National Farmers Union-Ontario Issues Statement

On May 30, Bonifacio Eugenio Romero, a 31-year-old Mexican migrant farm worker, died of COVID-19. He lost his life to feed us and to provide for his family back home.

The National Farmers Union [1] is devastated by the tragic death of Bonifacio Eugenio Romero. We extend our deepest condolences to his family, friends, and to all the essential agricultural workers who are risking their health and safety to bring food to Canadian tables every day.

More than 400 migrant farm workers have tested positive with COVID-19 in mass outbreaks across Southern Ontario. It is spreading among migrant workers due to overcrowded, unsanitary housing and unsafe working conditions, and/or a failure to quickly identify and isolate infected workers.

The National Farmers Union-Ontario (NFU-O) is concerned that not all farmers are complying with government regulations regarding the pandemic. We worry that government inspections of farms and migrant worker accommodations are being conducted remotely and will not be effective in the absence of surprise on-site inspections for verification. We are troubled that some migrant workers are not receiving adequate and ongoing information on health and safety protocols in the language of their choice.

Migrant farm workers are contracting the virus in the local community. They arrive in Canada in good health and are compliant with the 14-day quarantine protocol. Uncoordinated quarantine measures are unfairly stigmatizing these workers, despite the fact that they are not the source of the outbreaks. The NFU is against discriminatory exclusionary measures that target migrant workers, such as identification cards and restricted and prohibited movement on and off of the farm. We find the ongoing and systemic racism migrant farm workers experience abhorrent, including reports that they are being denied entry into local grocery stores. Migrant workers deserve to live and work in safety and dignity.

The NFU has a long-standing position in support of migrant workers. The NFU has joined calls for regulatory changes so that migrant workers can change jobs without threat of deportation, have full access to health care and other employee benefits, and be granted permanent resident status. We stand in solidarity with the Migrant Rights Network and Justicia for Migrant Workers in their outrage over the death of Bonifacio Eugenio Romero and their efforts to improve migrant workers' housing, working, and status conditions.

Note

1. The National Farmers Union is a direct-membership organization made up of Canadian farm families who share common goals. One of its goals "is to work together to achieve agricultural policies which will "ensure dignity and security of income for farm families while enhancing the land for future generations." It is organized on a regional basis. Each Region holds an annual convention where regional officers are elected and resolutions brought forward by members of the region are debated. Resolutions that are passed at the regional level are then debated and voted on at the annual National Convention. One board member from each of its regions serves as the Regional Coordinator.

It is committed to:

- ensuring family farms are the primary unit of food production;
- promoting environmentally-safe farming practices;
- giving farm women equal voice in shaping farm policy;
- working for fair food prices for both farmers and consumers;
- involving, educating and empowering rural youth for a better future;
- building healthy, vibrant rural communities;
- ensuring an adequate supply of safe, nutritious food for Canadians.
- solidarity with family farmers internationally

It states that it "is unique among farm organizations in working for people's interests against corporate control of our food system."


This article was published in

Number 42 - June 18, 2020

Article Link:
National Farmers Union-Ontario Issues Statement


    

Website:  www.cpcml.ca   Email:  editor@cpcml.ca