The Department of Labor said on June 20 that it was suspending a Biden-era regulation aimed at providing workplace organizing protections to foreign farmworkers holding H-2A visas in the United States.
Under this rule, farmworkers are allowed to advocate for better working conditions and improved accountability for employers in the H-2A visa program, among other provisions.
However, the department called the rule “burdensome” and said it had already been suspended because of federal court injunctions.
“As multiple federal court injunctions have created significant legal uncertainty, inconsistency, and operational challenges for farmers lawfully employing H-2A workers, this field assistance bulletin clarifies that the department will not be enforcing the 2024 final rule effective immediately—providing critical predictability for agricultural employers as litigation continues and as the department considers further regulatory action,” it stated.
The Epoch Times sought comment from the United Farm Workers (UFW) but did not hear back by publication time.
The labor union had previously called for an end to federal immigration raids targeting foreign farmworkers amid the Trump administration’s mass deportation operation.
“Our great farmers and people in the hotel and leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace,” he stated. “Changes are coming!”
Homan told reporters that he was sympathetic to industries that had been affected by immigration enforcement but added that as long as the laws are on the books, it’s ICE’s job to enforce them.
“There’s a right way and wrong way to hire workers,” he said. “There are legal programs that bring farm workers in. I’ve been saying for years that Congress needs to address this, but because Congress failed, it just doesn’t mean we ignore it.”







