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NorCal Farmers Worry Fruit Will Rot On Trees

Store Owners: Produce Prices Could Rise

POSTED: 5:34 pm PDT October 8, 2007
UPDATED: 12:49 pm PDT October 9, 2007

Farmers in and around Northern California are starting to feel the pinch from tighter border security and visa requirements, NBC11's Daniel Garza reported Monday.

Some farmers told Garza they expect some of their fields to remain unpicked. They said the illegal immigrant workers they have depended on to pick their fields are no longer crossing the border because of the tighter security at the border.

WATCH VIDEO: Bay Area Farmers: 'Not Enough Workers' | VIEW IMAGES: Farmers' Fears: Too Few Workers


Some said they believe their fields will end up filled with rotting produce.

The Bush administration has learned of the possible loss of millions of dollars for thousands of farmers throughout the country, and is attempting to loosen visa requirements for workers.

However, farmers told Garza the attempt is "too little too late."

IMAGES:
  • Illegal Immigrants Found In Engine

  • 750 In Custody After SoCal Sweep

  • Sewn In Car Upholstrey

  • Found In Truck Engine

  • Pursuit Caught On Camera




  • The president has blamed Congress for failing to come up with acceptable new immigration laws.

    Experts expect the impact on agribusiness to affect Americans' pocketbooks, Garza said.

    Working in the fields is a hard job that few will do, according to Pete Aiello of Uesugi Farms in Gilroy.

    "We'll have guys out in the field as early as 5 o'clock in the morning and the last guys won't leave the field until six or seven o'clock at night," said Aiello.

    VIDEOS: ICE Agents Make Bay Area Arrests
    Immigrants In San Rafael Arrested, Ordered Deported
    3 Mexican Immigrants Found Sewn In Car Upholstry
    'Day Without An Immigrant' Rallies


    Growers said not only is the supply of workers getting smaller, but the federal guest worker program known as the H-2A Visa is too time-consuming.

    "When you submit an application often times they can't turn it around for two or three months and by then half our harvest season is gone," Aiello said.

    A White House spokesman said it is important for the farm sector to have access to labor.

    Demonstrators demanding a path to citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants rallied Tuesday, hoping to spur Congress to act before the presidential race takes over the political landscape.


    "I'm really happy the government is about to raise an eyebrow about the situation," Aiello said. "Unfortunately by the time they actually sit down and put their noses to the grind stone and try to implement something, that could be years down the road before it's finally done."

    The owner of JJ&F Food Store, John Garcia, said in the long run consumers will feel the impact of fewer farm workers.

    "The supply is going to be down," said Garcia. "Demand is going to be up. It's going to increase. It's going to increase a lot."

    Grocery chains Zanotto's and Whole Foods said they have yet to see increased prices for produce because of farm labor shortages.

    Feds Crack Down On Foreign-Born Gang Members In Salinas

    Federal immigration officials announced Tuesday that a months-long crackdown on foreign-born gang members and gang associates has resulted in more than 1,300 arrests nationwide, including 26 in the Salinas area.

    The crackdown is part of Operation Community Shield, an initiative begun in 2005 that uses both criminal prosecution and immigration proceedings to disrupt and dismantle gang operations.

    "Violent foreign-born gang members represent a threat to communities across the nation. Working closely with our federal, state and local partners, Operation Community Shield has resulted in the arrest of more than 7,500 gang members and associates since its inception, and more than 1,300 just this summer," Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for Immigration and Customs Enforcement Julie Myers said.

    "Violent foreign-born gang members and their associates have more than worn out their welcome, and to them I have one message: Good riddance," Myers said.

    ICE agents along with the Salinas Police Department's Gang Suppression Unit, the Monterey County Probation Office, and the Salinas office of the California Department Of Corrections carried out the Salinas arrests over five days beginning on Sept. 24.

    The arrestees were all from Mexico except for a single Vietnamese national.

    All of them were linked to one of three gangs, the Surenos, MS-13 or SVN, officials said.




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