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Canada Treats Migrant Workers Horribly

Petsa

2013-05-17

May-akda

Dave Dean

Buod

Because Canadian citizens are increasingly unwilling to work tough agricultural jobs a la Stompin’ Tom’s “Tillsonburg”, the seasonal agricultural sector in Canada depends on migrant workers to hit the fields and greenhouses for harvest. Every year when the seasons are right, workers are recruited from South America, the Caribbean, The Philippines, Thailand, and Mexico, to work on farms that boast Canadian minimum wage along with room and board. For however long it takes, often seven or eight months of 60–70 hour work weeks, seasonal workers are used to harvest tobacco, cucumbers, ginseng, and whatever else grows inches from the ground and breaks a back to pick.

Over 25,000 migrants arrive in Canada, mostly in Southern Ontario, every year for this type of work, yet they remain largely invisible to their surrounding communities and the broader provincial and national purview that appreciates cheap produce.

Pamagat ng magazine

Vice

Connections

Pang-ekonomiyang sektor

Agriculture and horticulture workers and General farm workers

Mga Uri ng Nilalaman

Policy analysis

Geographical kaugnayan

Pederal and National relevance

Wika

Ingles