Ottawa, ON – The Fruit and Vegetable Growers of Canada (FVGC) welcomes the balanced findings of the Senate Committee on Social Affairs, Science and Technology’s recent report on temporary and migrant labour solutions.
The report identified six recommendations to improve Canada’s temporary foreign worker (TFW) programs, emphasizing the need for an independent migrant worker commission. This commission would centralize services and address program gaps for both workers and employers, streamlining the current complex network of departments and ministries involved.
“The proposed commission aligns with our long-standing call for more efficient TFW services,” says Marcus Janzen, President of FVGC. “Canadian fruit and vegetable growers’ operations are simply not sustainable without migrant labour, and the current systems are burdensome and complicated for growers to navigate.”
Canada’s fruit and vegetable sector relies heavily on the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP) and the TFW program’s agriculture stream. Fruit and vegetable crops often need to be picked by hand due to the delicate nature of the crop and the lack of automated options. Labour shortages have been a constant struggle for Canadian agriculture, and a reliable and efficient migrant labour program is essential to the long-term sustainability of the fruit and vegetable sector in Canada.