Guelph ON – Ontario’s fruit and vegetable growers are pushing back on recent allegations of poor housing standards and lax inspections around employer-provided housing for seasonal agricultural workers.
Workers who come to Ontario through the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP) to work on fruit and vegetable farms have access to housing from their employers. This housing is built, occupied and operated according to official fire and building codes and local public health standards. All housing is supervised and inspected by federal and provincial government officials, local public health units, and liaison officers from the SAWP workers’ home countries. If there are any issues with housing, anonymous reports can be made to the federal government or liaison officers for appropriate investigation.
“As farmers who employ SAWP workers in Ontario, we are subject to multiple layers of legislation and inspection, and those who don’t follow the rules face penalties that include temporary suspension or even permanent removal from the program,” says Ken Forth, President of Foreign Agricultural Resource Management Services. “Farmers support a strong regulatory framework to protect the health and safety of seasonal agricultural workers in their working and living environments, and housing that does not meet government standards should not pass inspection.”
Ontario was one of the first provinces to establish a consistent housing standard for SAWP workers, which was developed and supported by Ontario’s local public health units. During 2020 farmers, health units and the Ontario government developed recommendations to further strengthen housing requirements in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. Individual public health units also implemented their own quarantine accommodation requirements, some of which are the strictest in Canada.