Hamilton

Rift between migrant workers reinforced by program design and employers, researcher says

There's an unspoken divide between Caribbean and Mexican migrant farm workers in Canada, say some workers and advocates. The program baked separation into its design and some employers force workers to compete with each other, they added.

Language, culture and a program designed to divide are at the root of the problem, researcher says

A man sits under a tree.
Migrant workers from Mexico and the Caribbean are often separated by employers and encouraged to compete against each other, said a former worker and an advocate. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

During the nine years he worked as a migrant farm worker in Ontario, Sidique Ali-Hosein says he noticed a rift between workers of different cultural backgrounds. 

Caribbean and Mexican workers often kept to themselves, he said, sometimes because of differences like language but other times because the employers grouped workers into bubbles. 

"When a farm worker comes, they're more or less in a bubble … Caribbean workers, they're not sure of what their rights are, [just like Mexican workers] they are kept into a bubble, uneducated," he said. 

Ali-Hosein came to Canada from Trinidad and Tobago for the first time in 2013. He worked at a farm in Simcoe, Ont., before getting an open work permit. He now works at a pharmaceutical distribution warehouse in Toronto.

Looking back, Ali-Hosein said divisions sometimes translated into hostile situations such as workers cutting in line in front others, he said. 

Researchers and advocates say employers and the structure of the federal program itself reinforce divisions between workers, and hope to see more intentional efforts to unite them.

A divide with systemic roots

Through the Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program (SAWP), Canadian employers hire and fly in temporary foreign workers.

The program is open to workers from Mexico or several specific Caribbean countries (Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Montserrat, St. Kitts-Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Trinidad and Tobago).

Kristin Lozanski, professor at the University of Western Ontario, has spent the last eight years travelling to the Niagara Region while researching tourism and farm work in the area. 

She said this divide between workers from Mexico and the Caribbean has been built into the program almost from the start.

SAWP started in 1966 with Jamaican workers, said Lozanski, and was expanded to the Caribbean until 1974, when they decided to include Mexico.

She said the addition was made as a way to take power from Caribbean workers who were advocating for better conditions in the program, therefore making the program "constructed on the premise of competition."

"There was a sense that the Caribbean was building up too much power, and they needed to balance that power," she said.

Workers still compete, Lozanski said, and often over the jobs themselves. 

Workers are aware their livelihood lies completely in the hands of employers, who can decide not to invite a worker back with no previous warning, said Lozanski. And just like that, she said, a farmer can also decide to replace their current workforce with workers from another country entirely, further emphasizing the competition between workers.

A woman speaks into a microphone.
Luisa Ortiz-Garza was born in Mexico City and raised in Guadalajara, Mexico. She says migrant workers at farms are sometimes threatened by employers who say if they don't meet expectations, they will bring in a group from a different country. (Submitted by Luisa Ortiz-Garza)

Luisa Ortíz-Garza, an organizer with Migrant Workers Alliance for Change (MWAC), echoed the point and said she knows of workers having been threatened with replacement.

"Let's say it's a farm with only Jamaican workers, and the employers are constantly saying, 'if you don't work faster, if you don't produce as much as they want them to produce, we're gonna bring Mexican workers,' and the same happens for Mexican workers," she said.

Ortíz-Garza said in her experience speaking with migrant workers, many think one group has it "better than the other."

"Mexican workers would say, Jamaicans have it easier because they speak English … And then Jamaican workers would say Mexicans have it easier, because the employers like them better," she said.

In most cases, both Ortíz-Garza and Lozanski said farms don't usually have workers from Mexico and the Caribbean working together, citing language barriers. They often live in separate houses too, creating minimum interaction between the two groups.

The separation not only creates competition, said Ortíz-Garza, but also prevents unity and camaraderie.

"At the end of the day, they're going through the same thing. They are in the same program," she said.

Bringing workers together intentionally

Ortíz-Garza said the best way of ending the competition between Mexican and Caribbean farm workers is to give them the option to become permanent residents. That way, the fear of being replaced will no longer be a problem with job security.

Even when they are together, however, communication is often difficult because of language, so Lozanski said bridging the gap between Mexican and Caribbean workers must be done intentionally. 

Lozanski also added that most workers are here with the sole purpose of earning a living, so going out of their way to make friends with one another is not at the top of their priorities.

Three people stand near a counter with another person behind it, with a banner above the entrance that says: The Neighbourhood Organization; Migrant Workers Support Services.
The Neighbourhood Organization is a Toronto-based group which provides services to newcomers across Ontario. They opened an office at the Simcoe Town Centre in December and started holding meetings twice weekly at a nearby church for workers to share a meal. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

However, Ortíz-Garza said creating spaces where workers can spend time together is extremely beneficial to both groups.

Although Ali-Husain is no longer a migrant worker, he volunteers with the Neighbourhood Organization, a Toronto-based group which provides services to newcomers across Ontario including migrant workers in Simcoe. 

He says he volunteers to help workers get information and support he wish he had when he had first arrived.

He said he's seen first hand how workers are trying to help each other, even when they don't speak the same language.

"People are aware now, because the workforce is changing," he said. "They are kind of basically helping each other to be awake and aware of what's going on in the work environment."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Aura Carreño Rosas

Freelance reporter, CBC Hamilton

Aura Carreño Rosas is a Hamilton-based freelance journalist from Venezuela, with a passion for pop culture and unique people with diverse journeys.