Michigan mirrors national trends. The state produces many labor-intensive specialty crops — such as apples, blueberries, cucumbers, squash and asparagus — that require a large workforce during short, time-sensitive harvest periods. In 2024, Michigan farms employed about 15,000 H-2A workers, underscoring the program’s essential role in sustaining the state’s agricultural production.
Background on the H-2A Visa Program
The H-2A visa program was established in 1986 to allow foreign workers to enter the U.S. temporarily for low-skilled, seasonal agricultural jobs. Under this program, farm employers may hire foreign workers for seasonal agricultural work — typically up to 10 months — under the following conditions:
- Employers must demonstrate that they cannot find sufficient domestic workers.
- Workers must leave the U.S. when their visas expire.
- Jobs must be seasonal, which excludes year-round industries such as dairy.
- Employers must provide free housing for H-2A workers.
- Employers must pay for workers’ transportation between their home country and the work site.
- Employers must pay the Adverse Effect Wage Rate (AEWR), a special minimum wage intended to ensure that hiring foreign workers does not negatively impact U.S. farmworkers.
These requirements mean that H-2A workers are often more expensive than domestic workers once housing, transportation, and application costs are included. Recent research estimates that total H-2A employment costs are 20% to 50% higher than hiring U.S. workers, including unauthorized workers who have settled in the U.S. according to Castillo, Martin, and Rutledge, 2024.
Surge in the use of the H-2A Visa program in Michigan
Michigan agriculture depends heavily on seasonal labor, especially in fruit, vegetable, and nursery production. H-2A workers fill essential roles in harvesting, pruning, packing and field tasks during peak seasons.
Use of the H-2A program has grown rapidly in the state (Figure 2). Michigan had less than 1,000 certified H-2A positions in FY 2008, but by FY 2024, that number had increased to over 15,000.
Source : msu.edu