Sustainability Metrics in Agriculture – Webinar

September 24th, 2020

Increasingly, the marketplace is demanding an accounting of sustainability practices, but how are you measuring and communicating stewardship in your operations? Western Growers, in partnership with the Stewardship Index for Specialty Crops (SISC) and SupplyShift, has developed a Stewardship Calculator, an advanced online tool and visualization platform that allows growers and supply chain partners to quantify their sustainability practices.

Join us for our Sustainability Metrics in Agriculture: New Online Stewardship Calculator webinar on Wednesday, October 21 from 11:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. PT. We will provide an overview of the SISC, discuss the importance of sustainability in growing operations, and offer a demonstration of the Stewardship Calculator, an online tool for assessing the following sustainability metrics:

  • Applied Water Use Efficiency
  • Simple Irrigation Efficiency
  • Habitat and Biodiversity
  • Energy Use
  • Nitrogen Use
  • Phosphorus Use
  • Soil Organic Matter
  • Food Loss

There will be a Q&A session following the presentation.

WEBINAR DETAILS

Sustainability Metrics in Agriculture: New Online Stewardship Calculator

Date: Wednesday, September 21, 2020

Time: 11:00 AM – 12:00 PM PDT

Speakers:

·       Alison Edwards, Director, Stewardship Index for Specialty Crops

·       Jamie Barsimantov, PhD, Co-Founder & COO, Supplyshift

·       Marlene Hanken, Data Programs Analyst, Western Growers

Click here to register

CA Legislature Rejects Single-use Plastic Bills

September 1st, 2020

California lawmakers rejected a measure yesterday that would have created the nation’s strictest statewide regulations on single-use plastics. If passed, companion bills SB 54 (Allen) and AB 1080 (Gonzalez) would have phased out single-use plastics – including items such as plastic bags, film packaging and produce bags – which would have created extraordinary challenges for the agriculture industry.

After AB 1080 passed the Senate on Sunday, SB 54 fell four votes shy of passing the Assembly Monday night.

Western Growers (WG) and the California Farm Bureau Federation were the chief ag organization that lobbied against the bill. In particular, we wish to thank all of our members who responded to our Action Alert. Your collective outreach made a difference.

Additionally, WG would like to thank all the legislators who voted “no” or who abstained from voting on the bills. To see how each legislator voted, scroll through the images below.

For additional information on the bills and Western Growers’ efforts, read the Floor Alert here.

California to Phase Out Gas-Powered Cars by 2035

September 24th, 2020

Governor Gavin Newsom has issued an executive order requiring that, by 2035, all new cars and passenger trucks sold in California must be zero-emission vehicles. Newsom’s press release states that the executive order is his latest action for “aggressively mov[ing] the state further away from its reliance on climate change-causing fossil fuels while retaining and creating jobs and spurring economic growth.”

Newsom has tasked the California Air Resources Board with developing regulations to mandate that: 1) 100 percent of in-state sales of new passenger cars and trucks are zero-emission by 2035; and 2) all operations of medium- and heavy-duty vehicles shall be 100 percent zero emission by 2045 where feasible, with the mandate going into effect by 2035 for drayage trucks. The executive order also requires that off-road vehicles and equipment operations will have to achieve a 100 percent zero-emission goal by 2035.

In addition to closely monitoring this new mandate, Western Growers will be actively engaging on any rulemaking due to concerns over cost, lack of charging infrastructure and electric grid unreliability, among other issues.

For more information about the order, click here to see Newsom’s official press release.

Newsom Vetoes SB 1102 – H-2A Bill

September 29th, 2020

Yesterday, California Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed SB 1102, the H-2A bill authored by Senator Bill Monning. Western Growers thanks all of our members who responded to our Action Alerts and reached out to their legislators and Governor Newsom requesting that the bill be vetoed. Your collective outreach made a significant impact on the outcome of this bill.

If passed into law, SB 1102 would have changed the law by ignoring the definition of “voluntary” and “mandated” travel time. However, the Administration has expressed that they are not interested in expanding the definition of travel time. Additionally, Governor Newsom has directed the California Labor and Workforce Development Agency to develop a less restrictive template than that in SB 1102.

Moving forward, Western Growers will be an active participant in the development of the template that will be provided to H-2A employers.

For more information on the veto of SB 1102, read Governor Newsom’s full message to the California State Senate here: https://www.gov.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/SB-1102.pdf.

Register for WG’s Legal Updates Webinar Agricultural Trade: Current Climate and Trends Featuring Attorneys from Dentons’ Global Team

September 1st, 2020

Don’t miss Western Growers Legal Updates Webinar Series, moderated by WG’s Vice President and General Counsel, Jason Resnick tomorrow at 11:00 AM (PDT). Attorneys from Dentons’ global team will offer their insights on Agricultural Trade: Current Climate and Trends: Practical Considerations During COVID-19 and Beyond.

Western Growers is partnering with members of the Western Growers Ag Legal Network to bring back the popular Legal Updates Webinar Series. This webinar series is designed to equip ag professionals with the knowledge and skills to effectively navigate a host of pressing legal issues from employment and labor law, food safety liability, import/export regulatory issues, PACA, protecting trade secrets and IP, and more.

The series provides Western Growers members with an opportunity to learn from legal experts who serve the ag industry. Participants will gain insights into many of the practical legal issues that confront our industry. 

WEBINAR DETAILS

Date: Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Time: 11:00 p.m. PT

Speakers:

  • Michael J. Duvall, Partner, Dentons US LLP
  • Susanne Cook, Senior Partner, Dentons Cohen & Grigsby
  • Michael E. Zolandz, Office Managing Partner, Dentons
  • Steven A. Harris, Counsel, Dentons Cohen & Grigsby
  • Megan Finkelstein, Customs & Trade Consultant, Dentons Cohen & Grigsby

Click here to learn more and to register.

Employers Must Take Steps to Protect Outdoor Workers from Heat Illness

September 3rd, 2020

In light of the National Weather Service’s most recent excessive heat watch alert, Cal/OSHA is reminding all employers to take steps to prevent heat illness during a period of high heat across the state. When the temperature is 95 degrees or more, certain employers must implement effective high-heat procedures like additional monitoring of workers for signs of heat illnesses, and those in agriculture are required to provide extra cool-down rest periods in addition to required breaks.

Click here to read the Cal/OSHA News Release.

Guidance on Deferral of Payroll Taxes

September 8th, 2020

On August 8, 2020, President Donald Trump issued a memorandum directing the Treasury Secretary to defer the collection of the employee portion of Social Security taxes (listed as “OASDI” on the paystub) but left many questions on the details on implementing this deferral unanswered.  The Memorandum directed the Department of Treasury to issue guidance that would allow employers to defer the withholding and payment of the employee portion of Social Security taxes.

IRS has now issued guidance making clear that employers have the option to defer withholding the employee portion of Social Security taxes from their employees’ paychecks issued between September 1, 2020, and December 31, 2020, but are not required to do so. However, employers will be liable for any tax, penalties, and interest for any Social Security tax deferred if not paid to the IRS by April 30, 2021.*

Payment of Deferred Taxes

On August 28, 2020, the IRS published implementing guidance clarifying that that employers may defer withholding the 6.2% employee portion of the Social Security tax for certain wages paid to employees between September 1, 2020, and December 31, 2020. Social Security tax applies to wages and compensation paid up to the annual wage base limit, which is $137,700 for 2020. The obligation for these taxes are divided equally between employers and employees at 7.65 percent (6.2 percent for Social Security and 1.45% for Medicare).   However, employers are responsible for withholding and depositing with IRS the employee’s share from wages.

The Notice provides that employers must withhold and pay the taxes that the employee deferred “ratably” from wages and compensation between January 1, 2021, and April 30, 2021. While the Notice states that employers may “make arrangements to otherwise collect the total [deferred taxes] from the employee,” if necessary, it does not state what those arrangements may be.

The Notice is also silent on how employers and employees may report and pay the deferred tax, so employers and employees must hope that the IRS will release additional guidance or publish revised forms to account for the deferred taxes.

Employers who fail to pay the deferred taxes before May 1, 2021, may be subject to interest, penalties, and additions to tax with respect to any such amounts outstanding.

In conclusion, employers should proceed cautiously before electing to defer payment of Social Security taxes as permitted under the Notice. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says that the President’s executive directive is unworkable and many of its members will likely decline to participate because of the difficulties of administering the deferral and because it saddles employees with a large tax bill in January 2021.  Employers are advised to consult their accountant and/or tax advisor before electing to participate in the Social Security tax deferral program to ensure compliance with tax obligations.

 

*The deferral of the employee portion of the Social Security tax is different, and should not be confused with, the deferral provided by the CARES Act, which allows employers to defer payment of the employer portion of Social Security taxes through the end of 2020 and to pay such deferred amounts by the end of 2022.  

Western Growers Files Amicus Brief in Timing of Final Wages Case

September 8th, 2020

Western Growers and industry allies have filed an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief with the California Court of Appeal for the Fourth Appellate District.

In Jaime Zepeda Labor Contracting, Inc., et al. v. Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, the Court of Appeal will rule on two issues very important to the agricultural industry:  

  1. Whether workers of a farm labor contractor are “discharged” after completing a task or assignment for a particular grower, and so must be paid their final wages immediately (rather than on their regular weekly payday), even though the worker is never terminated by either the farm labor contractor or the grower; and
     
  2. Whether the failure to pay these immediate final wages, at the end of a grower-specific task or assignment (instead of in the weekly payroll) is, by itself, a minimum wage violation, which allows the Department of Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE) to issue an administrative citation for the amount of final wages and penalties of up to 30 days’ pay, without ever receiving a complaint from a worker, and without filing any action in court.

Jaime Zepeda Labor Contracting, Inc. (JZLC) is a farm labor contractor who provided workers to several growers in the Coachella Valley, for purposes of performing labor services during the table grape growing season.  JZLC paid its workers in full, each week on pay day, in accordance with California law.  Although no workers complained to the DLSE about their wages, the DLSE field office began an audit of JZLC’s payment practices and decided its workers were “discharged” after completing specific tasks or assignments at a given grower, even though the workers moved on to perform work at a different grower and were not actually terminated by either JZLC or any grower.  In other words, the DLSE decided that the workers were “discharged” even though they continued to have an ongoing working relationship (and ongoing work) with JZLC. 

Under California law, an employer is required to pay employees their final wages “immediately” on “discharge,” or else face stiff “waiting time penalties” (their rate of pay for up 30 days).  Because the DLSE determined JZLC’s workers were “discharged” after specific assignments, and were not immediately paid their final wages, it used its citation powers to issue administrative citations to JZLC for failing to pay minimum wages and final pay penalties in the amount of nearly $350,000, even though all its workers were paid in full every week.  After posting a bond in the cited amount, JZLC asked the Superior Court review the citation. 

The Superior Court agreed with the DLSE that JZLC’s workers were “discharged” after completing a grower-specific task or assignment; but it found that the DLSE lacked authority to issue a citation for waiting time penalties because the workers were actually paid all wages they were owed as part of their weekly payroll.  Both the DLSE and JZLC have appealed the Superior Court’s ruling, and the issue is now before the Court of Appeal, where new law will be created no matter how the ruling comes down.

California Farm Bureau Federation, California Fresh Fruit Association, California Farm Labor Contractors Association, Grower-Shipper Association of Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo Counties, and Ventura County Agricultural Association joined Western Growers to submit the brief on behalf of industry that was drafted by Babak Yousefzadeh and Brian Fong with the law firm of Sheppard Mullin. 

For more information, read the amicus brief.

U.S. Department of Labor Revises Farm Labor Contractor Forms

September 15th, 2020

The U.S. Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division (WHD) has revised the farm labor contractor (FLC) application form WH-530 and several other forms related to FLC registration with WHD.  The new forms WH-530, WH-514 and WH-514A, which have an expiration date of 8/31/2023, may be used immediately, but must be used for any application submitted on or after October 1, 2020. Farm labor contractors are advised to replace expiring forms with the new forms and to train staff involved in the FLC registration and vehicle inspection reporting processes to use the new forms.

The new Form WH-530 contains several modifications such as requiring an applicant requesting transportation authorization to identify how it will comply with the vehicle insurance or liability bond requirement. (Part II, Section 10). Forms WH-514 and WH-514a replace the field “Number of Seats” with “Vehicle Seating Capacity,” along with other minor changes. No changes have been made to form WH-515, which still contains a  revision date of 11/15 and no expiration date.

Form WH-530 is an application used to obtain a Farm Labor Contractor License.  Forms WH-514, WH-514a, and WH-515, which allow FLC applicants to verify to the WHD that the vehicles used to transport migrant/seasonal agricultural workers meet the MSPA vehicle safety standards and that anyone who drives such workers meets the Act’s minimum physical requirements. The WHD uses the information in deciding whether to authorize the FLC/FLC Employee applicant to transport/drive any migrant/seasonal agricultural worker(s) or to cause such transportation.

Form WH-514 is used to verify that any vehicle used or caused to be used to transport any migrant/seasonal agricultural worker(s) meets the Department of Transportation (DOT) safety standards. When the adopted DOT rules do not apply, FLC applicants seeking authorization to transport any migrant/seasonal agricultural workers use Form WH-514a to verify that the vehicles meet the DOL safety standards and, upon the vehicle meeting the required safety standards, the form is completed. Form WH-515 is a doctor’s certificate used to document that a motor vehicle driver or operator meets the minimum DOT physical requirements that the DOL has adopted.

Register for WG’s Legal Updates Webinar: Key Wage & Hour Compliance Areas For Employers Now

September 15th, 2020

WG’s Vice President and General Counsel, Jason Resnick, will be joined by the Jackson Lewis Team in the upcoming Western Growers Legal Updates Webinar on Wednesday, October 7, 2020. This program will focus on key wage and hour compliance areas arising out of the impact of COVID-19 for employers. Viewers can expect to learn not only about the wage and hour issues, but how to proactively deal with them as well.

As previously mentioned in Spotlight, Western Growers is partnering with members of the Western Growers Ag Legal Network to bring back the popular Legal Updates Webinar Series. This webinar series is designed to equip ag professionals with the knowledge and skills to effectively navigate a host of pressing legal issues from employment and labor law, food safety liability, import/export regulatory issues, PACA, protecting trade secrets and IP, and more.

The series provides Western Growers members with an opportunity to learn from legal experts who serve the ag industry. Participants will gain insights into many of the practical legal issues that confront our industry. 

WEBINAR DETAILS

Date: Wednesday, October 7, 2020

Time: 11:00 a.m. PT

Speakers:

  • Jonathan A. Siegel, Principal, Jackson Lewis, P.C., Orange County Office

  • J. Greg Coulter, Principal, Jackson Lewis, P.C., Phoenix Office

Click here to learn more and to register

Governor Newsom Signs COVID-19 Worker Protection Bills into Law

September 17th, 2020

Today, Governor Gavin Newsom signed a pair of COVID-19 worker protection bills into law.

SB 1159 creates a new “disputable presumption” that an employee’s illness or death due to COVID-19 is work-related on or after July 6, 2020, through January 1, 2023. The emergency legislation takes effect immediately.

AB 685 requires employers notify employees within one business day and public health officials within 48 hours of a potential COVID-19 exposure in the workplace. It also strengthens Cal/OSHA ‘s enforcement powers, including the power to shut down a worksite that the Division’s deems to subject workers to an “imminent hazard” of COVID-19 exposure.

An employer may dispute the presumption created by SB 1159 with evidence such as measures in place to reduce potential transmission of COVID-19 in the workplace, the employee’s nonoccupational risks of COVID-19 infection, and such other evidence that may be used to dispute a work-related injury.

The presumption under SB 1159 applies to all employees who test positive during an “outbreak” at the employee’s specific work location, and whose employer has five or more employees.  An injury for purposes of the law includes illness or death resulting from COVID-19 and the following conditions apply:

  • The employee tests positive for COVID-19 within 14 days after a day that the employee performed labor or services at the employee’s place of employment (excluding the employee’s home) at the employer’s direction.
  • The day on which the employee performed labor or services at the employee’s place of employment at the employer’s direction was on or after July 6, 2020. The date of injury must be the last date the employee performed labor or services at the employee’s place of employment at the employer’s direction before the positive test.
  • The employee’s positive test occurred during a period of an outbreak at the employee’s specific place of employment.

An “outbreak” is deemed to exist if, within 14 calendar days, one of the following occurs at a specific place of employment:

  • If the employer has 100 employees or fewer at a specific place of employment, 4 employees test positive for COVID-19;
  • If the employer has more than 100 employees at a specific place of employment, 4 percent of the number of employees who reported to the specific place of employment, test positive for COVID-19; or
  • A specific place of employment is ordered to close by a local or state public health department or Cal/OSHA due to a risk of infection with COVID-19.

Although not addressed in the bill, an employee who tested positive between March 19 and July 5, 2020 (i.e., when Governor Newsom’s executive order was in effect), would presumably fall under the executive order rather than SB 1159.

Employers are advised to train the appropriate staff on the new obligations created by these laws

CDC Again Recommends Testing for COVID-19 Close Contact

September 22nd, 2020

On Friday, the CDC issued clarification on its guidance for COVID-19 testing and is again recommending testing for anyone with close contact to someone with COVID-19:

“Due to the significance of asymptomatic and pre-symptomatic transmission, this guidance further reinforces the need to test asymptomatic persons, including close contacts of a person with documented SARS-CoV-2 infection” (meaning being within 6 feet of an infected person for at least 15 minutes).

The CDC also issued a reminder that anyone in close contact with an infected person should quarantine for 14 days, even if they have a negative test during that time.

Click here to review the CDC’s Overview for Testing for COVID-19.

For more information, contact Jason Resnick at [email protected].

Ventura County Issues H-2A Housing Order

September 22nd, 2020

On Friday, the Ventura County Health Officer issued a new order requiring temperature screening, self-evaluation and reporting of COVID-19 cases at all homeless shelters and H-2A housing in Ventura County.

The new order stipulates the following:

  • All individuals entering or residing in a homeless shelter of H-2A housing shall be screened for COVID-19 symptoms daily.
  • If through daily screening an individual or resident has symptoms related to COVID-19 the individual must immediately self-isolate and notify the manager, operator, owner of the facility or employer.
  • The operator, manager, owner of homeless shelters or the employers providing H-2A housing must immediately notify the Ventura County Public Health Department when there is one case of confirmed COVID-19 in the homeless shelter or H-2A housing at (805) 981-5201.

Click here to access the full Ventura County Health Officer Order.

For more information, contact Jason Resnick at [email protected].

Evolving Beyond Horse and Buggy, Farmers Looked to as Business Mavens

September 8th, 2020

By Stephanie Metzinger
Manager, Communication, Western Growers

For generations, growers across the United States have masterfully responded to the ebb and flow of massive global transitions to continue to provide food for the world, carry on their farm legacies and contribute to the nation’s economic success.

In 2017, the agriculture and food sector contributed $1.053 trillion to the U.S. gross domestic product. If treated as its own country, it would rank as the 16th largest economy in the world, sandwiched between Mexico and Indonesia. Farming contributed $132.8 billion of this sum. Even more astonishing is this was generated by only 3.4 million producers—75 percent of whom have been in business for more than 10 years.

The longevity and success of these operations is a testament to the business savvy of farmers. In Western Growers’ membership alone, many farm operators have been in business for 50 or more years. The Elliot family has been farming for over 150 years; the Jack, D’Arrigo, Vessey, Danna, Smith and Couture families for more than 100 years; the Reade, Pappas, Deardorff and Merrill families for 90 years or more, to name a few.

“I’ve been active on the ranch since I was a kid and have seen farming practices evolve from literally those horse and buggy days on up to now where we are flying drones,” said Ross Merrill, CEO of Merrill Farms. “I’ve witnessed a lot of changes, but the one thing that stays consistent is the need to adapt business models to keep up with current conditions in the marketplace.”

Merrill Farms was originally founded by Ross’ grandfather, Russell Merrill, in 1933 as a grower/packer/shipper, selling its crops under the Merrill labels. Identifying an opportunity to ship product to the East and expand into new markets, Russell partnered with Ken Nutting, Bruce Church and E.E. Harden to build packing houses and launch an ice company (Growers Ice) next to the railroad tracks. This proactive move not only resulted in the launch of the fresh produce industry in Salinas Valley, but it allowed Russell to expand Merrill Farms to other locations across California. Business was booming and Merrill Farms was officially a year-round shipper.

However, in the ‘80s, the company started to see a trend of consolidation on the retail buying side for produce items. It was becoming increasingly difficult to stay competitive so Merrill Farms evaluated its operation and profit margins and decided to rewrite its business model.

“We decided to specialize in farming and grow for the larger labels rather than competing with them on a marketing level,” said Merrill. “This model has been successful for the last 25 years. Our core value is focusing on the quality of our cultural practices so our shipper partners are assured that our product is going to arrive on time and that the food safety, worker safety and environmental safety compliance is already taken care of with a degree of excellence. That’s the currency Merrill Farms has today out in the marketplace.”

Merrill went on to share how focusing on the growing side has also opened up more marketing windows for the farm and has presented new crop opportunities. Merrill Farms has been able to expand its crop offerings beyond its signature iceberg lettuce, romaine and leaf lettuce programs, to now grow crops such as cauliflower, broccoli, broccolini, and Brussels sprouts. Venturing into new commodities has helped with crop rotation on the ranch and has resulted in increased yield and improved soil health.

Similarly, Rancho Filoso, which planted its roots in Ventura County in 1882, first grew lima beans, then walnuts and today citrus and avocados. The ranch is now diversifying and casting a wider net beyond its specialty crop background in search of different revenue streams. In 2016, the 86-acre citrus and avocado ranch substituted 1.5 of its acres with coffee.

“We’ve been worried about citrus production in this area, mainly due to Huanglongbing (HLB), so we’ve been trying to find new ways to diversify,” said Lisa Tate Soury, owner/business manager at Rancho Filoso. “One of the ways we are trying is with coffee. Although coffee is typically grown in higher altitudes in the tropics, we wanted to grow it here on the coastal climate to see how it goes.”

The plants will not be considered mature until next year, but the coffee beans have already received high cupping scores considering the age of the plant. Once the plants reach full maturity, the ranch will be ready to complete its exciting shift into coffee as it has already accumulated the necessary machinery and knowledge to successfully process the beans once they are picked.

“Everything is looking good, but it is still too soon to tell,” said Soury.

In the true entrepreneurial spirit, the five generations of farmers who have sat at the helm of Rancho Filoso surveyed the economic landscape during their respective reigns and altered the ranch’s business model accordingly. Taking a risk and diversifying has resulted in a highly successful farm operation that spans 140 years and counting.

Though multi-generational farms comprise most of agriculture in the United States, there are still a few who are braving the unknown to launch their own enterprise. Harrison Topp graduated from college during the Great Recession in 2008 and found himself seeking the security that the food and agriculture industry afforded.

“I migrated toward agriculture because I wanted something tangible and it felt safer engaging with the food system,” said Topp. In 2012/13, he started cultivating a small orchard in Paonia, Colorado. After a couple of years of working to boost soil and tree health, improve water efficiency, increase harvest yields and diversify production, Topp and his partner, Stacia Cannon, officially caught the farming bug and outlined the steps needed to grow the business.

“We started doing the calculations of what we thought we were going to need to be in this long term and provide for the majority of our livelihood,” he said. “I looked across sectors, beyond orchards and horticulture, to develop a model that looked like it spelled long-term success and would lead to a lifelong career in this business.”

In 2018, Topp Fruits officially expanded to Hotchkiss and now grows everything from peaches and cherries to apples and plums. Topp notes that the investment to expand the operation went hand in hand with the understanding that both he and Stacia would need to maintain off-farm work for a number of years.

Topp is currently the membership director for the Rocky Mountain Farmers Union and lauds the company for affording the flexibility needed to serve in his role, while still working on the farm to get his business up and running. Additionally, he credits Farmers Union for providing the opportunity to interact with high-caliber producers who have shared invaluable wisdom on how to effectively and efficiently run an agribusiness. Many of these relationships have played a role in helping this first-generation farmer establish premium markets to move his fruit.

“A huge part of our long-term strategy is making sure we aren’t planting trees where we don’t know where the fruit is going,” said Topp. “We are doing a lot of work to establish and maintain those markets ahead of time so that when we are at the stage of where we are producing a lot of fruit in two to three years, we’ll be in a lot better shape.”

Launching new enterprises, adapting business models for long-term success, diversifying and innovating are just a handful of the professional skills that farmers have mastered as entrepreneurs. Producers have ingeniously navigated their operations to withstand the turbulence of the unknown and continue to raise the bar for excellence. Needless to say, farmers are the ultimate business mavens.

Ag Legal Issues in the Time of Covid

September 8th, 2020

By Tim Linden

While many of the trends regarding legal issues in the agricultural space do not appear to have changed significantly in the past year, the coronavirus, and the pandemic it has unleashed, is certainly top of mind and has greatly impacted the legal process. Civil cases are not going to trial, lawyers and clients are not meeting in person, depositions are being taken by Zoom and government agencies are not operating in the same manner as they were a year ago.

Western Grower & Shipper contacted a handful of attorneys specializing in ag law to get their take on the current situation. Collectively, they see more nuisance lawsuits and demand letters as plaintiff attorneys have reportedly increased their efforts to manipulate class action lawsuits. There are also new legal actions relating to the coronavirus and more expected to be on their way.

Below are reports from five attorneys, all of whom are participants in the Western Growers Agricultural Legal Network, which guarantees members a discount for some legal services.

 

Paul Moncrief of Moncrief & Hart

For Paul Moncrief, who specializes in contract law in Salinas, CA for Moncrief & Hart, his work-life has not been upended by COVID-19, but the novel coronavirus has kept him busy dealing with many potential legal issues surrounding the pandemic. In a far-reaching interview covering many different contract types dealing with agricultural practices, the veteran ag law attorney revealed that there are more questions than impacts due to the coronavirus. Parties to both sides of many different contracts are exploring the role that COVID-19 might play in potential litigation, but for the most part, he said using the coronavirus to break a contract is not a winning argument.

In law, force majeure or an Act of God, is a common legal clause in contracts that frees both parties from liability or obligation when an extraordinary event happens. Moncrief said that, like with many legal disputes in the produce industry between buyer and seller, most of the contract issues regarding product during the early stages of coronavirus-caused business shutdowns were worked out between the parties amicably. Buyers and sellers have ongoing relationships so they have an interest in solving the issues without litigation and they typically do so. But Moncrief said that from a strictly legal perspective, a buyer purchasing a product who then loses his customer for that product because of a restaurant closure, for example, would have a difficult time winning litigation based on force majeure. “This doesn’t really fit the definition,” he said. “Market risk is not an Act of God.”

Moncrief did note that there certainly were instances when force majeure could be applied. For example, a contracted supplier of produce for an event in the future that could not be held because of a government mandate would have a difficult time trying to enforce that contract.

When speaking to WG&S in August, he reiterated that the early weeks of the pandemic did result in cancelled orders and other issues but they were typically worked out between the parties, with contracts since then attempting to add the pandemic to the “Act of God” list. Moncrief said some buyers did try to add that wording to contracts already in place but he advised his clients against signing such addendums.

He said the coronavirus, and other issues such as food safety concerns, continue to create situations where buyers, especially large buyers, try to shift liability to the shipper or grower. Moncrief said basic contract law calls for each party to pay the damages they cause. He said not only is it bad business to accept liability for damages you don’t cause, but it can also run afoul of your insurance policy. He explained that insurance companies write policies to insure you against your own actions that result in damages to another party. By accepting liability above that, you risk invalidating your policy. At the very least, your insurance company probably will not pay for the damages that you did not cause even if you contractually accept liability.

Moncrief also cautioned against signing contracts that on their face are unfair but the buyer demands your concurrence with a “take it or leave it” offer. He said while this might seem like a coerced signing, the courts will not see it that way. “It is still enforceable,” he said. “It’s the market risk you assume.”

Although he did say that public policy might offer some relief. For example, California law is specific about the terms that can be enforced with regard to non-compete clauses that employees are often asked to sign. A company in another state would not be able to enforce such a clause against a California employee if it is counter to California law.

Lynn Jacquez & Chris Schulte, SJ-Lake & Heron

The coronavirus has materially impacted the agricultural work of SJ-Lake attorneys Lynn Jacquez and Chris Schulte as they are heavily involved in a wide range of labor law issues and have been inundated with legal questions since the beginning of the pandemic. “It’s been a five-alarm fire ever since,” said Jacquez, noting that both regulatory and liability issues are top of mind for agricultural companies across the country.

She explained the law firm does a lot of work with employers trying to secure temporary foreign workers through the Department of Labor’s H-2A guest worker program. The final approval for an application typically requires an in-person meeting at a U.S. facility in the worker’s country of origin. COVID-19 eliminated that possibility, so many work-arounds had to be developed for H-2A workers to be approved. This caused additional shepherding of these applications through the process by the applicants and their attorneys. Visa challenges occurred on a daily basis. She said navigating the H-2A process during these difficult times has become a logistical equation and very case specific. She did express how impressed she has been with how the parties to these contracts have collectively risen to the challenge, sorted through the issues, and made the program work. But there have been a multitude of issues.

Schulte said state and local regulations regarding social distancing and mask wearing also impacted the federal program, and SJ-Lake’s efforts, as the U.S. company applicants typically needed to adjust their deliverables because of new rules. For example, providing housing is part of the H-2A requirement and social distancing rules typically meant providing twice as much living space for each worker. He added that more government agencies have been involved than what is typically the case.

Other legal work that has surfaced specific to the coronavirus includes the Paycheck Protection Program loans that were part of the stimulus package. The loans offered forgiveness if employers followed specific regulations concerning keeping employees on the payroll.

In the non-COVID-specific realm of labor law, Schulte said there continues to be litigation trends concerning paying workers for travel time and eliminating the overtime exemption for ag workers. That has largely already occurred in California with labor activist now setting their sights on accomplishing the same worker benefit in Colorado.

The Washington D.C.-based SJ-Lake does a lot of advocacy work for its clients and Jacquez said an interesting six months lies ahead as it pertains to both the H-2A program and immigration reform. The Trump Administration is in the midst of issuing new regulations for H-2A, which the agricultural industry believes will be less onerous than the previous rules, which were put in place in 2010. However, the new rules have not been announced, hence they will not be in place if a new administration takes the helm in January of 2021. It’s likely that a new round of discussions will begin on H-2A with the previous work basically scrapped.

Jacquez is much more confident that immigration reform, at least as it relates to agricultural, will occur in 2021 regardless who wins the presidency. “In fact I will go out on a limb and predict that regardless of the (presidential) administration, the ag work force issue will be addressed in 2021.”

She explained that there is bi-partisan support for such an action and the politics would appear to be favorable in either a Democratic administration or a second term Trump Administration.

Michael Duvall of Dentons US LLP

Michael Duvall is a member of Dentons’ Litigation and Dispute Resolution practice, focusing on class actions, commercial litigation, appeals and administrative enforcement actions. He works from the global law firm’s Los Angeles office where much of the firm’s West Coast food company work is centered. Like the other attorneys interviewed for this story, Duvall’s work has been impacted by the coronavirus. As a litigator, he would typically spend quite a bit of time in court, but the courts in Los Angeles, and many places across the country, are largely closed. He said that while in-person trials and court appearances are continuing to occur for some criminal cases and in emergency situations, civil jury trials have been halted since March. But that doesn’t mean the work has stopped.

“We are not going to court, but cases are still matriculating as they normally would in their early stages,” he said, noting that there are pre-trial hearings being held over the phone and via video. There are also Zoom depositions taking place and the normal correspondence between attorneys after a lawsuit has been filed or a demand letter sent.

Duvall said the demand letter is an ever-increasing tactic in the agricultural sector. It typically threatens class action status for some alleged unlawful trade practice such as inaccurate labeling of product. He said a settlement often is the result, with a payoff to the would-be plaintiff to prevent the class action from moving forward. With regard to unlawful trade practices, Duvall said increasingly the firm is seeing challenges to food label statements such as “pure, natural or healthy.” While the use of the word “organic” is regulated by the USDA’s National Organics Program, many of these other words do not have specific legal definitions, and may allow for jury interpretation, hence the potential lawsuits. He added that litigation has moved into additional areas, for example, a class action is likely to question statements about the food’s source (including where it is grown or whether it is “natural”). The plaintiff claims that your label is false, misleading or deceptive.

But Duvall does not recommend that food companies avoid such phrases. They are often used because they resonate with consumers and are responsive to their demands. He advises clients to invest the time and money up front to substantiate the claim they are going to make and accept potential litigation as the cost of doing business. “When you are in the food business, you are a litigation target,” he said. “When you are threatened with a lawsuit it means you have arrived. You are big enough to be a target.”

But he reiterated that it is much less expensive to conduct the research for the basis of your claim—and have a lawyer review the documentation and the label—than to hire a lawyer after the fact to mount a defense. He said a company should have test results, certifications, and other documents to substantiate their labeling statements.

Considering legal life after the coronavirus, Duvall believes there will be some changes, but he relishes going back to the old ways of doing things in the litigation world. For example, he said many attorneys want to go back to in-person depositions, noting that it can be difficult to read a witness by Zoom. “There is no substitute for being face to face,” he said.

He suspects trials will continue to be held in person, but if this pandemic stretches well into 2021 and continuing to delay a trial no longer makes sense, zoom trials may become more prevalent as well.

He also noted that the Los Angeles County court system, for example, has invested a great deal of money and time improving its video technology capabilities, ramping up the program over a three-month time period. It’s logical, Duvall said, that they will want to utilize that technology even beyond these challenging times.

Erica Rosasco of McKague Rosasco

Erica Rosasco is a partner at McKague Rosasco LLP in Roseville, CA, whose practice focuses on agricultural employment law. “It’s been a challenge,” she said, speaking of her legal life during a pandemic. “Normally I travel a lot, seeing clients in person or making court appearances. I have not seen a client since COVID.”

She said much of the litigation work has been halted as the various stakeholders are not available. “Litigation came to a stand-still. Much of what I do now is advise and consult,” she said. “We’ve done quite a few webinars on COVID and the workplace rules surrounding it, but those seem to change every day.”

She added that mediation by Zoom also appears to be less effective as one side or the other can literally, and dramatically, leave the conference, eschewing a back and forth approach and a resulting compromise agreement.

Rosasco said much of her work involves representing farm labor contractors as they appear to be the target of much litigation including class action suits or the easier-to-file Private Attorney General Act (PAGA) suits. She explained that with a class action suit a lot of pre-work has to be done by the plaintiff’s lawyer to find and qualify a named class action plaintiff. That is much less important in a PAGA case, which has made that legal tactic against employers proliferate. She said these PAGA suits often involve technical wage and hour violations and the threat of a class action unless a settlement is paid. She said technical violations on meal breaks, pay day regulations and hourly rates are common. Her advice is that employers need to follow both the spirit and letter of the law but she admits that technical violations are difficult to avoid. She cautioned employers against the “rogue manager” that does not follow company policy and commits labor violations. “You can’t let one employee sink your ship.”

While settling is often the most inexpensive route to take in these PAGA cases, Rosasco said they will go to trial on behalf of their clients when necessary to deter what she believes are unwarranted lawsuits. She said some of these plaintiff’s lawyers take a shotgun approach to their lawsuit filings casting a big net in the hopes of finding one big fish every once in a while. She noted that one recent case involved a payment of $2000 to the plaintiff, which included legal fees. “That was a loser. His fees had to be much greater than that,” she said.

As a practical matter, Rosasco said the coronavirus has reduced the workload in some areas such as workplace violations. She said OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) does not have enough people to do inspections so there have been fewer violation citations. She worries about lawsuits filed against employers because of employees getting coronavirus, but that has not happened yet.

COVID Chaos

September 8th, 2020

What an upside-down time we are living in with the pandemic overturning all of our normal lives. Our industry has been battered with this virus but we continue to grow food for our nation—all thanks to your hard work. In Washington, Western Growers has been trying to do everything we can to support you. We have been working to make sure you can access guest workers if you need them. We have been trying to make changes to the Payroll Protection Program to make it work better for you. And we have been trying to secure more federal resources for you. It’s this last piece that is very important and deserves the spotlight. Currently, there are resources available to the ag community, and we are trying to make additional resources available as the ongoing crisis continues.

USDA Programs

In May, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced that it was implementing two new programs to provide producers money to offset losses incurred due to the pandemic. Under the first program, USDA is purchasing excess produce and distributing that product to those in need through the Farmers to Families Box Program. This program directly helps Americans who are hungry while also shoring up markets in the specialty crops industry and providing income to producers. So far, several billion dollars have been spent. Western Growers has been concerned and is pleased that USDA is ensuring that produce contractors in this program are now all PACA licensed.

In May, USDA also announced that it would be providing growers with direct financial payments to help offset losses related to COVID. As designed, growers can submit applications for federal dollars up to $750,000 to offset losses incurred. Over the course of the last few months, we have worked on your behalf to improve the program. First, we have been pushing to expand the list of fruits, vegetables and tree nuts that are eligible for payments. USDA, in response, has added roughly 90 new crops to the list of eligible produce crops. We have tried to eliminate USDA rules that impede producers getting funds; in response, USDA has recently changed a regulation that prevented certain S-Corps from getting money. As currently constructed, the program applies to losses incurred before April 15; we are working with the U.S. Congress and the Trump Administration to expand eligibility beyond that date and for the rest of the year. We are also working with USDA to better advertise the program and ensure that every fruit, vegetable and tree nut grower in America is aware that the program exists.

New Resources for Worker Safety

We know that the health and safety of your workers is absolutely critical to each of you; without your workers you can’t bring food to America’s table. Creating a safe workplace has been challenging during COVID especially as guidance evolves. In that regard, Western Growers has been reviewing guidance from federal and state officials and recently worked with academics to provide a webinar series on what that information means on a practical level with real-world, on-farm explanations of Centers for Disease Control guidelines. We know, however, that farmers need access to additional testing for their farmworkers, as well as funding to quarantine those who test positive for COVID-19 and to isolate individuals who have been exposed to others who tested positive for COVID-19. Some farms have been fortunate to find available tests and are paying for their workers to be tested, but in rural parts of the country finding tests for potentially hundreds of workers can be very difficult with testing results being long delayed. Furthermore, the expense of widespread and frequent re-testing is beyond the financial reach of many farms, most of which are family-owned and operated.

Other farming operations have taken the next step and are renting hotel rooms to isolate or quarantine positive and exposed employees, if such accommodations are available. However, it is cost-prohibitive for most farms to provide 14 days of isolation/quarantine lodging. Compounding the costs of testing and housing are additional COVID-19 expenses, including masks and gloves, disinfectants and sanitizers, touchless thermometers, and other administrative and engineering controls. Most farmers have some of these supplies on hand and are providing them to their employees but not all stock up and the list of supplies and other engineering changes grows as we learn more about the novel coronavirus.

Our work in Washington D.C. has been focused this summer on securing additional resources for you to offset the increased costs associated with all these expenses. In that regard, we have pushed for federal dollars to be available to reimburse producers who have spent money already on these costs. We are supporting efforts to create tax credits for these costs. We are also supporting efforts to create direct financial aid to pay for costs going forward. In essence, we are taking all of the above approaches to make sure that you have the resources you need to ensure worker safety from the coronavirus.

Legislator Profile: Serving the People is the Best Job Senator Gowan Has Ever Had

September 8th, 2020

By Chardae Heim
Communications Coordinator, Western Growers

(Editor’s Note: Senator David Gowan spent the first eight years of his political career in the Arizona House of Representatives fighting for the families and businesses of Southern Arizona. He now serves as Arizona’s 14th Senate District Senator.)

David Gowan, a conservative Republican, was first elected to the Arizona House of Representatives in 2008. He resides in Sierra Vista, a city located in the 14th senate district of Arizona, which also includes Cochise County, Greenlee County, most of Graham County and a portion of Pima County—a district comparable in size to the State of Massachusetts with an 83.5 mile stretch on the Mexican border.

Following Gowan’s graduation from the University of Arizona, former state Rep. Randy Graf had announced his resignation from the State House to run in the Republican primary for Congress. Gowan saw this as the perfect opportunity to pursue his interests in politics. While Graf’s announcement came at what seemed like the perfect time, Gowan’s desire to make a change based on his viewpoints motivated his run for office.

In 2004, Gowan kicked off his first campaign for the Arizona House of Representatives. He lost both the 2004 and the 2006 elections. Instead of allowing these back-to-back defeats to discourage him, he used them as fuel to run for a third time. He won a runaway victory in 2008 and was sworn into office in January of 2009. He served a total of four terms before being termed out. During his tenure in the State House, Gowan served as both the Majority Leader and the Speaker of the House. After his four terms, he initially sought election to the U.S. House as Arizona’s 1st Congressional District representative, but he withdrew before the end of the race, choosing to return to the private sector.

After leaving the race, Gowan spent the following two years as a Realtor, but this wouldn’t be the last time he would be seen in the Arizona Legislature. During those two years, Gowan prepared for his State Senate election campaign. Politics was his passion and although seeking change motivated his decision to run, serving the people has been his motivation to stay in office.

“The best job I’ve ever had is serving the people and taking care of my constituency,” Gowan said. “I enjoy it and I’m blessed to have it.”

After winning the senate seat, Gowan hit the ground running with an appointment to serve as Appropriations Committee Chairman and member of the Water and Agriculture Committee, as well as the Natural Resources and Energy Committee. Representing a predominantly rural district, Senator Gowan has been an unyielding advocate for the agriculture industry. “Ask anybody, ag is the backbone of this state, [ag] created this state,” he exclaimed.

One of Gowan’s most significant achievements as a legislator has been helping the state fairs, which he believes is one of the last educational opportunities for the community members to familiarize themselves with the industry.

“I want to make sure people stay educated properly so they know the source of their food,” he said. “Did you know that some people think their food originates in grocery stores? That’s why fairs, and all forms of agricultural education are so important for our farming and ranching communities.”

Gowan was recently named Legislator of the Year by the Arizona County Fairs Association for his work.

In addition to being a champion for the fair industry, Gowan has been a huge proponent for water projects.

“As Appropriations Chairman, I have fought for $20 million in funding for water infrastructure,” Gowan said. “As Chairman, I have the ability to start conversations that everyone doesn’t get to [start].” The funding he is referencing is a part of the Drought Contingency Plan, arguably the biggest water policy change in Arizona in the last 40 years. “Pinal County farmers shouldn’t have to fight for water from other areas, and neither should Yuma, or any other ag region in our state!” Gowan stated. He is determined to continue his fight for those that need water, especially those in the agriculture industry.

In the Arizona State Legislature, Senator Gowan has a reputation for being quick-witted and pragmatic with “principles he doesn’t cross.” He is passionate about the issues that affect his constituency. During his first term, Gowan was initially under the impression that everyone who gets elected immediately tackles issues that were also important to him, considering they were all Arizona representatives. “I later found out, that’s not true,” he said laughingly. “Everything is about balance.”

Gowan referred to his time spent in the Arizona Legislature as a learning experience. “I have learned the ins-and-outs of government processes, which is necessary to be a strong representative for your constituency,” he exclaimed. He came into office in 2009, during the Great Recession. At the time, the primary focus was the state budget, because Arizona faced a massive economic downturn and a multi-billion-dollar budget deficit. Over the eight years that he served as a state representative, he and his colleagues were able to get the budget deficit structurally balanced and turned into a surplus. Little did the senator know, the takeaways from the Great Recession would be useful and applicable over a decade later.

Similar to the recession, COVID-19 has caused economic concerns. Due to Gowan’s past experiences and informed decision-making skills, he has participated in a better recovery at a faster rate.

He admits working under COVID-19 restriction has called for adjustments. “For starters, there have been plenty of Zoom calls,” Gowan said jokingly. The pandemic has caused his appreciation for face to face interaction to grow. “It is easier to speak to someone face to face,” he said. “We can look at each other’s body language and faces.”

Aside from the Zoom calls, the Arizona Legislature is taking the necessary precautions to ensure their safety, health and cleanliness. This includes constant wipe downs of the rails and floors and having easily accessible hand sanitizers throughout the building. Although they are diligent in their efforts, Gowan says he is hopeful that we see an end to this.

While the pandemic has thrown a wrench in the works, Gowan remains in awe of this nation’s tenacity. “The professionalism is boundless,” he says. “Being able to work for yourself and create jobs is the beauty of this great country. That is what being a professional means.” According to Gowan, being a professional includes creating wealth and making a good life for the family.

As a legislator working incessantly to bolster his constituency, he has found it difficult to detach from work. “When I’m not introducing new legislation, I am most likely killing off bad bills,” he stated. “Defending the industry is a large portion of the job and I don’t go to the Capitol to lose; I go to win for my constituents.”

When he does find downtime, he chooses to spend it with family. Senator Gowan can be found at his family’s apple tree orchard, at a county fair or leisure traveling. Above all else, as a man of great faith, he never misses a Sunday at Mountain Vista Baptist Church. “I love my district, it’s a great district,” he declared. “It’s like me, pro-family and pro-faith.”

The Importance of a Risk Management Approach to Pesticide Regulation

September 8th, 2020

Our daily life routines consist of many activities including work, school, recreation, and travel. Hopefully, we go about engaging in these activities with a focus on the opportunities and benefits that they will bring to our lives and livelihood. Engaging in life’s opportunities brings both rewards and risks. As a society, we have studied many of those risks and have developed tried and true mitigations to minimize them to a realistic and practical level. Realistic and practical are key components to developing a successful risk management strategy that identifies a risk, mitigates that risk to a practical level, and does so in a way that allows productivity to continue.

People identify and make risk management decisions every day. We wear a seatbelt and follow driving regulations to best safeguard ourselves, our passengers, and other drivers on the roadway. This is done to reduce the opportunities for an accident to occur and if one does, that the results of that accident will not be as severe. Furthermore, these risk management strategies were developed based upon science and physics. What if we were to decide that we cannot have any risk with driving? The impracticality of that decision would lead to enormous social and economic consequences. Weighing risks and mitigating them is something that we do almost subconsciously whether it involves making diet choices or taking medications. The list goes on.

The discussion above is meant to provide some real-world examples of how important risk management decisions are and how we take them for granted. However, there is a strong and vocal anti-pesticide lobby that believes that risk management is not appropriate since it doesn’t eliminate the potential risk to zero. Talk about an impossible standard to meet. That is precisely their strategy. Since risk can never be zero; then a crop protection chemistry must be banned from use.

This concept of ignoring the importance of risk management completely discounts the millions of dollars of scientific research and countless studies that are conducted to bring a new crop protection chemistry to market. These active ingredients face such scrutiny at both the federal Environmental Protection Agency and at the California Department of Pesticide Regulation that it often takes a decade or more to get them registered for sale and use in California. These studies specifically look at human health and the environment, as well as how effective the product is in controlling the intended pest or disease. By and large, these chemistries have been very beneficial in helping to limit pests and disease while increasing crop yields. Indeed, crop yields are a critical consideration for growers as they determine the economic viability of planting and harvesting a crop. And good crop yields are equally important to consumers since that plays a critical role in keeping food costs reasonable.

This article is not about conventional agriculture or organic agriculture. It is about the unfortunate success that the anti-pesticide lobby has had on building the public’s fear around pesticides and then using that messaging to call into question pesticide risk management decisions that have been based on science and real-world, per the label, use of a compound. As one of many advocates who operate within this space, it is truly frustrating and appalling to witness the attempt to dismantle the risk management model.

WG continues to highlight the necessity of risk management at the California Department of Pesticide Regulation and the negative consequences that a strict adherence to a zero risk policy as advocated by anti-pesticide groups would have on the entire agricultural output from farm to store. Our food supply is the safest on the planet because of risk management and the fact that growers follow precise guidance and regulations on integrated pest management and label requirements. WG will continue to advocate for both conventional and organic crop protection tools for growers to have in their toolbox.

Systems Approach to Safety Defines Western Growers’ New Science Expert

September 8th, 2020

Over my career in product safety and compliance, I’ve had the opportunity to work for a variety of businesses, large global corporations to smaller regional producers. These companies have made everything from cleaning products to medical devices, skin lotions, cheeses and fresh-cut salad blends. Yet, my role in each organization has been the same: to design, execute and measure product safety management systems that assured an outcome of consumer safety and trust. I view my role as lead for Science at Western Growers as the same…supporting all our members’ and the industry’s safety management systems.

Safety management systems are defined by the following attributes: 1) a series of risk identification and mitigation controls that can be applied to an operation 2) data-based feedback loops that verify that controls were successful; 3) reporting systems that promote transparency to leadership, regulators and customers and 4) a framework for a strong safety culture.

An easy analogy is to consider the safety management system used for cars. Cars have risk identification sensors, such as brake lights that tell us when we need to reduce speed; risk mitigation controls, such as brakes to reduce the car’s speed; and data-based feedback that verify controls are working, such as the speedometer. Brakes, brake lights and speedometers are the controls and data used by the driver to operate the car safely and provides transparency to other drivers so that they can also drive safely, thus making driving a car itself safer. Car manufacturers are always investing to improve safety, including additional sensors to identify when a car should brake beyond brake lights. These investments are improving the driver’s safety and ultimately trust in the car.

Our members also need to be able to anticipate and identify changes in safety risk, apply controls that mitigate such risk, and accurately measure if the controls are being effectively applied. Our members know well the risks associated with their operations. They conduct risk assessment throughout the growing and harvesting of a crop, deploy and document numerous controls to address the risk assessment, and measure the effectiveness of these controls using varied tools, such as pre-harvest testing. We are transparent by facilitating auditors, customers and regulatory inspectors to review these controls, their corresponding documents and effectiveness on a regular basis to assure they are in place and appropriate. We promote the traceability of our products using technology-enabled processes that link crop, field, harvest crew, harvest machine, day, time, etc. to a package or case for shipment. Yet, we all know there are important opportunities for continuous improvement in our safety management systems.

Upholding our member’s vital role in public health protection and environmental performance is paramount.

Let’s look at these opportunities in the context of a safety management system and my critical priorities.

1.  Risk identification and mitigation controls: Our key opportunity lies in improving our understanding of how, when, and why our risk controls are either inadequate or fail. Whether it is an observation of a worker not wearing appropriate PPE or a pathogen positive test for a pre-harvest tissue sample, understanding through root cause analysis is critical to improving our industry’s safety management system’s effectiveness. Building capabilities in root cause analysis, including processes, specialized resources, training and education will be a critical focus.

2.  Data-based feedback loops: Going back to my analogy of a car, we all agree that as drivers we need to be assured that the data we receive on our car’s braking system is accurate and timely. Finding out after we have an accident or receive a speeding ticket that we didn’t have the right data is not acceptable. Similarly, we expect the information we receive from the other cars on the road to also be accurate and timely. Again finding out after an accident that we didn’t have the right data is not acceptable. Understanding, via data, how our car performs in the context of other cars helps us drive more safely. Continuing to identify key partnerships and tools for food safety and environmental performance data and data-sharing is a priority.

3.  Reporting systems that promote transparency to leadership, regulators and customers: We already have a need as an industry to strengthen our individual and collective reporting systems as we respond to challenges put forth by the Food and Drug Administration in both the Leafy Greens STEC Action Plan and their recently released blue print for the New Era for Modern Food Safety. Our customers and consumers will also benefit from developing comprehensive reports reflecting membership commitments in food safety and sustainability.

4.  A framework for a strong safety culture: Our industry’s strong and on-going commitment to continuous improvement in our safety management systems reflect our foundational understanding of our vital role in public health and environmental protection. Strengthening our member’s safety culture will be an outcome of all our collective efforts.

As we face more and more challenges in food safety, environmental performance and customer and regulatory oversight, looking at our efforts within the context of a system helps us to remember that design, execution and measurement of the controls we use to support the safety of our products and the consumers are all equally critical.

Joint Employers Under the FLSA

September 8th, 2020

In January 2020, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) released its Final Rule on the often-litigated joint employer issue under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), which took effect on March 16, 2020. Prior to the publication of the Final Rule, the Fair Labor Standards Act’s (“FLSA”) joint-employer standard had not been substantively changed in over 60 years.

Under the FLSA, an “employer” is “any person acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee;” a joint employer is any additional “person” (i.e., an individual or entity) who is jointly and severally liable with the employer for the employee’s wages. Consistent with the FLSA’s broad definitions and scope of coverage, the DOL’s regulations specifically recognize that two or more employers may jointly employ one employee, and generally require employers to comply with their legal responsibilities under the FLSA.

Where an employee performs work for the employer that simultaneously benefits another individual or entity, the Final Rule adopts a four-factor balancing test to determine whether the potential joint employer is directly or indirectly controlling the employee.

Four-Factor Balancing Test

The DOL’s Final Rule lays out a four-factor balancing test, derived from the Ninth Circuit test articulated in Bonnette v. California Health & Welfare Agency (9th Cir. 1983), to evaluate employer-like behavior. The four-factor balancing test assesses whether the potential joint employer:

1.  Hires or fires the employee;

2.  Supervises and controls the employee’s work schedule or conditions of employment to a substantial degree;

3.  Determines the employee’s rate and method of payment; and

4.  Maintains the employee’s employment records. “Employment records” are the types of records that evidence the potential employer’s activities in the other three factors, such as maintaining payroll records.

According to the DOL, additional factors may also be relevant in determining whether another person is a joint employer, “but only if they indicate whether the potential joint employer is exercising significant control over the terms and conditions of the employee’s work.” Whether a person is a joint employer will depend on all the facts in the case, and the appropriate weight to give each factor will vary depending on the circumstances but no single factor is determinative of joint employer status.

The Final Rule further clarifies that to be a joint employer under the FLSA, a second employer must actually exercise—directly or indirectly—one or more of the four control factors. The reserved right to exercise this control may in some instances be relevant for determining joint-employer status, but such a reserved right, if not actually utilized, will not, without other factors, establish a joint-employer relationship.

Factors Not Relevant

The Final Rule contains other important points and identifies factors that are not relevant to the determination of FLSA joint employer status. For example, the Final Rule specifies that whether the employee is economically dependent on the potential joint employer, including factors used to establish whether a particular worker is a bona fide independent contractor, are not relevant to determine joint employer liability. Other factors that do not make joint employer status more or less likely under the Act, include:

•   the potential joint employer’s contractual agreements with the employer requiring the employer to comply with its legal obligations;

•   the potential joint employer’s contractual agreements with the employer including those requiring the potential joint employer to:

–   satisfy certain health and safety standards or requirements;

–   provide training; or

–   implement quality control standards to ensure the consistent quality of the work product, brand, or business reputation;

•   the potential joint employer’s practice of providing the employer with a sample employee handbook, or other forms, or allowing the employer to operate a business on its premises (including “store within a store” arrangements);

•   The employee’s “economic dependence” on the potential joint employer. Factors that assess economic dependence include the employee’s:

–   role in in a specialty job;

–   opportunity for profit or loss based the employee’s managerial skill;

–   investment in equipment or materials; and

–   number of other contractual relationships for similar services.

Joint Employer Rules in California

Although DOL issued its new Final Rule, California has its own set of joint-employer rules that are generally more protective of workers than the federal law. The Industrial Welfare Commission and the California Supreme Court have adopted a joint-employer definition emphasizing the employer’s control over wages, hours and working conditions, and the extent to which the potential joint employer knew of and failed to prevent wage and hour violations.

The California Supreme Court set out the factors that can create a joint employer relationship in Martinez v. Combs (2010). Under the Martinez test, to “employ” means (1) “to exercise control over…wages, hours or working conditions,” (2) “to suffer or permit to work,” or (3) “to engage, thereby creating a common law employment relationship.” The court in Ochoa v. McDonald’s Corp. (N.D. Cal. 2015) explained that “[a]ny of the three is sufficient to create an employment relationship.”

Although a potential joint employer’s control is often pivotal in determining joint-employer liability, in some circumstances California statutes impose joint-employer liability regardless of who exercises control. For example, California Labor Code section 2810.3 holds companies strictly liable for wage and hour violations when they use staffing agencies, or other labor contractors, to supply workers.

Federal Lawsuit to Challenge DOL Final Rule

Although the DOL limits the four-factor test to “actions taken with respect to the employee’s terms and conditions of employment, rather than the theoretical ability” to take such actions, a coalition of state attorney generals filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief in the Southern District of New York challenging the validity of the Final Rule. The complaint alleges that the Final Rule unlawfully narrows the joint employment standard under the FLSA, undermines critical workplace protections for the country’s low-income and middle-income workers, and leads to increased wage theft and other labor law violations.

Until this lawsuit makes its way through the courts, or an injunction is issued, employers should consult with counsel to assess potential risks, and review whether they may be jointly and severally liable for employees’ wages in light of the Final Rule.

Jennifer A. Mancera is an attorney with Noland, Hamerly, Etienne & Hoss. She represents companies in a variety of employment law matters and has extensive human resources management experience.