February 14, 2026

Immigrant Farmworkers Struggle to Feed Themselves during Coronavirus

040620-18-Agriculture-Coronavirus-Immigration
Immigrant Farmworkers Struggle to Feed Themselves during Coronavirus

Immigrant Farmworkers Struggle to Feed Themselves during Coronavirus
Covid-19, the coronavirus sickening and killing unprecedented numbers of people around the world, has caused the US government to rethink its position with regard to the massive workforce that grows and harvests the nationโ€™s food. (Photo via salud-america.org)

Immigrant farmworkers have never been recognized, respected, or properly rewarded for their labor.


Immigrant Farmworkers Struggle to Feed Themselves during Coronavirus

By Danica Jorden


The 3 million strong farmworker force that provides the United States with its food has been deemed โ€œessentialโ€ by the United States government during the coronavirus. Undocumented farmworkers, who make up almost half of this predominantly Latino force, have been granted a sort of reprieve from arrest by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agency that arrests, detains and deports undocumented immigrants in the United States

In a marked pivot from its previous stance, ICE issued a statement on March 18 declaring that, during the coronavirus crisis, it will focus on โ€œcriminalโ€ aliens and โ€œdelayโ€ enforcement activities aimed at others. The brief, four paragraph statement ended with a phrase civil rights organizations have long clamored for: โ€œIndividuals should not avoid seeking medical care because they fear civil immigration enforcement.โ€

DHS followed up a day later with a memorandum listing agricultural work as part of the โ€œessential critical infrastructure,โ€ telling farmworkers โ€œyou have a special responsibility to maintain your work schedule.โ€

Previously ICE claimed to only arrest and detain, in the words of Donald Trump during his presidential campaign, the โ€œbad hombresโ€, immigrants who posed an imminent threat to public safety. But ICEโ€™s own literature conflates violent crimes with misdemeanor border crossing. Numerous community groups have documented case upon case of teens being arrested at school bus stops, parents being torn out of their cars in front of their children, and applicants arrested at ICE check-ins who had no serious records other than border crossing infractions.

But Covid-19, the coronavirus sickening and killing unprecedented numbers of people around the world, has caused the US government to rethink its position with regard to the massive workforce that grows and harvests the nationโ€™s food. From the orange groves of California to the corn fields of Iowa and the sweet potato growers of North Carolina, 80% of the 3 million farmworkers in the United States are Latino, and 90% of those working on H-2A (temporary agricultural worker) visas are from Mexico. Only a little more than half (53%) of these essential workers have legal authorization.

Lariza Garzon and the Episcopal Farmworker Ministry saw their food delivery for farmworkers in Dunn, North Carolina swamped on March 27 by immigrant families in search of basic foodstuffs. According to Ms Garzon, more than 200 families came to the EFWMโ€™s offices, and at least 50 families were forced to leave empty handed.

The EFWM is asking for donations of items like hand sanitizer, soap and Tylenol, and staples such as beans, tortillas, cooking oil and canned tuna. They also accept monetary donations here, or here.


Published by Common Dreams, 04.06.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.