Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program celebrates 50 years

Darpan News Desk, 12 Jul, 2016 02:09 PM
  • Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program celebrates 50 years
Ontario’s Seasonal Agricultural Workers Program (SAWP) is marking a major milestone.
 
The internationally acclaimed program is celebrating its 50th anniversary supplying Ontario farmers experiencing domestic labour shortages with seasonal workers from Mexico and the Caribbean.
 
Approximately 17,000 seasonal workers from Mexico, Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad/Tobago and the Eastern Caribbean States are expected to be placed at Ontario fruit and vegetable farms this growing season as a supplement to local labour through SAWP. Approximately 1,450 farms will benefit from the program this year.
 
“We’re extremely proud that we’ve been able to help our horticultural industry thrive and grow over the past half century,” says Ken Forth, president of Foreign Agricultural Resource Management Services (F.AR.M.S.), which administers the program. “Ontario produces some of the highest quality fruits and vegetables in the world. Without the supplemental labour they hire through SAWP, many of our growers just wouldn’t be able stay viable.”
 
The program got its start in 1966 when 263 seasonal workers from Jamaica were brought to Ontario to fill a shortage of available Canadian workers. Over the past 50 years the program has grown steadily and has consistently exceeded expectations, providing Ontario farmers a steady source of reliable, skilled and professional labour.
 
At the same time, the program has given seasonal agricultural workers employment, benefits and educational opportunities not available to them at home.
 
Because SAWP is a “Canadians first” program, supplementary seasonal farm labour is hired from partner countries only if agricultural operators cannot find domestic workers to fill vacancies. “Half a century after it was created, this program continues to serve the same vital function on an even larger scale,” says Forth.
 
A recent report by Agri-food Economic Systems found that chronic labour shortages continue to challenge the agricultural sector due to aging demographics, competition with other sectors and fewer numbers of young people pursuing careers in farming. As a result, demand for workers under SAWP is projected to remain steady.
 
The report cited the program as a key reason Ontario’s horticulture industry is able to generate $5.4 billion in economic activity and approximately 34,280 jobs.
 
It’s estimated that two jobs for Canadians are created in the agri-food industry for every seasonal agricultural worker employed through SAWP at Ontario farms.

MORE National ARTICLES

Local Cab Companies Partner With VPD

Local Cab Companies Partner With VPD
The Vancouver Police Department is partnering with local cab companies in a new initiative aimed at preventing and reducing crime.

Local Cab Companies Partner With VPD

Delta Police Seek Witnesses To Fatal Collision Between Dump Truck And Vehicle

Delta Police Seek Witnesses To Fatal Collision Between Dump Truck And Vehicle
As a result of the collision, the dump truck and the vehicle, a black Pontiac Sunfire, ended up in the ditch.

Delta Police Seek Witnesses To Fatal Collision Between Dump Truck And Vehicle

Blankets, Not Hoses, Help Some B.C. Firefighters Make Unusual Rescue

Blankets, Not Hoses, Help Some B.C. Firefighters Make Unusual Rescue
VERNON, B.C. — A bald eagle is recovering in B.C.'s North Okanagan region after four firefighters stepped up to save it.

Blankets, Not Hoses, Help Some B.C. Firefighters Make Unusual Rescue

Unveiling Of Dinosaur Tracks Marches B.C. Back To Its Cretaceous Past

Unveiling Of Dinosaur Tracks Marches B.C. Back To Its Cretaceous Past
The large site, called a dinosaur trackway, was scheduled to be unveiled Friday afternoon near Hudson's Hope, about 80 kilometres west of Fort. St. John.

Unveiling Of Dinosaur Tracks Marches B.C. Back To Its Cretaceous Past

Life Not A Bowl Of Cherries For Okanagan Residents Or Rain-Soaked Farmers

Life Not A Bowl Of Cherries For Okanagan Residents Or Rain-Soaked Farmers
Once ripe, cherries can't tolerate any extra water or their outer skins will split, destroying their valu

Life Not A Bowl Of Cherries For Okanagan Residents Or Rain-Soaked Farmers

Vancouver Male Sex Workers Felt Safer Advertising Online Than In The Streets

Vancouver Male Sex Workers Felt Safer Advertising Online Than In The Streets
The study by the B.C. Centre of Excellence in HIV/AIDS and the outreach program Hustle surveyed 39 men and trans men sex workers as well as eight others who buy their services.

Vancouver Male Sex Workers Felt Safer Advertising Online Than In The Streets