulholland Citrus

Member Since 2001

Family Background: Many books have been written about William Mulholland, who is largely responsible for bringing water to parched Los Angeles County more than a century ago.  He was the head of a predecessor to the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and responsible for building the city water infrastructure and providing a water supply that allowed the city to grow into one of the largest in the world.  Mulholland designed and supervised the building of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, a 233-mile-long system to move water from Owens Valley to the San Fernando Valley.  Tom Mulholland is the fourth generation and the only male left in this lineage.

 

The Origins of Mulholland Citrus: Perry Mulholland was a son of William and the grandfather of Tom.  He started the Mulholland Orchard Company with about 400 acres in the San Fernando Valley in the 1930s, which is where his son Richard grew up and lived as a child.  When the urbanization of Los Angeles County edged into the ranch in the 1950s, Richard moved to Orange Cove where the land was cheap and the open space was huge.  “Dad’s vision has come true but the landscape changed with the nearly 100 percent coverage of all the properties,” said Tom, which was brought about by the Central Valley water project.

Richard Mulholland planted citrus groves and started a citrus nursery.  “At the age of 10, I started my own nursery in 4-H as the expansion of the Orange Cove area developed with all the farmers needing the new citrus trees.  Dad had his nursery where I learned how to germinate citrus seed.  Later my responsibilities spread to tractor and wind machine jobs.”

When he started college in the early ‘70s, Tom said he was a “hippie and no way was I going to return to the farm and do the hard work.”  He focused on the environmental issues and got a degree in Urban Planning.  But after college, he helped his father put in a drip irrigation system.  “This was the one time we worked side by side and installed pipelines and filters doing all the work ourselves.  Well, I never left.  His innovation by installing permanent drip irrigation was at the beginning of this farming revolution, displaying great respect to his generation of the Mulholland family.  He was the first to bring wind machines into the valley citrus industry.”

Tom Mulholland soon planted his own grove and has been germinating new citrus seed ever since.

 

An Expanding Citrus Industry: Tom remembered that “during the 1960s, scientists were really looking into the world of citrus with intent to understand disease, horticultural practices, i.e. rootstock choices and varietal selections.  Florida was always the juice citrus growing capital but California had the fresh fruit-growing climate.  Sweet oranges were the predominant choice such as Valencia and Washington navel.  Lemons were desirable and grew in some California climate zones while grapefruit was still a Florida fruit.”

By the early 1980s, Spain started its citrus expansion programs with mandarins from the newly-discovered clementine and perfected the culture, while California expanded its acreage of navels with newer varieties.

 

The Origin of the W. Murcott: Tom was very interested in the European and interested in finding a mandarin that could grow in California.  “At the time we only had a USDA selection called a minneola for the late season.  Dr. Bill Bitters, an important scientist at UC Riverside, brought Satsuma mandarin into California from Japan in the early ‘60s, which developed into a marginal market.”

But in the early 1980s, Tom recalls that Dr. Bitters made a citrus budwood exchange with Morocco.  The Afourer/W.Murcott happened to be one selection given to the U.S. without any restrictions.  The variety went through the Citrus Clonal Protection Program where it was “cleaned up” and placed in the foundation block in Lindcove.  “It was here that during an evaluation I saw the merit of the fruit and from then on developed it as quickly as possible.”

 

Mulholland’s Claim to Fame: Other major farming companies at that time pursued the early clementine and developed their brands around the navels, but Mulholland launched the “Delite” brand around the Afourer/W.Murcott, and launched the easy peel industry that was to follow.  “I continued to propagate, plant and ultimately introduced the fruit to the retail market,” he said.

At the same time, the Moroccan government patented the variety in Europe and got plant protection and received further protection in South Africia.  “They actually have a patent in the USA but due to the reason that I had already commercialized the variety it was and still has not been contested.”

The variety continued to be developed in California and it eventually became known as the Cutie by a couple of the world’s largest produce growers and marketers.  “Delite was first but stood out in a second position in relative terms,” he said.

Meanwhile, he said another plant breeder in Riverside used new technology to sterilize the Afourer/W.Murcott.  Through budwood radiation and subsequent fruit evaluation, a seedless selection was discovered.  The California Citrus Research Board released the new Tango variety to the industry, which Mulholland said is now the most propagated and used variety in new plantings.

 

Mulholland Citrus Today: Mulholland citrus continues to grow and be a leader in the areas of citrus selections, citrus propagation and orchard development.  “We have also been on the leading edge of citrus packing equipment and food safety procedures,” Tom said.  “The difficult areas are how to continue in the current environments of worker needs and balance with extreme water shortage situations along with land use and management practices to continue to be good stewards of the greatest growing grounds in the world.”

He revealed that Mulholland Citrus has been on the cutting edge of lower pesticide use “using the IPM models and general good sense.  We have been supplying the industry with Aphytis melinus for the past 30 years as a major beneficial insect in thwarting the California red scale problem.  Safe food is paramount from our orchards.”

 

Western Growers Connection: “Western Growers has proven to be an organization that takes on any legislative problem as it occurs.  Somehow people in government get notions from partly told truths and make drastic decisions.  We need an empowering body that will see the issue and at least create the time to bring all sources of information forward in order to make educated and reasonable rules or regulations.  The teamwork of WG is awesome in that they have brought in an intellectually sound and understanding body of people to operate in an informational world that is so much driven by sound bites.”

 

Agriculture’s Future: “Change is inevitable from water monitoring to nitrogen use to air quality to worker safety etc.  We have to accept this,” he said.  “There are balances that are now in extreme tensions and we can see the uses and misuses as time allows a few to determine the future of the masses.  Jared Diamond believes the overuse of the natural resources will be the demise of future generations and he has documented some examples.  We need to be sure Western Growers is a controlled example of a long-term solution and not a whim of current problems.  The people drawn to WG are the brightest and most forward thinking in the industry.  This is the greatest attribute to WG.  Used wisely, we can continue our agriculture and ‘sustain’ in a mesmerized way.”

 

The Company’s future: “Keeping the generations on track is not an expectation but a reward,” he said.  “Heather (his daughter) is here and will be the future of Mulholland Citrus as my term is adjusted.  She will have learned from one of the best citrus legacies but it is her option what will happen.”

Mulholland Citrus currently markets its navels through Sunkist and its mandarins through The Wonderful Company and its Halo brand.  “We must keep all options open and know that tomorrow will be different than today.  Mulholland will find the next new variety because that is what we do.  There will be more change to come…stay tuned.”

 

PRESIDENTIAL POLITICS: A Year Out: Immigration Issues Leading the Debate

November 4th, 2015

By Tim Linden

 

Largely because of Donald Trump’s surprising lead in the polls and his brash comments about Mexicans, the issue of immigration has been front and center in the early debates for the 2016 presidential election.

Though the agricultural community—Western Growers in particular—has been fighting for immigration reform to be dealt with for many years, this latest attention is not really what the industry has had in mind.  Many of the candidates have been trying to out-trump Trump by talking tough and continually emphasizing border security.  Rather than thoughtfully suggesting solutions to the two most important issues—America’s falsely-documented working class and the continuing need for immigrant labor—most of the rhetoric are sound bites urging an unrealistic kick-them-out philosophy.

With several months before the first primaries and one year until the general election, we present here the views of those running for the highest office in the land.  On the Democrat side, we have limited participation to the top two announced candidates—Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders.  On the Republican side, we limited participation to the top contenders, according to a compilation of polls on Oct. 11.  We arbitrarily put the cut-off line at 3 percent, which meant seven contenders qualified, listed here with their poll numbers in parenthesis:  Donald Trump (23.7%), Ben Carson (18.4), Marco Rubio (9.9), Carly Fiorina (8.9), Jeb Bush (7.1), Ted Cruz (6.7) and John Kasisch (3.3).

In presenting each candidate’s views on immigration reform, what to do with undocumented people currently in the United States, border security and a guest worker program, we tried to use their own words, taken from their official websites, published interviews, bylined columns or YouTube sound bites.

We suspect that movement on this issue will change over time, especially when the two parties pick their nominees and those two standard-bearers do the normal dance moving toward the middle to appeal to more voters.  This information represents our best summarization of where the candidates stand one year out on the most important issue for production agriculture.

 

REPUBLICANS

 

Donald Trump

Trump has been talking about immigration with several inflammatory statements since he first began campaigning.  His website articulates his viewpoints.

The three core principles of Trump’s immigration plan from his website

1. A nation without borders is not a nation.  There must be a wall across the southern border.

2. A nation without laws is not a nation.  Laws passed in accordance with our constitutional system of government must be enforced.

3. A nation that does not serve its own citizens is not a nation.  Any immigration plan must improve jobs, wages and security for all Americans.

Trump believes Mexico should pay for building the wall.  He said the flow of Mexicans into the United States has been a very costly endeavor with U.S. taxpayers picking up the tab on hundreds of billions of dollars in healthcare costs, housing costs, education costs, welfare costs, etc.  He believes the impact on unemployment and crime has been very significant.  “In short, the Mexican government has taken the United States to the cleaners.  They are responsible for this problem, and they must help pay to clean it up,” he writes on his website.  “Mexico must pay for the wall and, until they do, the United States will, among other things: impound all remittance payments derived from illegal wages; increase fees on all temporary visas issued to Mexican CEOs and diplomats (and if necessary cancel them); increase fees on all border crossing cards …and increase fees at ports of entry to the United States from Mexico.”

He also calls for the tripling of the number of Immigration and Customs Enforcement offices, nationwide E-Verify, and the ending of birthright citizenship.  He believes the influx of foreign workers holds down salaries, keeps unemployment high, and makes it difficult for poor and working class Americans to earn a middle class wage.

Trump advocates increasing the prevailing wage for H-1Bs, but believes applications for foreign workers should be mailed to unemployment offices so that Americans can be hired first.  “Before any new green cards are issued to foreign workers abroad, there will be a pause where employers will have to hire from the domestic pool of unemployed immigrant and native workers.  This will help reverse women’s plummeting workplace participation rate, grow wages, and allow record immigration levels to subside to more moderate historical averages.”

 

Ben Carson

He has seven issues that he expounds upon on his website but none of them are immigration reform.  He did byline an article on the subject in the National Review in Nov. of 2014, which forms the basis for this review.

“We have all heard it said many times that America is a land of immigrants—some voluntary and some involuntary, but immigrants nevertheless.  We have plenty of space in our country, but insufficient resources to support everyone who wants to come here…

“It is time for Congress to act, and to do so in a bipartisan fashion that engenders the confidence of the American people.  There are many common-sense prescriptions within reach of our government.  It is time to seize them…

“Right now, we have very porous borders and unenthusiastic and inconsistent enforcement of immigration laws.  Further incentives for illegal immigration are easy enrollment in public schools, easy employment for those willing to take jobs others don’t want, easy access to health care and easy acquisition of public support through welfare programs.  Yet this population cannot participate in the formal workforce, which means they cannot contribute fully to their local economies.  Any discussion of immigration reform should include bipartisan solutions that both address the undocumented population here today and discourage illegal immigration going forward…

“A national guest-worker program makes sense and seems to work well in Canada. Non-citizens would have to apply for a guest-worker permit and have a guaranteed job awaiting them.  Taxes would be paid at a rate commensurate with other U.S. workers, and special visas would allow for easy entry and egress across borders.  Guest-worker status would be granted to individuals and not to groups.  People already here illegally could apply for guest-worker status from outside of the country.  This means they would have to leave first.  They should in no way be rewarded for having broken our laws, but if they are wise, they will arrange with their employer before they leave to immediately offer them a legal job as soon as their application is received.  When they return, they still would not be U.S. citizens, but they would be legal, and they would be paying taxes.  Only jobs that are vacant as a result of a lack of interest by American citizens should be eligible for the guest-worker program.  In return for greater certainty on immigration, employers must bear some responsibility for making sure that no illegal immigrants are hired.  Employers who break the rules should receive swift, severe, and consistent punishment that constitutes a real deterrent and not a mere inconvenience.  A second infraction should be a criminal offense and treated as such…

“We must create a system that disincentivizes illegal immigration and upholds the rule of law while providing us with a steady stream of immigrants from other nations who will strengthen our society.  Let’s solve the problem and stop playing political football.”

 

Sen. Marco Rubio

Sen. Rubio has been identified with the issue for many years in Congress.  He co-authored a Senate bill on the subject and has talked about immigration reform in many interviews, which are mostly quoted from here.

Often Sen. Rubio has said he supports comprehensive reform, but believes it will have to be accomplished through individual bills instead of a larger legislative package, noting “the votes aren’t there” for the comprehensive approach.

Rubio has said that the United States has to deal with immigration.  “We have a broken enforcement system on immigration.  We have a legal immigration system that’s outdated and needs to be modernized so we can win the global competition for talent.  We have millions of people living in this country illegally, many of whom have been here for a decade or longer.  We need to find a reasonable but responsible way of incorporating them into American life.  Last year we tried to do that through a one-size-fits-all comprehensive approach; it didn’t work.”

He believes the situation on the border is “unsustainable.”

Rubio believes in strict border security and a universal E-Verify system.  He also believes the entry/exit tracking system needs to be overhauled “because 40 percent of illegal immigrants are people that came legally and they overstayed.”

He believes that illegal residents should be forced to leave the country and apply for legal status through legal channels.  Rubio’s Senate bill did support a guest worker program for agriculture.

In a 2014 speech to a Hispanic group, he said: “The people who are against illegal immigration and make that the core of their argument view it only as a law and order issue.  But we know it’s much more than that.  Yes, it is a law and order issue, but it’s also a human issue.  These are real people.  These are human beings who have children, and hopes and dreams.  These are people that are doing what virtually any of us would do if our children were hungry, if their countries were dangerous, if they had no hope for their future.”

In his book, he argued that English is the de facto official language and the United States should recognize that as its official language.  He argued that “knowledge of English is necessary to the economic progress and social assimilation.”

 

Carly Fiorina

Fiorina’s campaign website does contain several statements on the immigration issue, but she has not talked extensively about the subject.

Fiorina emphasizes the need to secure the U.S. borders with Mexico and Canada.  “It’s not rocket science to do it, we just haven’t done it, northern borders and southern borders.  I think we need to fix the legal immigration system, which has been broken for decades, under both Republicans and Democrats.  You know we talk about it but somehow it never gets done.”

She is opposed to giving citizenship to those who have come to the United States illegally.  “My own view is, if you have come here illegally and stayed here illegally, that you don’t get a pass to citizenship.”

On further questioning, she said “Well, I think legal status is a possibility for sure.  I think their children maybe can become citizens.  But my own view is, it isn’t fair to say to people who have played by the rules—and it takes a long time to play by the rules—that, you know, it just doesn’t matter.”

She believes the use of technology is superior to building a wall to curb illegal immigration.

With regard to a guest worker program, she has said it must be crafted “intelligently” and she has admitted using H-1B when she was CEO of Hewlett Packard, however, she has no position statement on the subject.

 

JEB BUSH

Bush has long been identified as the Republican candidate that is most moderate on the immigration issue.  In this campaign season, Bush has reiterated his belief in immigration reform, saying that his plan “also includes a path to legal status.”

He has noted his differences on this subject to many within the Republican Party.  Though he prioritizes security along the nation’s border, he believes the GOP could also broker an agreement on other immigration reform possibilities, including some path to legal status for the 11 million people already here.  “Let’s do it.  Let’s control the border.  There’s nothing wrong with that.  There’s nothing that holds back the Republicans from putting a comprehensive plan in place to do it,” he has said.

He recently was in South Texas talking about the issue: “I spent time with local civic, law enforcement and political leaders in the border communities near McAllen, Texas.  It was a good discussion and I learned a great deal about the challenges they face.  On the border, people know firsthand the realities of our broken immigration system.”

He noted that he was opposed to any idea (put forth by other candidates) that boils down to the “mass deportation of 11 million people at a cost of as much as $600 billion, massive new federal powers to step on the civil liberties of ordinary Americans, and a border plan that could be best described as a fantasy.”

He continued:  “That plan is not something a small-government conservative would put forward.  It requires the federal government to manage the exorbitantly expensive mass deportation of millions of people.  It also requires a massive public works project unlike anything we’ve seen since the construction of the Hoover Dam.”

He also said he was opposed to plans that would “punish legal trade and commerce between the U.S. and Mexico” which he believes “would devastate border cities” that depend on that trade.

Bush has authored a book titled “Immigration Reform: Forging an American Solution.”  He says the book “relies on a different way of thinking. I rely on insights from people who live on the borders—as well as people who deal with the immigration issue in our schools, businesses and communities.”

He calls for securing the border as well as “a practical solution to the status of the 11 million people here illegally today.  We need a vigorous path to earned legal status where people are required to learn English, pay a fine and taxes, pass a criminal background check, work and not receive federal government benefits.”

Bush is generally considered a proponent of guest worker programs.

 

TED CRUZ

As the son of a Cuban immigrant, Sen. Cruz celebrates legal immigration, but has not shown an affinity for those who have entered the United States through non-legal channels.

His quotations on the subject include the following:  “Americans, and particularly Texans, have witnessed the harmful effects of an unsecure border, endangering the lives both of citizens and those who enter illegally.  President Obama’s policies have encouraged drug smugglers, child abusers, murderers, and other dangerous criminals to traffic immigrant children into our nation under life-threatening conditions.  In the summer of 2013 we witnessed a humanitarian crisis at our Southern Border, propelled by promises of amnesty from the White House.  Immigrants deserve a better system in which they will be welcomed to the United States safely and with dignity.”

In 2014, Sen. Cruz proposed legislation to prevent the President from expanding amnesty.  A similar bill was passed by the house of representatives but did not get through the Senate.  In 2013, Sen. Cruz proposed amendments to an immigration reform bill that would strengthen border security, expand green card opportunities, increase highly-skilled “H1B” visas, prevent illegal aliens from receiving welfare benefits, and enforce the rule of law.

When discussing guest worker programs, Sen. Cruz typically supports those involving highly-skilled technical workers without saying much about the type of guest worker program agriculture supports and needs.

 

John Kasich

As Governor of Ohio, Kasich has been relatively silent on immigration reform.  Ohio was one of the state’s challenging President Obama’s executive actions on immigration but he did not individually speak out on the issue.  Since announcing his run for the presidency he has clarified some of his positions.

In November 2014 at a forum for Republicans, he said, “My sense is I don’t like the idea of citizenship when people jump the line, [but] we may have to do it… Everybody in this country has to feel as though they have an opportunity.”

At one point, within the past six months, he said he would rather not offer such immigrants a path to citizenship, but noted that it needs to be an option on the table to open negotiations.  “If they’re law-abiding and they register, I think they ought to be able to stay… They may have to pay a penalty. … You don’t ditch the line … and if you do, you don’t get rewarded for it.”

He tends to argue for border security but allows that it would be virtually impossible to deport the roughly 11-12 million people without documentation currently living in the United States.  He advocates that these people pay a fine, but “I’m not for putting them on a school bus, driving them to the border, opening the door and telling them to get out.”

His most recent comments on the subject came in October at a Q&A session hosted by the United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.  Kasich did advocate a desire to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, but broke ranks with other GOP hopefuls on the concept of challenging birthright citizenship.  “We’re not going to change the 14th Amendment.  If you’re born here, you’re a citizen.  Period.  End of story.”

During that same meeting he also spoke about a guest worker program.  “I believe we ought to have an effective guest worker program.  I think people ought to be able to come in and work and be able to go back home.  I just don’t think you want to reward people who do the jump.”

 

THE DEMOCRATS

By and large, the Democrats favor immigration reform and a path to legalization, but there are some differences.

 

Hillary Clinton

On her website, Clinton spells out her views on the main topics of immigration reform, which are quoted from below.

On a fair and just immigration system:  Every family should feel like they belong in this country.  Instead of breaking up law-abiding immigrant families who have enriched America for years, Hillary will offer them a path to citizenship.”

On comprehensive immigration reform: The American people support comprehensive immigration reform—not just because it is the right thing to do, but because it strengthens families, our economy, and our country.  Congress must pass comprehensive immigration reform that provides a path to citizenship, treats every person with dignity, upholds the rule of law, protects our borders and national security, and brings millions of hardworking people into the formal economy.”

On defending executive actions: Hillary will defend President Obama’s executive actions on immigration from partisan attacks that would put DREAMers at risk of deportation.  And if Congress continues to refuse to act, she will do everything possible under the law to go further.  She will put in place a simple, straightforward, accessible way for parents of DREAMers and others with a history of service and contribution to their communities to make their case and be eligible for the same deferred action as their children.”

On conducting humane, common-sense enforcement:  Immigration enforcement must be more humane, more targeted, and more effective.  We will focus our limited resources on those individuals who pose a violent threat to public safety.  Hillary will also phase out private immigrant detention centers.”

There is no mention of her stance on a guest worker program, but she broached the subject when running for the presidency in 2008.  At that time, she was opposed to a general guest worker program but supported carving out a “special program” for agriculture.  She defended that position stating: “This is a sector of the economy that over decades has been demonstrated to be very difficult to attract legal workers.  That is not true yet in the hotel industry and the hospitality industry.  So I would like to solve what is clearly a shortage-of-labor problem in the agricultural sector.  I’d like to see it be a part of comprehensive immigration reform.  In the absence of that, what’s happening is that farmers in California are starting to move their production facilities to Mexico and Latin American.  It’s going to be a lose-lose for us if we don’t get that agricultural problem fixed.”

 

BERNIE SANDERS

Senator Sanders was criticized early after his announced candidacy for not having an immigration reform policy.  He has since clarified his views on the topic.

He has announced that as President, he would push for immigration reform and go even further than President Barack Obama in expanding deportation relief.  As President he would use executive action to give deportation relief to the parents of U.S. citizens, legal permanent residents and so-called Dreamers.

“Despite the central role that undocumented workers play in our economy and in our daily lives, these workers are too often reviled by many for political gain and shunted into the shadows.  Let me be very clear as to where I stand.  It is time for this disgraceful situation to end.”

Sanders did support the comprehensive immigration reform bill that passed the Senate in 2013, as well as the never-passed Dream Act to provide legal status to undocumented young people who came to the United States as children.

Sanders is not a fan of guest worker programs, as he has said they could cost Americans their jobs and lead to lower wages.

In this discussion, he has focused on the exploitation of immigrants who “have been routinely cheated out of wages, held virtually captive by employers who have seized their documents, forced to live in unspeakably inhumane conditions and denied medical benefits for on-the-job injuries.”

Sanders has also said that another of his priorities is to ensure that workers are not exploited by employers who think their undocumented status will prevent them from speaking out.

Sanders is strongly in favor of legalization and citizenship for the current unauthorized immigrant population, which will raise wages and lift labor standards for all workers, and he’s against expanding U.S. temporary foreign worker programs, which he believes allow employers to exploit and underpay so-called guest workers.

It is Sanders’ strong advocacy of workers’ rights that clearly drives his views on immigration reform.  He believes that having eight million people working in the U.S. labor market without labor and employment rights puts downward pressure on the wages and working conditions of all workers.  His desire for legalization of the unauthorized population is consistent with his broader view that wages for workers in the United States should be higher.

BEYOND PACKAGING: Suite of Services Drives Sambrailo’s Growth

November 4th, 2015

Sambrailo Packaging Company has an impressive history in the produce industry dating back almost a full century.  But when Tom Byrne joined the third-generation, family-owned firm a couple of years ago as its vice president and general manager, he was equally impressed with the array of services provided by the packaging company.

He noted that the company was well-known as a provider of packaging, but the suite of services that it provided for its customers flew under the radar.  When he first arrived at Sambrailo as a veteran in the packaging industry, Byrne surveyed the firm’s customers to determine how they perceived the company.  Not surprisingly, most respondents focused in on the firm’s core product.

“They saw us as a packaging supplier, but we do so much more than that,” Byrne relayed.

Sambrailo has long been aligned with Driscoll’s Strawberry Associates and Byrne said the company has been fortunate enough to grow significantly over the years as Driscoll’s has grown the berry category to unprecedented heights.  And over the years, the packaging company has added many services in the packaging realm to aid Driscoll’s and its other customers.

“We go from design to development to issuance to the grower and everything in between,” Byrne said.

He added that in the “everything in between” catchall includes planning, forecasting, procurement, recycling, inventory management and production scheduling.

In a nutshell, or clamshell if you will, Byrne found that the company was well known for offering specific packaging configurations that it had designed, developed and manufactured, but not as well-known as an expert procurement manager for any packaging that a customer needs.

The Sambrailo executive explained that clamshell molds are very expensive, costing $100,000 to $250,000 for each mold.  No packaging company has every clamshell configuration for every situation.  But the Sambrailo team can work with the customer, identify their needs, procure the products necessary for those needs and warehouse them so they can handle inventory management.

Byrne said that while providing many of those services has been ongoing for decades and generations of growers and shipper customers, the company, guided by a strong and multi-faceted management team, has now formally packaged them under the Sambrailo Resource Management umbrella.  He said working with Driscoll’s for the past 70 years allowed “us to constantly up our game.”

He believes the packaging expertise that the firm now has within its four walls offers a great and efficient value proposition for its customers.  “For example, one of our employees, Tony Cadiente, has been here for 54 years…from wooden boxes to corrugated… from berry baskets to the invention of the clamshell.  He has worked with paper trays, injection molds and thermoformed plastics.  We are able to leverage his institutional knowledge to help our customers.”

Though Byrne acknowledges there could be a perception of bias when using a packaging manufacturer to buy competitive packaging, he said that is not the case.  Using his earlier explanation of the clamshell business, he said it is a foregone conclusion that no packaging company can have every item in that genre that a shipper needs.  It makes perfect business sense, he said, to use the expertise that Sambrailo has to make certain that the shipper is getting the best product possible for the intended use.  And it makes further sense for Sambrailo to utilize its resources in that arena—facilities, capital, expertise, buying leverage—to help its customers efficiently manage their packaging needs and find the right packaging solution for every situation.

Sambrailo, in fact, is improving its value proposition in the procurement and inventory management end of the packaging business by creating strategic partnerships with other suppliers to give it easier and greater access to a wider range of products.  He said these new alliances allow for increased production and delivery of packaging solutions from the United States, Mexico and Asia.

While the company is making a concerted effort to tout the “services” end of the business, it remains a major packaging manufacturer and supplier, especially in the clamshell sector.  Byrne said that clamshells continue to gain market share in many commodities including berries, tomatoes, grapes and other fruit.  The firm does most of its sales business with U.S.-based firms operating in California and Mexico.

Sambrailo is a leader in the industry with its lines of Mixim®, RunRite® and Go Greener!™ clamshells.  The Mixim packaging system improves air-flow and produces faster cooling, while RunRite clamshells are well-suited to blueberry production with the containers designed and engineered to run on high-speed packing lines with minimal down-time and product loss.  As such, the firm claims the packaging is the most efficient and cost-effective clamshell on the market.

The “Go Greener!” product line for organic growers was introduced in 2014 with clamshells made from 100 percent post-consumer recycled PET from clear and green beverage bottles.  These clamshells are a translucent green color and are instantly recognizable by organic consumers on the retail shelf.