NewNow you can hear Fox News article!
An Erizona farmer is emphasizing for a more functional approach to hiring efficient labor in agriculture amid the boundary crack of President Donald Trump, telling Fox News Digital that the current system is extinguishing the fear among HisPanic workers.
Dadleville, during the remote, hilly landscape journey, the farmer Scott Heartquist expressed more cooperation among the business owners, workers and immigration officials, which also maintains the law of the United States to meet the needs of labor to find practical solutions.
“There is a human side that everyone likes,” I feel for them, “said the heartbist, looking at skilled workers to enter the country. “And I also understand that our system is not set to come easily.”
Trump Pitch scheme allows farmers to fast for illegal immigrant workers
The farmer Scott Heartquist hopes that the immigration system and process to obtain a visa for workers will be easier under President Trump. (Fox News Digital)
While some farmers have experienced issues with migrants who steal or steal from their properties, the heartquarters stated that their personal relations and support for the Hispanic community has allowed them to run their business without any issue.
“Immigration is such a poignant theme and, you know, we were just talking about it – my employees. They are not all legal, but not a good part of the people in the community. And so, we see it, we have it. We now have an issue with it,” he said.
The family farm began on a small piece of land in Arizona. After avoiding bone cancer, Christie, the wife of the Scott Heartquist, worked with her husband to teach her children, where her food comes and increases a healthy meat supply.
The family operates its own inspection processing plant in the farm, which provides hormone-free, steroid-free, vaccine-free, and antibiotic-free grass-filtering and grass-prepared beef, pork and lamb to local people.
The heartquelist family has cultivated not only a solid business but also a close and sore commune. Many family members and employees live on the Hartques Holll Farm Property in Dadleville – often share fresh food and stories after a hard day work.
Trump is working on exile for illegal farm and hospitality workers
A staff member goes to a group of sheep in a member of the Heartques Holll Farm. These sheep are one of the several sources of food for family and business. (Fox News Digital)
During a hot summer evening dinner, a butcher in the farm, Saul Merkez said that he is grateful that the family has provided its immigrant workers to do good work and strong benefits.
Márquez praised God for allowing his daughter to flourish as a citizen in America – a milestone that helped him and his wife get a permanent residence three years ago.
“My friends say that you earn very well here. So, you manipulate the illegal coming here because it is an American dream. It’s an American dream. And everyone is going to take a risk. Earlier, it was not easy, now it’s not easy,” he told Fox News Digital.
He also recommended that the immigrants discovered legal routes to come to the US, such as work visa for farm jobs, instead of trying to illegally enter – insisting that the current political atmosphere has increased concerns among the documents and uninterrupted Hispanic workers.
Voice of critics against migrant fields, hospital workers against Trump’s ‘temporary pass’
Heartques in the Hallvist Holll farm in Dudleville, Erizona graze two cows on a pile of grass. (Fox News Digital)
“You hear a lot of things about the new administration,” Márquez said. “We are, and people are very afraid. Because I have friends and family, who are unfortunately, not yet documents. So, there is a lot of fear with this administration that people do not want to go out to shops.”
A combination of factors-including the lack of labor for meat cutters and the cumbersome process of obtaining visas-has made it difficult to hire workers to work to work for the heart, with the skill set required to provide the community with a wide range of grass-lady, pasture-elevated meats.
Heartquist claimed that many of these issues have arisen from the Obama administration.
He said, “You had some abuses in some areas, and instead of dealing with individual abuses, they just cut the visa. And so, they made them more challenging to get a visa,” he said.
Trump urged the immigration crack for major industries to ‘temporary pass’: ‘I cherish our farmers’
Saul Merkese told Fox News Digital that documents and unspecified workers under the new administration have been frightened. (Fox News Digital)
“I can tell you now, Mexico and Central America have 16-and-17-year children who are cutting meat. To be able to bring them in, give them more training, teach them food safety issues, and all those pieces will be amazing. We can’t do it now. It is not built in our system,” Heartquist continued.
Without discussion about a more strong system and ability to bring workers from other countries to fill these labor needs, Dilkwa predicted that the immigration issues would continue to be spread.
Click here to get Fox News app
He said, “We are going to do exile on a large scale that are going to happen right now. The administration will change in three years,” he said. “Maybe it will still be strict on the border, perhaps it will not be, and so we will have another attack, another flood of people. The problem we face is … is a small part of the community that is not really good people, and it is out of the entire community and it is not appropriate.”