New York takes big step towards lowering overtime threshold
SCHUYLERVILLE: The thousands of people paid to plant corn, pick apples and milk cows in New York often work long days, six days a week and earn overtime only after 60 hours of labour.
New York took a big step on Friday towards lowering that threshold when a state board voted to recommend that a 40-hour overtime rule for farm workers be phased in over the next 10 years.
If the recommendation is approved by the state labour commissioner, New York would join California and Washington state in phasing in an overtime threshold common in other industries.
The vote by the three-member wage board capped a series of public hearings this month that heated up debate over compensation for agricultural workers in New York, many from Mexico, Guatemala and other foreign countries.
January saw a heated debate over compensation for agricultural workers
“We need a better quality of life,” veteran dairy worker Lazaro Alvarez said. He is among those who say the change is long overdue for an estimated 55,000 agricultural workers in New York.
But the prospect is alarming farmers. They warn the extra costs would wipe out marginal farms, hobble others and actually reduce workers’ earnings if farmers cap hours to manage expenses.
While the industry overall may survive, many individual farms will not, Chris Laughton of Farm Credit East, a lender for the agriculture industry in the Northeast, testified this month.
At Welcome Stock Farm near Saratoga Springs, Bill Peck said overtime after 40 hours for the farms 18 full-time employees would cost him up to an extra $12,000 a month. Dairy farmers like Peck say they cannot simply raise prices to reflect added expenses, since wholesale milk prices are regulated.
We aren’t going to be able to invest in a new tractor. We aren’t going to be able to invest in adding another barn, said Peck. That money is going to go just into payroll, so which is good for them in the short term, but long term the business can’t survive.
Crop farmers who grow vegetables and apples say they would be particularly hard hit when extra seasonal labour is needed. They say higher overtime costs will make them less competitive with farms in other states.
Farm workers in New York didn’t qualify for overtime pay at all until 2020, when the state changed the law to mandate extra pay for workers who exceeded 60 hours a week. The new law also instructed the wage board to consider whether to recommend a lower threshold.
The board voted on Friday to lower the farm threshold by four hours every other year, starting with overtime after 56 hours on or after Jan 1, 2024.
Farm workers would be able to earn overtime after 40 hours in 2032 under the recommendation. The board still needs to make a formal recommendation to Gov. Kathy Hocus labour commissioner, who can accept, reject or modify them.
We did something very historical today, said board chairperson Brenda McDuffie.
The recommendations were approved in a series of 2-1 votes, with member David Fisher, representing the New York Farm Bureau, opposing them.
Average hourly wages for agricultural workers in the region last year were $16.16, according to federal figures, though some earn the minimum wage of $13.20.
Alvarez, 63, of Mexico City, said overtime after 40 hours would reduce stress for workers like himself and give them a better quality of life.
“I will be able to have checkups at the doctor, I will be able to buy personal items. I will have time for me, Alvarez said in Spanish.
California has already been lowering farm overtime levels in phases over several years. Larger farms in California had to begin providing overtime after 40 hours starting this year. Farms with 25 or fewer employees will hit the 40-hour mark in 2025.
Washington approved a law last year phasing in overtime pay for agricultural workers.
Several other states offer some farm workers overtime, with limitations and exceptions. Trent Taylor, an attorney with the advocacy group Farmworker Justice, said more states are considering the proposals as the nation grapples more with labor and racial issues.
Nationally, farm workers were excluded from the overtime provisions of the landmark 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act. At the time, the US was only 73 years removed from outlawing slavery. Advocates say continuing to leave them out perpetuates an injustice against a profession long dominated by people of colour.
Published in Dawn, January 30th, 2022