Temporary Agricultural Employment of H-2A Aliens in the United States; Modernizing the Labor Certification Process and Enforcement, 77110-77262 [E8-29309]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 244 / Thursday, December 18, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training
Administration
20 CFR Part 655
Wage and Hour Division
29 CFR Parts 501, 780, and 788
RIN 1205–AB55
Temporary Agricultural Employment of
H–2A Aliens in the United States;
Modernizing the Labor Certification
Process and Enforcement
Employment and Training
Administration, and Wage and Hour
Division, Employment Standards
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Final rule.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Department of Labor
(DOL or Department) is amending its
regulations regarding the certification
for the temporary employment of
nonimmigrant workers in agricultural
occupations on a temporary or seasonal
basis, and the enforcement of the
contractual obligations applicable to
employers of such nonimmigrant
workers.
This final rule re-engineers the
process by which employers obtain a
temporary labor certification from the
Department for use in petitioning the
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) to employ a nonimmigrant
worker in H–2A (agricultural temporary
worker) status. The final rule utilizes an
attestation-based application process
based on pre-filing recruitment and
eliminates duplicative H–2A activities
currently performed by State Workforce
Agencies (SWAs) and the Department.
The rule also provides enhanced
enforcement, including more rigorous
penalties, to complement the
modernized certification process and to
appropriately protect workers.
DATES: This final rule is effective
January 17, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information about 20 CFR part
655, subpart B, contact William L.
Carlson, Administrator, Office of
Foreign Labor Certification,
Employment and Training
Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Room C–4312, Washington, DC 20210.
Telephone: (202) 693–3010 (this is not
a toll-free number). Individuals with
hearing or speech impairments may
access the telephone number above via
TTY by calling the toll-free Federal
Information Relay Service at 1–800–
877–8339.
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For further information regarding 29
CFR part 501, contact James Kessler,
Farm Labor Team Leader, Wage and
Hour Division, Employment Standards
Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW.,
Room S–3510, Washington, DC 20210;
Telephone (202) 693–0070 (this is not a
toll-free number). Individuals with
hearing or speech impairments may
access the telephone number above via
TTY by calling the toll-free Federal
Information Relay Service at 1–800–
877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background Leading to the NPRM
A. Statutory Standard and Current
Department of Labor Regulations
B. Overview of the Proposed Redesign of
the System
C. Severability
II. Discussion of Comments on Proposed Rule
A. Revisions to 20 CFR Part 655
Subpart B
Section 655.93 Special Procedures
Section 655.100 Overview and
Definitions
Section 655.101 Applications for
Temporary Employment Certification
Section 655.102 Required pre-filing
activity
Section 655.103 Advertising
requirements
Section 655.104 Contents of job offers
Section 655.105 Assurances and
obligations of H–2A employers
Section 655.106 Assurances and
obligations of H–2A labor contractors
Section 655.107 Processing of
applications
Section 655.108 Offered wage rate
Section 655.109 Labor certification
determinations
Section 655.110 Validity and scope of
temporary labor certifications
Section 655.111 Required departure
Section 655.112 Audits
Section 655.113 H–2A Applications
Involving Fraud or Willful
Misrepresentation
Section 655.114 Setting Meal Charges;
Petition for Higher Meal Charges
Section 655.115 Administrative Review
and De Novo Hearing before an
Administrative Law Judge
Section 655.116 Job Service Complaint
System; enforcement of work contracts
Section 655.117 Revocation of H–2A
certification approval
Section 655.118 Debarment
Timeline for Anticipated Training and
Education Outreach Initiative Transition
B. Revisions to 29 CFR Part 501
Section 501.0 Introduction
Section 501.1 Purpose and scope
Section 501.2 Coordination of intake
between DOL agencies
Section 501.3 Discrimination
Section 501.4 Waiver of rights prohibited
Section 501.5 Investigation authority of
Secretary
Section 501.6 Cooperation with DOL
officials
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Section 501.8 Surety bond
Section 501.10 Definitions
Section 501.15 Enforcement
Section 501.16 Sanctions and remedies
Section 501.19 Civil money penalty
assessment
Section 501.20 Debarment and revocation
Section 501.21 Failure to cooperate with
investigations
Section 501.30 Applicability of
procedures and rules
Section 501.31 Written notice of
determination required
Section 501.32 Contents of notice
Section 501.33 Requests for hearing
Section 501.42 Exhaustion of
administrative remedies
C. Revisions to 29 CFR Parts 780 and 788
Section 780.115 Forest products
Section 780.201 Meaning of forestry or
lumbering operations
Section 780.205 Nursery activities
generally and Christmas tree production
Section 780.208 Forestry activities
Section 788.10 Preparing other forestry
products
III. Administrative Information
A. Executive Order 12866—Regulatory
Planning and Review
B. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
D. Executive Order 13132—Federalism
E. Executive Order 13175—Indian Tribal
Governments
F. Assessment of Federal Regulations and
Policies on Families
G. Executive Order 12630—Protected
Property Rights
H. Executive Order 12988—Civil Justice
Reform
I. Plain Language
J. Executive Order 13211—Energy Supply
K. Paperwork Reduction Act
I. Background Leading to the NPRM
A. Statutory Standard and Current
Department of Labor Regulations
The H–2A visa program provides a
means for U.S. agricultural employers to
employ foreign workers on a temporary
basis to perform agricultural labor or
services when U.S. labor is in short
supply. Section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of
the Immigration and Nationality Act
(INA or the Act) (8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a)) defines an H–2A
worker as a nonimmigrant admitted to
the U.S. on a temporary or seasonal
basis to perform agricultural labor or
services. Section 214(c)(1) of the INA (8
U.S.C. 1184(c)(1)) mandates that the
Secretary of DHS consult with the
Secretary of the Department of Labor
(the Secretary) with respect to
adjudication H–2A petitions, and, by
cross-referencing Section 218 of the INA
(8 U.S.C. 1188), with determining the
availability of U.S. workers and the
effect on wages and working conditions.
Section 218 also sets forth further
details of the H–2A application process
and the requirements to be met by the
agricultural employer.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 244 / Thursday, December 18, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
Although foreign agricultural labor
has contributed to the growth and
success of America’s agricultural sector
since the 19th century, the modern-day
agricultural worker visa program
originated with the creation, in the INA
(Pub. L. 82–144), of the ‘‘H–2
program’’—a reference to the INA
subparagraph that established the
program. Today, the H–2A
nonimmigrant visa program authorizes
the Secretary of DHS to permit
employers to hire foreign workers to
come temporarily to the U.S. and
perform agricultural services or labor of
a seasonal or temporary nature, if the
need for foreign labor is first certified by
the Secretary.
Section 218(a)(1) of the INA (8 U.S.C.
1188(a)(1)) states that a petition to
import H–2A workers may not be
approved by the Secretary of Homeland
Security unless the petitioner has
applied to the Secretary for a
certification that:
(a) There are not sufficient U.S.
workers who are able, willing, and
qualified, and who will be available at
the time and place needed to perform
the labor or services involved in the
petition; and
(b) The employment of the alien in
such labor or services will not adversely
affect the wages and working conditions
of workers in the United States similarly
employed.
The INA specifies conditions under
which the Secretary must deny
certification, and establishes specific
timeframes within which employers
must file—and the Department must
process and either reject or certify—
applications for H–2A labor
certification. In addition, the statute
contains certain worker protections,
including the provision of workers’
compensation insurance and housing as
well as minimum recruitment standards
to which H–2A employers must adhere.
See 8 U.S.C. 1188(b) and (c). The INA
does not limit the number of foreign
workers who may be accorded H–2A
status each year or the number of labor
certification applications the
Department may process.
The Department has regulations at 20
CFR part 655, subpart B—‘‘Labor
Certification Process for Temporary
Agricultural Employment Occupations
in the United States (H–2A Workers),’’
governing the H–2A labor certification
process, and at 29 CFR part 501
implementing its enforcement
responsibilities under the H–2A
program. Regulations relating to
employer-provided housing for
agricultural workers appear at 20 CFR
part 654, subpart E (Housing for
Agricultural Workers), and 29 CFR
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1910.142 (standards set by the
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration); see also 20 CFR
651.10, and part 653, subparts B and F.
The Department was charged with
reviewing the efficiency and
effectiveness of its H–2A procedures in
light of the increasing presence of
undocumented workers in agricultural
occupations and because of growing
concern about the stability of the
agricultural industry given its difficulty
in gaining access to a legal workforce.1
The Department reviewed its
administration of the program and, in
light of its extensive experience in both
the processing of applications and the
enforcement of worker protections,
proposed measures to re-engineer the
H–2A program in a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on February 13, 2008 (73
FR 8538) (NPRM or Proposed Rule).
B. Overview of the Proposed Redesign of
the System
The NPRM described a pre-filing
recruitment and attestation process as
part of a re-engineered H–2A program.
The Department proposed a process by
which employers, as part of their
application, would attest under threat of
penalties, including debarment from the
program, that they have complied with
and will continue to comply with all
applicable program requirements. In
addition, employers would not be
required to file extensive documentation
with their applications but would be
required to maintain all supporting
documentation for their application for
a period of 5 years in order to facilitate
the Department’s enforcement of
program requirements. The
Department’s proposal also contained
new and enhanced penalties and
procedures for invoking those penalties
against employers as well as their
attorneys or agents who fail to perform
obligations imposed under the H–2A
program. The program also eliminates
duplicative administration and
processing by the State Workforce
Agencies (SWAs) and the Department
by requiring filing of the application
only with the Department’s National
Processing Center (NPC) in Chicago,
Illinois. This program would also enable
the SWAs to better perform their
mandated functions in processing H–2A
agricultural clearance orders, by
enhancing their ability to conduct
housing inspections well in advance of
the employer’s application date. The
1 Fact Sheet: Improving Border Security and
Immigration Within Existing Law, Office of the
Press Secretary, The White House (August 10,
2007); see also Statement on Improving Border
Security and Immigration Within Existing Law, 43
Weekly Comp. Pres. Doc. (August 13, 2007).
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SWAs would also continue to clear and
post intrastate job orders, circulate them
through the Employment Service
interstate clearance system and refer
potential U.S. workers to employers.
Finally, the Department proposed
additional processes for penalizing
employers or their attorneys or agents
who fail to perform obligations required
under the H–2A program, including
provisions for debarring employers,
agents, and attorneys and revoking
approved labor certifications.
C. Severability
The Department declares that, to the
extent that any portion of this Final
Rule is declared to be invalid by a court,
it intends for all other parts of the Final
Rule that are capable of operating in the
absence of the specific portion that has
been invalidated to remain in effect.
Thus, even if a court decision
invalidating a portion of this Final Rule
resulted in a partial reversion to the
current regulations or to the statutory
language itself, the Department intends
that the rest of the Final Rule would
continue to operate, if at all possible, in
tandem with the reverted provisions.
II. Discussion of Comments on
Proposed Rule
The Department received over 11,000
comments in response to the proposed
rule, the vast majority of them form
letters or e-mails repeating the same
contentions. Commenters included
individual farmers and associations of
farmers, agricultural associations, law
firms, farmworker advocates,
community-based organizations, and
individual members of the public. The
Department has reviewed these
comments and taken them into
consideration in drafting this Final
Rule.
We do not discuss here those
provisions of the NPRM on which we
received no comments. Those
provisions were adopted as proposed.
We have also made some editorial
changes to the text of the proposed
regulations, for clarity and to improve
readability. Those changes are not
intended to alter the meaning or intent
of the regulations.
A. Revisions to 20 CFR Part 655
Subpart B
Section 655.93 Special Procedures
The Department proposed to revise
the current regulation on special
procedures to clarify its authority to
establish procedures that vary from
those procedures outlined in the
regulations. We received numerous
comments about this revised language
on special procedures.
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Several commenters questioned the
effect the proposed language would
have on special procedures currently in
use. Section 655.93(b) of the current
regulations provides for special
procedures, stating that: ‘‘the Director
has the authority to establish special
procedures for processing H–2A
applications when employers can
demonstrate upon written application to
and consultation with the Director that
special procedures are necessary.’’ The
proposed rule provides that ‘‘the OFLC
Administrator has the authority to
establish or to revise special procedures
in the form of variances for processing
certain H–2A applications when
employers can demonstrate upon
written application to and consultation
with the OFLC Administrator that
special procedures are necessary.’’
Four associations of growers/
producers specifically requested
clarification of the phrase ‘‘in the form
of variances.’’ These associations asked
the Department to confirm that the
proposed language does not pose a
threat to the continued use of the
special procedures for sheepherders
currently in place. One association
expressed concern that this revised
language would require hundreds of
employers engaged in the range
production of livestock to annually
document their need for special
procedures.
The addition of the phrase ‘‘in the
form of variances’’ is intended to clarify
that special procedures differ from those
processes set out in the regulation,
which otherwise apply to employers
seeking to hire H–2A workers. The
special procedures for sheepherders, for
example, arise from decades of past
practices and draw upon the unique
nature of the activity that cannot be
completely addressed in the generally
applicable regulations. The
establishment of special procedures
recognizes the peculiarities of an
industry or activity, and provides a
means to comply with the underlying
program requirements through an
altered process that adequately
addresses the unique nature of the
industry or activity while meeting the
statutory and regulatory requirements of
the program. The special procedures do
not enable industries and employers to
evade their statutory or regulatory
responsibilities but rather establish a
feasible and tailored means of meeting
them while recognizing the unique
circumstances of that industry. The
language in § 655.93(b) affirms the
Department’s authority to develop and/
or revise special procedures. The
Department does not intend to require
any industry currently using special
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procedures to seek ratification of their
current practice, nor does the
Department intend to require annual or
periodic justifications of an industry’s
need for special procedures. The
Department does reserve the right to
make appropriate changes to those
procedures after consultation with the
industry involved.
Section 655.93(b) in the NPRM
enables the Administrator/OFLC ‘‘to
establish or revise special procedures in
the form of variances for processing
certain H–2A applications when
employers can demonstrate upon
written application to and consultation
with the OFLC Administrator that
special procedures are necessary.’’ In
contrast, the current rule states that the
subpart permits the Administrator/
OFLC to ‘‘continue and * * * revise the
special procedures previously in effect
for the handling of applications for
sheepherders in the Western States (and
to adapt such procedures to occupations
in the range production of other
livestock) and for custom combine
crews.’’
The Department received several
comments about the proposed language,
universally expressing concern that the
new language provides the Department
with broader authority for changing or
revoking existing special procedures
without providing due process with
respect to altering the procedures. An
association of growers/producers stated
that the proposed rule uses ‘‘more
ominous terms’’ and gives the
impression that the Administrator/
OFLC has unilateral authority to make
changes without safeguards, review, or
democratic procedures. One association
of growers and producers expressed the
view that the revocation language gives
the Department authority to revoke the
procedures without advance notice and
opportunity for comment and is,
therefore, a violation of the
Administrative Procedure Act.
A law firm that provides counsel to
agricultural employers stated that the
new language does not adequately
solidify the Department’s commitment
to existing special procedures and
recommended that the Department
amend the regulation to affirm its
commitment to continuing such longstanding special procedures by
providing that any proposed changes to
the existing special procedures and
policies can be made only after
publication in the Federal Register with
at least a 120-day period for public
comment. The firm also commented that
the proposal to empower the
Administrator/OFLC to revoke special
procedures would violate Section
218(c)(4) of the INA, which requires the
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Secretary of Labor to issue regulations
addressing the specific requirements of
housing for employees principally
engaged in the range production of
livestock.
The Department has decided,
following consideration of these
concerns, to retain the NPRM language
in the final regulation, but has added
language similar to that in the current
regulation, to enumerate those special
procedures currently in effect as
examples of the use of special
procedures. It is our belief that this
provision, as it now reads, provides
both the Department and employers
using the H–2A program essential
flexibility regarding special procedures,
thus permitting the Department to be far
more responsive to employers’ changing
needs, crop mechanization, and similar
concerns. In addition, the language on
special procedures in the Final Rule
reaffirms the Department’s continuing
commitment to use special procedures
where appropriate. The Department has
no present intent to revoke any of the
special procedures that are already in
place, nor does the language of the final
regulation give the Department any new
power to do so. While it is possible that
at some time in the future the
Department may need to revoke or
revise existing special procedures, that
step would be taken with the same level
of deliberation and consultation that
was employed in the creation of those
procedures. To strengthen our
commitment to continue the current
consultative process, we have changed
the word ‘‘may’’ in the last sentence of
paragraph (b) to ‘‘will.’’ The provision
also provides the Department with the
authority to develop new procedures to
meet employer needs and, additionally,
provides employers with the
opportunity to request that the
Department consider additional
procedures or revisions to existing
special procedures. Proposed paragraph
(c) has been deleted as unnecessarily
duplicative of the language in paragraph
(b).
Two associations of growers and
producers requested that the
Department formulate special
procedures for dairy workers, stating
that these requested special procedures
should not be different from those
already established for sheepherders.
The associations stated the provisions
for sheepherders have ‘‘special
relevance to the current dairy situation’’
and also stated the ‘‘special procedures
relieve the sheepherding industry from
having to make a showing of temporary
or seasonal employment.’’ The
longstanding special procedures that
allow sheepherders to participate in the
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H–2A program have their origins in
prior statutory provisions dating back to
the 1950s. The Department is unaware
of any comparable statutory history
pertaining to the dairy industry. The
Department would, of course, consider
a specific request from dairy producers
or their representatives for the
development of special procedures that
would be applicable to eligible H–2A
occupations (see further discussion on
this point in the discussion of the
definition of ‘‘agricultural labor or
services’’ below). The Department does
not believe, however, that it would be
appropriate to speculatively address the
merits of a specific special procedures
request in this regulation, particularly
before a request making a detailed case
for the appropriateness of such special
procedures has been received.
An individual employer commented
that those involved in discussing and
considering changes to the H–2A
program should preserve the special
procedures for sheepherders and extend
them to all occupations engaged in the
range production of other livestock
(cattle and horses). A private citizen
provided suggestions for improving the
handling of certification for sheep
shearers.
The Department has previously
established special procedures for open
range production of livestock and sheep
shearers and does not have any plans to
change those procedures at this time
and does not believe that it would be
appropriate to address in this regulation
the merits of the commenters’ general
suggestions for revising these special
procedures. The Department would, of
course, be willing to consider a specific
request from livestock producers or
their representatives for the revision or
expansion of special procedures
consistent with its authority and this
regulation.
Section 655.100—Overview and
definitions
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(a) Overview
The Department included a provision
in the NPRM, similar to a provision in
the current regulation, which provides
an overview of the H–2A program. This
overview provides the reader, especially
readers unfamiliar with the program, a
general description of program
obligations, requirements, and
processes.
Only two commenters identified
concerns with the overview as written.
Both expressed concern with the
proposed earlier time period for the
recruitment of U.S. workers. They
questioned whether U.S. workers who
agreed to work on a date far in advance
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would then be available to work for the
entire contract period. The overview,
however, simply describes in broadbrush fashion the regulatory provisions
that are discussed in detail later in the
NPRM, and in and of itself has no legal
effect. The concerns and observations
expressed by commenters will be
addressed in the context of the relevant
regulatory provision to which they
apply rather than in the overview. The
overview has also been edited for
general clarity and to reflect changes
made throughout the regulatory text.
(b) Transition
The Department, due to past program
experience, has decided to add a
transition period in order to provide an
orderly and seamless transition to the
new system created by these regulatory
revisions. This will allow the
Department to make necessary changes
to program operations, provide training
to the NPC, SWAs and stakeholder
groups, and allow employers and their
agents/representatives to become
familiar with the new system.
Employers with a date of need for
workers on or after July 1, 2009 will be
obligated to follow all of the new
procedures established by these
regulations. Prior to that time, the
Department has created a hybrid system
involving elements of the old and the
new regulations as delineated in the
new § 655.100(b).
Even though the NPRM put current
and future users of H–2A workers on
some notice regarding what this Final
Rule will require, the rule as a whole
implements several significant changes
to the administration of the program.
Several commenters requested that the
Department allow employers some
period of time to prepare and adjust
their requests for temporary agricultural
workers. These regulations implement
new application forms, new processes,
and new time periods for conducting
recruitment for domestic workers to
which current and new users of the
program will need to become
accustomed.
The Department is accordingly
adopting a transition period after the
effective date of this Final Rule. The
transition period establishes procedures
that will apply to any application for
which the first date of need for H–2A
workers is no earlier than the effective
date of this rule and no later than June
30, 2009.
During this transition period, the
Department will accept applications in
the following manner: An employer will
complete and submit Form ETA–9142,
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification, in accordance with
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§ 655.107, no less than 45 days prior to
their date of need. The employer will
simultaneously submit Form ETA–790
Agricultural and Food Processing
Clearance Order (job order), with the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification (application) directly to the
Chicago NPC. Activities that are
required to be conducted prior to filing
an application under the Final Rule will
be conducted post-filing during this
transition period, much as they are
under the current rule. The employer
will also be expected to make
attestations in its application applicable
to its future recruitment activities,
payment of the offered wage rate, etc.
Employers will not be required to
complete an initial recruitment report
for submission with the application, but
will be required to complete a
recruitment report for submission to the
NPC prior to certification, and will also
be required to complete a final
recruitment report covering the entire
recruitment period.
The employer will not separately
request a wage determination from the
Chicago NPC. Upon receipt of Forms
ETA–9142 and ETA–790, the Chicago
NPC will provide the employer with the
minimum applicable wage rate to be
offered by the employer, and will
process the application and job order in
a manner consistent with § 655.107,
issuing a modification for any curable
deficiencies within 7 calendar days.
Once the application and job order have
been accepted, the Chicago NPC will
transmit a copy of the job order to the
SWA(s) serving the area of intended
employment to initiate intrastate and
interstate clearance, request the SWA(s)
schedule an inspection of the housing,
and provide instructions to the
employer to commence positive
recruitment in a manner consistent with
§ 655.102. The NPC will designate labor
supply States during this transition
period on a case-by-case basis, applying
the basic information standard for such
designations that is set forth in
§ 655.102(i).
This transition period process will
apply only to applications filed on or
after the effective date of this regulation
with dates of need no earlier than the
effective date and no later than June 30,
2009. Employers with a date of need on
or after July 1, 2009 will be expected to
fully comply with all of the
requirements of the Final Rule.
Moreover, after the Final Rule’s effective
date, the requirements of the Final Rule
will fully apply except for those
modifications that are expressly
mentioned as transition period
procedures in § 655.100(b); all other
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provisions of the Final Rule will apply
on the effective date of the Final Rule.
These transition period procedures
are designed to ensure that employers
seeking to utilize the program
immediately after its effective date,
especially those with needs early in the
planting season, will not be prejudiced
by the new pre-filing requirements
regarding wage determinations and
recruitment, which might otherwise
substantially impact employers’
application timing. Because the
Department’s seasonal H–2A workload
begins to peak in January of each year,
however, the Department deems it
essential to the smooth and continuous
operation of the H–2A program
throughout calendar year 2009 to make
the rule effective as early in the year as
possible.
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(c) Definitions 655.100
Definition of ‘‘agent,’’ ‘‘attorney,’’ and
‘‘representative’’
The Department did not propose any
changes to the definition of ‘‘agent’’
from existing regulations but added
definitions for ‘‘attorney’’ and
‘‘representative’’ in the proposed rule. A
major trade association commented that
the definitions of, and references to, the
terms ‘‘agent,’’ ‘‘attorney’’ and
‘‘representative’’ are confusing. The
association found the definitions of
agent and representative to be
duplicative and the distinctions
between these two terms, both of which
encompass the authority to act on behalf
of an employer, unclear. The association
also commented that the definition of
‘‘attorney’’ is self-evident and appears to
be a vehicle for permitting attorneys to
act as ‘‘agents’’ or ‘‘representatives.’’
Further, according to the commenter,
the term ‘‘representative’’ is also
problematic and the Department should
consider revising it or eliminating it
entirely. The association believes the
main purpose of the definition is to
deem the person who makes the
attestations on behalf of the employer a
‘‘representative,’’ but the association
believes it is not clear whether the
intent of the definition of
‘‘representative’’ is to also make the
representative liable for any
misrepresentations made in an
attestation on behalf of an employer.
The association recommended the
proposed rule should clarify the intent
of the definition of ‘‘representative’’ and
also under what circumstances an agent
will be liable for activities undertaken
on behalf of an employer. The
association recommended a clear set of
standards for liability and suggested
such standards should not deviate from
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the current standards where agents,
attorneys, and representatives (under
the proposed rule) are not liable if they
perform the administrative tasks
necessary to file labor certification
applications and petitions for visas and
do not make attestations that are
factually based. In addition, the
association recommended that the
agents, attorneys, or representatives
should not be liable for program
violations by the employer.
The Department understands the need
for clarity in determining who qualifies
as a representative before the
Department and what responsibilities
and liabilities attach to that role and has
accordingly simplified the definition of
a representative. Although the
Department does distinguish between
the different roles of attorneys and
agents, both groups are held to the same
standards of ethics and honesty under
the Department’s rules. Under the rules,
attorneys can function as agents, and
either attorneys or agents can function
as a representative of the employer. The
Department has, in addition, replaced
the word ‘‘official’’ with ‘‘person or
entity’’ to parallel the definition of
agent.
However, the Department disagrees
with the commenter’s interpretation of
the extent to which an agent or attorney
can be held accountable by the
Department for their own and their
clients’ conduct in filing an application
for an employer. While agents and
attorneys are of course not strictly liable
for all misconduct engaged in by their
clients, they do undertake a significant
duty in attestations to the Department
regarding their employer-clients’
obligations. They are, therefore,
responsible for exercising reasonable
due diligence in ensuring that
employers understand their
responsibilities under the program and
are prepared to execute those
obligations. Agents and attorneys do not
themselves make the factual attestations
and are not required to have personal
knowledge that the attestations they
submit are accurate. They are, however,
required to inform the employers they
represent of the employers’ obligations
under the program, including the
employers’ liability for making false
attestations, and the prohibition on
submitting applications containing
attestations they know or should know
are false. The debarment provisions at
§ 655.118 of the final regulations have
accordingly been clarified to state that
agents and attorneys can be held liable
for their employer-clients’ misconduct
when they ‘‘participated in, had
knowledge of, or had reason to know of,
the employer’s substantial violation.’’
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The same association also questioned
why the Department is ‘‘singling out
attorneys’’ in the definition of
‘‘representative’’ by requiring an
attorney who acts as an employer’s
representative and interviews and/or
considers U.S. workers for the job
offered to the foreign worker(s) to also
be the person who normally considers
applicants for job opportunities not
involving labor certifications. The
association found no apparent rationale
justifying why the Department should
dictate who and under what
circumstances an attorney or any other
person should interview U.S. job
applicants. It further recommended that
the rule eliminate the reference to
attorneys or, at a minimum, clarify that
the rule does not reach attorneys who
merely advise and guide employers
through the H–2A program. The
Department has accordingly clarified
the definition of representative by
deleting the sentence limiting the role
attorneys can play in interviewing and
considering workers, primarily because,
unlike other labor certification programs
administered by the Department, the
relatively simple job qualifications that
apply to most agricultural job
opportunities render it unlikely that
U.S. workers would be discouraged
from applying for those jobs by the
prospect of being interviewed by an
attorney.
A specialty bar association urged that
the definition of ‘‘agent’’ be changed in
order to prevent abuses related to
foreign nationals paying recruiters’ fees.
The association suggested that the
Department limit representation of
employers to that recognized by DHS:
attorneys duly licensed and in good
standing; law students and law
graduates not yet licensed who are
working under the direct supervision of
an attorney licensed in the United States
or a certified representative; a reputable
individual of good moral character who
is assisting without direct or indirect
remuneration and who has a preexisting relationship with the person or
entity being represented; and accredited
representatives, who are persons
representing a nonprofit organization
which has been accredited by the Board
of Immigration Appeals.
The Department acknowledges that its
allowance of agents who are not
attorneys and who do not fit into the
categories recognized by DHS creates a
difference of practices between the two
agencies. However, the Department has
for decades permitted agents who do not
meet DHS’s criteria to appear before it.
Agents who are not attorneys have
adequately represented claimants before
the Department in a wide variety of
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activities since long before the
development of the H–2A program. To
change such a long-standing practice in
the context of this rulemaking would
represent a major change in policy that
the Department is not prepared to make
at this time. The Department has,
however, added language to the
definition of both ‘‘agent’’ and
‘‘attorney’’ to clarify that individuals
who have been debarred by the
Department under § 655.118 cannot
function as attorneys or agents during
the period of their debarment.
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Definition of ‘‘adverse effect wage rate’’
The Department proposed a revised
definition of ‘‘adverse effect wage rate,’’
limiting its application to only H–2A
workers. A law firm commented that the
proposed definition of ‘‘adverse effect
wage rate’’ appears to apply only to H–
2A workers and not to U.S. workers who
are employed in ‘‘corresponding
employment.’’ The Department has
clarified the definition to make clear
that those hired into corresponding
employment during the recruitment
period will also receive the highest of
the AEWR, prevailing wage, or
minimum wage, as applicable. The firm
also requested the same revision to 29
CFR Part 501 regulations. The
Department believes that this
requirement is adequately explained in
the text of the regulations at § 655.104(l)
and § 655.105(g).
Definition of ‘‘agricultural association’’
The Department added a definition
for ‘‘agricultural association’’ in the
proposed regulation. A major trade
association commented that the
proposed definition does not
acknowledge that associations may be
joint employers and suggests that the
definition could cause confusion
because other sections of the proposed
regulation acknowledge that
associations may have joint employer
status. The association recommended
the definition clarify that agricultural
associations may serve as agents or joint
employers and define the circumstances
under which joint employer
arrangements may be utilized. A
professional association further
commented that associations should not
be exempt from Farm Labor Contractor
provisions if the associations are
performing the same activities as Farm
Labor Contractors.
The Department agrees that
agricultural associations play a vital role
in the H–2A program and seeks to
minimize potential confusion about
their role and responsibilities. The
regulation has been revised to clarify
that agricultural associations may
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indeed serve as sole employers, joint
employers, or as agents. The definition
of ‘‘H–2A Labor Contractors’’ has also
been revised to clearly differentiate
labor contractors from agricultural
associations and that an agricultural
association that meets the definition in
this part is not subject to the
requirements attaching to H–2A Labor
Contractors. Finally, the regulation has
been clarified by specifying that
‘‘processing establishments, canneries,
gins, packing sheds, nurseries, or other
fixed-site agricultural employers’’ can
all be encompassed by agricultural
associations.
Definition of Application for Temporary
Employment Certification
The Department has added to the
Final Rule a definition of Application
for Temporary Labor Certification. An
Application for Temporary Labor
Certification is an Office of Management
and Budget (OMB)-approved form that
an employer submits to DOL to secure
a temporary agricultural labor
certification. A complete submission is
required to include an initial
recruitment report.
Definition of ‘‘date of need’’
The Department slightly modified the
definition of ‘‘date of need’’ to clarify
that the applicable date is the one that
is specified in the employer’s
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification.
Definition of ‘‘employ’’ and ‘‘employer’’
In the NPRM, the Department added
a definition for ‘‘employ’’ and made
revisions to the existing definition of
‘‘employer.’’ A trade association
suggested that the Department eliminate
the definition of ‘‘employ’’ but retain
the definition of ‘‘employer,’’ stating
that the definition of ‘‘employ’’ adds
nothing to clarify status or legal
obligations under the H–2A program.
The association believes the status of an
employer under the H–2A program is
defined by the labor certification and
visa petition processes and that the
incorporation of the broad FLSA and
MSPA definitions of ‘‘employ’’
insinuate broad legal concepts that add
unnecessary confusion. The association
further recommended that the
Department eliminate the fourth
criterion related to joint employment
status in its proposed definition of
‘‘employer’’ and, instead, provide a
separate definition of joint employer
associations and the respective
liabilities of the association and its joint
employer members.
The Department agrees with these
comments and has, accordingly,
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removed the definition of ‘‘employ’’ as
superfluous and created a separate
definition of ‘‘joint employment’’ (using
that portion of the definition of
employer which discussed joint
employers) to eliminate any confusion
between the two terms. The definition
of ‘‘employer’’ has also been revised.
First, the Final Rule clarifies the
proposal’s statement that an employer
must have a ‘‘location’’ within the U.S.
to more specifically state that it must
have a ‘‘place of business (physical
location) within the U.S.’’ Second, out
of recognition that some H–2A program
users, such as H–2ALCs, are itinerant by
nature, and that SWA referrals may thus
occasionally need to be made to nonfixed locations, the Final Rule states
that an employer must have ‘‘a means
by which it may be contacted for
employment’’ rather than a specific
location ‘‘to which U.S. workers may be
referred.’’ Finally, the Final Rule
clarifies that an employer must have an
employment relationship ‘‘with respect
to H–2A employees or related U.S.
workers under this subpart’’ rather than
less specifically referring to ‘‘employees
under this subpart,’’ and deletes the
references to specific indicia of an
employment relationship because the
applicable criteria are spelled out in
greater detail in the definition of
‘‘employee.’’ The definition of ‘‘joint
employer’’ is modified slightly from the
concept that appeared in the NPRM to
clarify that the two or more employers
must each have sufficient indicia of
employment to be considered the
employer of the employee in order to
meet the test for joint employment.
Definition of ‘‘farm labor contracting
activity’’ and ‘‘Farm Labor Contractor
(FLC)’’
The Department proposed adding
definitions for ‘‘farm labor contracting
activity’’ and ‘‘Farm Labor Contractor
(FLC)’’ to this section. In the Final Rule,
the Department has eliminated the
definition for ‘‘farm labor contracting
activity’’ and revised the definition for
‘‘Farm Labor Contractor.’’ The revised
definition is now contained under the
heading ‘‘H–2A Labor Contractor.’’
A law firm commented that neither
agents nor attorneys should be required
to register as H–2A Labor Contractors.
The commenter did not specifically
address why it believed agents and
attorneys would be required to register
under the proposed definitions, so the
Department is unable to respond to this
point. As a general matter, however, an
agent or attorney, if performing labor
contracting activities as they appear in
the revised definition of an H–2A Labor
Contractor, would be required to register
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as, and would be held to the standards
of, an H–2A Labor Contractor.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations commented that the
definition proposed for Farm Labor
Contractor (H–2A Labor Contractor)
would exclude recruiters of foreign
temporary workers from the scope of the
rule, making enforcement impossible.
This organization pointed out that
under the Migrant and Seasonal
Agricultural Worker Protection Act
(MSPA), H–2A workers are not migrant
or seasonal agricultural workers and,
therefore, a contractor recruiting
workers to become H–2A visa holders
would not fit within the proposed
regulatory definition. The organization
also commented that the reference to
‘‘fixed-site’’ employers in the ‘‘farm
labor contracting activity’’ definition
could present problems in some
employment situations, such as
employment for a custom harvester,
where the employer would not have a
fixed site. An association of growers/
producers suggested the MSPA
definitions for ‘‘farm labor contracting
activity’’ and ‘‘Farm Labor Contractor’’
should be used.
In response to the comments, the
Department has deleted the definition of
‘‘agricultural employer’’ and included a
separate definition for ‘‘fixed-site
employer.’’ The Department also deleted
the definition of ‘‘Farm Labor
Contractor’’ in the final regulation and
replaced it with a new definition for
‘‘H–2A Labor Contractor.’’ This will
differentiate the two terms since the
definition of an ‘‘H–2A Labor
Contractor’’ does not match the
definition of a ‘‘Farm Labor Contractor’’
as used in MSPA, and the operational
differences between the H–2A program
and MSPA do not allow perfect parallels
to be drawn between the two statutory
schemes. The definition of ‘‘farm labor
contracting activity’’ has been deleted as
redundant since the activities have been
made part of the definitions of ‘‘fixedsite employer’’ and ‘‘H–2A Labor
Contractor.’’
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Definition of ‘‘joint employment’’
The Department included in its
definition of ‘‘employment’’ a reference
to what would constitute ‘‘joint
employment’’ for purposes of the H–2A
program. The Department received one
comment suggesting the inclusion of the
definition of ‘‘joint employment’’ within
the definition of ‘‘employment’’ was
confusing. The Department has
accordingly removed the last phrase
from the proposed definition of
‘‘employer’’ and provided a separate
definition for ‘‘joint employment.’’
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Definition of ‘‘prevailing’’
Definition of ‘‘successor in interest’’
The Department proposed a revision
to the definition of ‘‘prevailing’’ to
include, ‘‘with respect to certain
benefits other than wages provided by
employers and certain practices engaged
in by employers, that practice or benefit
which is most commonly provided by
employers (including H–2A and non-H–
2A employers) for the occupation in the
area of intended employment.’’ This
represented a change from the current
rule, which does not refer to
‘‘commonly provided’’ practices or
benefits but instead uses a percentage
test (50 percent or more of employers in
an area and for an occupation must
engage in the practice or offer the
benefit for it to be considered
‘‘prevailing,’’ and the 50 percent or
more of employers must also employ in
aggregate 50 percent or more of U.S.
workers in the occupation and area’’).
The Department received comments on
the change, specifically inquiring
whether the SWAs would continue to
conduct prevailing wage and practice
surveys, and requesting that if the
Department intends to no longer require
SWAs to conduct prevailing wage and
practice surveys, the change should be
discussed in the preamble.
The Department has determined that,
to provide greater clarity and for ease of
administration, the definition of
‘‘prevailing’’ will revert to the definition
in the current regulation that requires
that 50 percent or more of employers in
an area and for an occupation engage in
the practice or offer the benefit and that
the 50 percent or more of the employers
in an area must also employ in aggregate
50 percent or more of U.S. workers in
the occupation and area.
The Department notes it does not
intend to change the provision on
prevailing wage surveys currently
undertaken by SWAs. The Department
has included specific definitions for the
terms ‘‘prevailing piece rate’’ and
‘‘prevailing hourly rate,’’ the two kinds
of wage surveys that have traditionally
been undertaken by SWAs, and has
included express references to both
types of surveys throughout the rule.
The Department’s proposal included a
debarment provision allowing for
debarment of a successor in interest to
ensure that violators are not able to reincorporate to circumvent the effect of
the debarment provisions. A national
agricultural association commented that
this provision as drafted could result in
an innocent third party buying the farm
of a debarred farmer and being subject
to debarment, even though the successor
is free of any wrongdoing, and thus the
rule would place roadblocks on the sale
of assets to innocent parties.
The Department agrees with this
commenter. We have addressed this
issue by including a definition of
‘‘successor in interest’’ to make clear
that the Department will consider the
facts of each case to determine whether
the successor and its agents were
personally involved in the violations
that led to debarment in determining
whether the successor constitutes a
‘‘successor in interest’’ for purposes of
the rule.
Definition of ‘‘strike’’
The Department has been added to
the Final Rule a definition for the term
strike. The definition conforms to the
changes explained in the discussion of
§ 655.105(c), and clarifies that the
Department will evaluate whether job
opportunities are vacant because of a
strike, lockout, or work stoppage on an
individualized, position-by-position
basis.
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Definition of ‘‘United States’’
The Consolidated Natural Resources
Act of 2008, Public Law 110–229, Title
VII (CNRA), applies the INA to the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands (CNMI) at the completion of the
transition period as provided in the
CNRA, which at the earliest, would be
December 31, 2014. Accordingly, the H–
2A program will not apply to the CNMI
until such time. However, the CNRA
amends the definition of ‘‘United
States’’ in the INA to include the CNMI.
It should be noted that the amendment
to the INA of the definition of ‘‘United
States’’ does not take effect until the
beginning of the transition period which
could be as early as June 1, 2009, but
may be delayed up to 180 days.
Accordingly, the Department has
included CNMI in the definition of
‘‘United States’’ with the following
qualification: ‘‘as of the transition
program effective date, as defined in the
Consolidated Natural Resources Act of
2008, Public Law 110–229, Title VII.’’
The Department will publish a notice in
the Federal Register at such time that its
regulations regarding the foreign labor
programs described in the INA,
including the H–2A program, will apply
to the Commonwealth.
Definition of ‘‘Within [number and type]
days’’
The Department has added to the
Final Rule a definition of the term
within [number and type] days. The
definition clarifies how the Department
will calculate timing for meeting filing
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deadlines under the rule where that
term, in some formulation, appears. The
definition specifies that a period of time
described by the term ‘‘within [number
and type] days’’ will begin to run on the
first business day after the Department
sends a notice to the employer by means
normally assuring next-day delivery,
and will end on the day that the
employer sends whatever
communication is required by the rules
back to the Department, as evidenced by
a postal mark or other similar receipt.
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Definition of ‘‘Work contract’’
The Department has added to the
Final Rule a definition of the term work
contract. The definition was borrowed
from the definition section of 29 CFR
part 501 of the NPRM, with minor
modifications made for purposes of
clarification.
d. Definition of ‘‘agricultural labor or
services’’
The Department proposed changes to
the definition of ‘‘agricultural labor or
services’’ to clarify, as in the current
regulation, that an activity that meets
either the Internal Revenue Code (IRC)
or the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
definition of agriculture is considered
agricultural labor or services for H–2A
program purposes and, more
significantly, to remove limitations on
the performance of certain traditional
agricultural activities which, when
performed for more than one farmer, are
not considered agricultural labor or
services under the IRC or the FLSA,
including packing and processing.
The Department received several
comments supporting these changes,
with some specific suggestions for
additional changes. A major trade
association complimented the
Department on providing ‘‘bright line’’
definitional guidance regarding the
activities that constitute agricultural
work to be covered by the H–2A
program as distinct from the H–2B
program. A number of these
commenters mentioned that the
Department’s inclusion of packing and
processing activities in work considered
as agricultural provides an option for
obtaining legal workers, especially in
light of the numerical limitations on H–
2B visas. One association of growers/
producers supported the expansion of
the current definition to include
packing and processing but suggested
that agricultural employers who have
previously used the H–2B program for
packing or processing operations be
allowed to continue using the H–2B
program. Another association of
growers/producers suggested that the
definition be changed to allow product
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that is moving from on-farm production
directly to the end consumer be
included as permissible work for H–2A
workers, and suggested that the
definition provide that it is a
permissible activity for H–2A workers to
work on production of a purchased crop
when the crop is purchased by a farm
because of weather damage to that
farm’s crops in a particular year.
The Department appreciates the
general support for the proposed
changes and has retained them in the
final regulation. Regarding packing and
processing activities, the proposed
definition includes as agricultural
activities ‘‘handling, planting, drying,
packing, packaging, processing,
freezing, grading, storing or delivering
to storage or to market or to a carrier for
transportation to market, in its
unmanufactured state, any agricultural
or horticultural commodity while in the
employ of the operator of a farm.’’ In
response to the request to allow
employers who have used the H–2B
program for packing or processing
operations to continue using the H–2B
program, the Department has revised the
definition to clarify that while the
Department cannot permit H–2A
workers and H–2B workers to
simultaneously perform the same work
at the same establishment, the
distinctions between establishments at
which operations of this nature should
be performed by H–2A workers and
those at which the operations should be
performed by H–2B workers are too fine
for the Department to reasonably
distinguish between them with
sufficient precision to establish a bright
line test. The Department will therefore
defer to operators as to whether the
‘‘handling, planting, drying, packing,
packaging, processing, freezing, grading,
storing or delivering’’ operations at their
particular establishment are more
properly governed by the H–2A or the
H–2B program, but will not accept
applications for both kinds of workers to
simultaneously perform the same work
at the same establishment.
The Department agrees with the
comment that H–2A workers should be
permitted to work in the production of
a purchased crop, as well as work in
processing or packing a farm product
that is moving from on-farm production
directly to the end consumer. Moreover,
the Department believes such activities
are permitted by the definition in the
proposed rule and therefore the
provision requires no additional
language in the Final Rule.
The Department has clarified the
Final Rule to reflect existing law, which
provides that work performed by H–2A
workers, or workers in corresponding
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employment, which is not defined as
agriculture under Section 3(f) of the Fair
Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. 203(f), is
subject to the provisions of the FLSA as
provided therein, including the
overtime provisions in Section 7(a)(29
U.S.C. 207(a)).
Incidental Activities
The Department also proposed
clarifications to reflect that work
activity of the type typically performed
on a farm and incident to the
agricultural labor or services for which
an H–2A labor certification was
approved may be performed by an H–2A
worker. A number of commenters,
including a professional association, a
major trade association, and several
associations of growers/producers
supported this change, stating that it
was positive and would provide more
flexibility for employers. A major trade
association commented this change
would allow employers to include
duties in H–2A certified job
opportunities that reflect the actual
duties performed by farm workers and
further commented that, ‘‘[p]resumably
the provision will cover a farm worker
who engages in incidental employment
in the farm’s roadside retail stand, a
farm worker who assists in managing
‘pick your own’ activities, and a farm
worker who occasionally drives a tractor
pulling a hay wagon for a hay ride, to
cite a few examples of incidental
activities customarily performed by
farm workers that have been disallowed
in the past.’’ This commenter’s
understanding of the Department’s
interpretation is correct.
One association of growers/producers
commented that allowing H–2A workers
to perform duties typically performed
on a farm benefits the employee as well
as the employer. A trade association
commented that being able to use
workers in other jobs not listed on the
contract is needed, particularly when
weather prevents field work.
The Department has revised the
wording in the definition of
‘‘agricultural labor or services’’ provided
in § 655.100(d)(1)(vi) to provide
additional clarity for employers. The
definition now reads: ‘‘Other work
typically performed on a farm that is not
specifically listed on the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
and is minor (i.e., less than 20 percent
of the total time worked on the job
duties that are listed on the Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification) and incidental to the
agricultural labor or services for which
the H–2A worker was sought.’’ The
Department recognizes that, due to the
unpredictable nature of weather
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conditions and agricultural work itself,
employers need some flexibility in
assigning tasks, and that it would be
difficult if not impossible to list all
potential minor and incidental job
responsibilities of H–2A workers on the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification. The proposed amendment
of the definition is intended to
recognize the reality of working
conditions at agricultural
establishments and ensure that an H–2A
worker’s performance of minor and
incidental activity does not violate the
terms and conditions of the worker’s H–
2A visa status. The further revision to
the definition will assist employers in
determining whether activities or work
not included on the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
can reasonably be considered as minor
and incidental.
Inclusion of Other Occupations
The Department proposed to include
logging employment in its definition of
‘‘agricultural labor or services’’ for
purposes of the H–2A program. Two
commenters voiced their support for
this inclusion; we received no
comments in opposition. The
Department also sought comments as to
whether there are other occupations that
should be included within the
definition of agriculture used in the H–
2A program. The Department received
several suggestions of other industries
that should be considered, including
livestock and dairy producers, fisheries,
nurseries, greenhouses, landscapers,
poultry producers, wine businesses,
equine businesses, turf grass growers,
mushroom producers, maple syrup
producers, and employers engaging in
seasonal food processing as well as
growers who operate processing and
packing plants.
Of those requesting expansion of the
definition to include other occupations,
representatives of the dairy industry
submitted the most comments. A major
trade association and a number of
associations of growers/producers
commented that the dairy industry is
unable to use the H–2A agricultural
worker visa program and that this
exclusion is unfair. They stated dairy
farmers need and deserve the same
access to legal foreign workers as other
sectors of the agricultural industry. The
association suggested that H–2A visas
for dairy workers should last at least
three years rather than one. Two trade
association commenters stated they
understood the importance under the
statutory definition of H–2A workers
needing to be temporary or seasonal, but
not why the jobs themselves needed to
be temporary or seasonal. A farm bureau
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provided comments suggesting dairy
and livestock operations should be
allowed to designate seasonal jobs
within their operations for which H–2A
workers could be employed. This
association commented that current
worker patterns suggest typical milkers
stay in their positions for 9 to 10 months
and then voluntarily leave, but return to
seek a job after 2 to 3 months.
The Department also received
comments from an association of
growers/producers and from two
individual employers requesting that
reforestation work be considered as
agricultural labor. These commenters
assert that there are reforestation
activities including planting, weed
control, herbicide application and other
unskilled tasks related to preparing the
site and cultivating the soil and that
workers who perform these tasks
deserve consideration for eligibility for
H–2A visas, as do workers who perform
the same or similar tasks in cultivating
other agricultural and horticultural
commodities on many of the same
farms. These commenters also pointed
out that workers performing
reforestation tasks for farmers or on
farms are clearly agricultural employees
under the FLSA and, additionally,
believed the Internal Revenue Code
supports their position for considering
reforestation work performed on a farm
or for a farmer as agricultural labor or
services.
Following review of the comments
discussed above, the Department has
decided the definition of agriculture
should not be further expanded at this
time and no additional activities have
been selected for inclusion as
agricultural activities beyond those
included in the NPRM. In most cases
where there was the suggestion for the
inclusion of a particular industry or
activity in the definition of agriculture
there was not strong support for the
inclusion by representatives of that
industry, as indicated by the number
and source of the comments received.
For example, one commenter supported
adding maple syrup harvesting and
ancillary activities to the definition of
agricultural labor. The suggestion did
not come from someone actually
involved in the maple syrup industry,
however, but rather from a State
Workforce Agency. While the
Department appreciates the input of
such commenters, it would be
inappropriate to impose on those
industries (most of which currently
qualify for the H–2B program rather
than the H–2A program) changes that
the industry itself did not seek.
The two exceptions to this pattern in
the comments were the dairy industry
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and the reforestation industry, both of
which, as discussed above, submitted
comments evidencing industry-based
support. The Department’s analysis of
the comments from the dairy industry,
however, indicates it is not the
program’s definition of agriculture,
which already includes dairy activities,
that presents a potential barrier to the
industry’s use of the H–2A program, but
rather the statutory requirement for the
work to be temporary or seasonal in
nature.
The H–2A program, by statute,
provides a means for agricultural
employers to employ foreign workers on
a temporary basis. Many dairy-related
job needs, however, appear to be yearround and permanent in nature.
While the H–2A program is specially
designed for agricultural employers,
they are not limited to using only the H–
2A program. The employment-based
permanent visa program is also open to
agricultural employers with a
permanent need for which they are
unable to secure U.S. workers. At the
same time, year-round operations are
permitted to seek certification to utilize
H–2A workers for seasonal or temporary
jobs within their industries when they
can substantiate the temporary or
seasonal nature of the jobs. The
Department recognizes that an employer
may have both permanent and
temporary jobs in the same occupation.
However, employers should be aware
that the Department does not typically
approve subsequent applications
requesting foreign workers for the same
position when, taken together, those
applications would cover a continuous
period of time in excess of 10 months,
unless exceptional circumstances are
present.
The comments from the reforestation
industry, while thoughtful, represented
the input of only two individual
employers and a single employer
association who do not necessarily
provide a representative sample of the
entire reforestation industry. The
Department is reluctant to overturn the
regulatory practices of several decades
and impose the significant obligations of
an H–2A employer on an entire industry
without significant input from that
industry. While the Department is
willing to further explore whether to
include the reforestation industry in the
definition of agriculture, it does not
believe a decision to do so is warranted
at this time.
‘‘On a seasonal or other temporary
basis’’
The Department proposed a definition
of the key terms ‘‘on a seasonal or other
temporary basis’’ in the definition of
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agricultural labor or services in the
NPRM that continued the interpretation
of the current regulation. We received
several comments related to the phrase
‘‘on a seasonal or other temporary
basis.’’ A trade association suggested the
rule borrow the temporary and seasonal
concepts from the Migrant and Seasonal
Agricultural Workers Protection Act
(MSPA) definitions that are appropriate
in an H–2A context without
incorporating the MSPA regulations and
related judicial precedent. It was the
association’s belief that this approach
would allow an H–2A worker to be
admitted for longer than a 10-month
period. An association of growers/
producers suggested the definition of
temporary or seasonal should apply to
the worker rather than the job and also
that year-round farming operations/
nurseries should be allowed to access a
workforce to provide year-round
services by rotating ‘‘shifts’’ of workers
with different contract/visa periods.
Another trade association also suggested
the definition and interpretation of
temporary and seasonal could be
expanded.
The Department does not agree that
the definition of temporary or seasonal
should focus on the worker rather than
the job. The INA is clear that the
employer must have a need for foreign
labor to undertake work of a temporary
or seasonal nature for which it cannot
locate U.S. workers. The Department’s
position has traditionally been that job
opportunities that are permanent in
nature do not qualify for the H–2A
program. The controlling factor is the
employer’s temporary need, generally
less than 1 year, and not the nature of
the job duties. See Matter of Artee Corp.,
18 I&N Dec. 366 (Comm. 1982); see also
Global Horizons, Inc. v. DOL, 2007–
TLC–1 (November 30, 2006) (upholding
the Department’s position that a failure
to prove a specific temporary need
precludes acceptance of temporary H–
2A application); see also 11 U.S. Op.
Off. Legal Counsel 39 (1987). An H–2A
worker could, however, be employed
continuously by successive H–2A
employers having a temporary need for
the worker’s services and thus be
employed and remain in the U.S. for a
period beyond one year.
In addition, the Department has made
several edits to the Definitions section
of the NPRM to provide consistency
with other changes to the regulatory text
and to clarify the Final Rule. For
example, the definition of ‘‘Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification’’ has been amended to help
ensure the public has a clear
understanding of what this regulation
requires. Other definitions, such as
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‘‘temporary agricultural labor
certification determination’’ and
‘‘unauthorized alien,’’ have been
eliminated because they are not used in
this regulation. We have also made nonsubstantive changes to provide clarity
and to comport with plain English
language requirements.
Section 655.101 Applications for
Temporary Employment Certification in
Agriculture
(a) Instituting an Attestation-based
Process
The Department proposed instituting
an application requiring employers to
attest to their adherence to the
obligations of the H–2A program. The
Department received several comments
in favor of the new process, several
opposed, and others generally in favor
but suggesting changes to the process as
outlined in the Department’s proposal.
Some commenters believed that
attestations to future events should not
be required, and that attestations should
be made under the ‘‘applicant’s best
knowledge and belief’’ standard and not
the ‘‘under penalty of perjury’’ standard
because applicants cannot know what
will happen in the future.
The Department believes that the
attestations the Final Rule requires
employers to make do not require
employers to predict future events, but
rather represent straightforward
commitments to comply with program
requirements. Such compliance is fully
in the control of the employer. It is,
therefore, not necessary to delete or
modify the manner in which attestations
are made.
(1) Support for an Attestation-based
Process
Those commenters who favored the
shift to an attestation-based process
generally believed the new process
would make the H–2A application more
efficient and less burdensome for
employers. One State government
agency commented that the process
would enable the SWAs to focus on job
orders, referrals, and housing
inspections while relieving them of the
burden to review the applications
themselves. Another commenter
supported the shift but encouraged the
Department to ensure the
‘‘Administrator * * * acquires the
agricultural expertise necessary to
provide training and guidance to those
who are reviewing and overseeing the
operating of a program that is critical to
future U.S. agricultural production.’’
The Department appreciates support
for its proposed process. As of June 1,
2008, the Department has centralized
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the Federal processing of all
applications for H–2A temporary foreign
workers in the Chicago National
Processing Center. This centralization
will enhance the Department’s ability to
handle the expected increases in the
usage of the H–2A program and ensure
consistency in application of program
requirements. The Department
recognizes the unique needs and
timeframes associated with this program
and anticipates that centralization will
lead to the development of greater
expertise to meet those needs and
timeframes. It also believes that
centralized processing of applications
will facilitate the identification of areas
where program training should be
enhanced and that the centralized
environment will maximize the
effectiveness of such training.
An association of growers/producers
supported the attestation-based process
but found the process, as described in
the proposed regulation, confusing and
duplicative. This commenter requested
that all of the attestation requirements
be consolidated into one rule clearly
stating which facts are to be verified.
The Department appreciates the
commenter’s suggestion about
consolidation of the attestation
requirements and, as provided in the
proposal, has retained the
comprehensive listing of the
requirements in § 655.105, ‘‘Assurances
and Obligations of H–2A Employers’’
and § 655.106, ‘‘Assurances and
Obligations of H–2A Labor Contractors.’’
It was not clear if this commenter was
requesting a consolidated listing of the
attestations required by both the
Departments of Labor and Homeland
Security. The Department of Labor is
including in the comprehensive lists
only those attestations that DOL
requires. The commenter did not
include specific examples of
duplication or confusing information
and the Department, therefore, is unable
to provide any further response.
(2) Legality of the Attestation-based
Process
Several of the commenters who
opposed the change asserted an
attestation-based process conflicts with
the statutory mandate in Section 218 of
the INA (8 U.S.C. 1188). These
commenters interpreted the INA to
require the Department to make a
determination based upon an active
verification of the H–2A application.
One group commented that the
attestation process violates the statute’s
Congressional mandate. Two
organizations expressed the belief that
the certification process has always
been understood to require active
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oversight by the Department of the
employer’s recruitment and hiring of
U.S. workers as well as the details of the
job offer. One commenter, an advocacy
organization, voiced the opinion that
the statutory standard is not whether the
employer has made adequate assurances
that it has or will meet the obligations
of the H–2A program but is whether the
employer has actually met them.
Another commenter opined that labor
certifications were not meant to be
attestation-based and that this approach
will dramatically reduce government
oversight of this program. These
commenters believe that the Secretary
will not be able to certify that wages and
working conditions have not been
adversely affected and that this
regulation is contrary to the statute.
The attestation-based process
implemented by the Final Rule is not
inconsistent with any statutory
requirements, but rather is a reasonable
means selected by the Department to
fulfill its statutory responsibilities. The
Department does not interpret Section
218 of the INA to specify a particular
methodology that the Department must
employ to determine that all of the
statutory criteria have been met, and
indeed, various aspects of the
Department’s methodology have
changed through the years. The
attestation-based system, backed by
audits, that is implemented by the Final
Rule is an acceptable means, within the
reasonable discretion of the Secretary,
for the Department to ensure that the
statutory criteria for certification are met
and that program requirements are
satisfied. Similar approaches have been
used by the Department in other
contexts (such as approval of permanent
labor certifications) to fulfill its
statutory responsibilities. Indeed, as
discussed in greater detail in various
sections below, under the statutory time
limits for filing applications and issuing
certifications the Department typically
makes certification determinations on
applications prior to the completion of
many of the recruitment requirements
and without any direct observation or
inspection by the Department or its
SWA agents that rental housing secured
by employers complies with all of the
applicable legal standards.
No system for review and approval of
applications, of course, is foolproof, and
the statute prescribes appropriate
penalties for situations in which the
terms of approved labor certifications
are later violated. See 8 U.S.C.
1188(b)(2)(A). There will always be bad
actors who attempt to circumvent
program requirements. Employers
sometimes violate program
requirements under the current H–2A
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application process, and the Department
has also detected violations in other
foreign worker programs it administers.
Under the final rule, the Department
will have more enforcement tools at its
disposal than ever before to deal with
such violations. The Department
believes that the attestation-based
process fully complies with all statutory
requirements and, when utilized in
concert with a strong audit and review
process, represents the best means for
the Department to deploy its limited
resources in a manner that ensures that
statutory timelines are met and that the
program’s integrity is maintained.
(3) Protections for U.S. Workers in an
Attestation-based Process
Several commenters believed the
proposed attestation-based process
would not provide adequate protections
for U.S. and H–2A workers because it
would reduce the oversight
responsibilities of the Department.
Some of these commenters also said the
current system should be maintained to
ensure that the Department oversees
worker protection, especially in the
areas of housing and wages. An
organization commented that while this
change may ease the application process
for employers it ignores the damage that
could be caused by false attestations and
a lack of active oversight of the job
terms, recruitment, and hiring of U.S.
workers. A farmworker advocacy
organization questioned the change to
an attestation-based process claiming
there is a long history of labor abuse in
agriculture and saying they believed
that when ‘‘self-inspection procedures’’
are implemented they are generally
based upon a prior record of compliance
and an accompanying determination
that resources would be better utilized
in another pursuit. Another farmworker
advocacy organization commented that
the attestation-based process, as
proposed, would further remove and
diminish the Department’s role in
assuring all reasonable efforts to locate
U.S. workers had been exhausted before
foreign guest workers could be certified.
Another commenter voiced concern that
the proposed process would eliminate
the current process of follow-up
correspondence that has been
instrumental in ensuring that employers
have actually undertaken the required
recruitment steps. A worker advocacy
organization commented the proposed
process, with its emphasis on meeting
paper requirements, would be ‘‘ill
suited to deal with the inherent
disparities in bargaining power between
U.S. agricultural employers and
impoverished workers from the
developing world.’’
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The Department believes these
commenters’ concerns, while not
invalid, are substantially resolved by the
safeguards that have been built into the
new process. The new program model
emphasizes compliance through
enforcement mechanisms such as
audits, revocation of approved
certifications, and debarment from the
program. In light of these enforcement
tools, employers will have a substantial
incentive to be truthful in their
representations that they cannot find
U.S. workers willing to engage in
agricultural work at the appropriate
wage, because good-faith compliance
with program obligations is necessary to
maintain continued access to a legal
nonimmigrant workforce. Because the
rule requires pre-filing recruitment, the
Department will also have an
opportunity to review recruitment
reports and (through its SWA partners)
to conduct housing inspections before
applications are approved. Job orders
must also be reviewed, approved, and
circulated by the SWAs before labor
certifications can be granted, making it
impossible for even bad actor employers
to entirely circumvent the program’s
core recruitment requirements. Finally,
it is worth noting that the bulk of the
program’s requirements, including
requirements to pay workers at
prescribed rates, maintain housing
conditions, and provide transportation
that complies with applicable safety
requirements, have always been, and
must necessarily be, enforced by the
Department after the labor certification
has been granted.
Although not a factor in our
evaluation of the comments here, the
Department also notes that many
commenters who opposed the
attestation-based system in this
rulemaking, claiming that it will
adversely affect U.S. workers, have
enthusiastically endorsed proposed
legislation before the U.S. Congress that
would in fact mandate that the
Department adopt an attestation-based
application system in the H–2A
program. Those organizations in their
comments on this rulemaking made no
attempt to explain their contradictory
public positions regarding the merits of
an attestation-based application system.
(4) Improvements for Employers in an
Attestation-based Process
Several commenters questioned
whether the proposed process would
yield a simplified process for employer
applicants. These commenters believed
the new process requires the same
amount of paperwork and only relieves
employers of submitting documentation
while at the same time imposes
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additional requirements including postfiling audits, increased penalties, and a
five-year records retention requirement.
Several commenters were concerned
that the attestation-based process would
lead to increased liabilities for
employers.
The Department does not believe that
employers, attorneys, and agents
wishing to comply with program
obligations will be adversely affected by
the institution of an attestation-based
process. The process is designed to give
employers specific notice of the
assurances they are making to the
Department and what their obligations
are. Once the employer is on notice of
those assurances, it is better able to
understand what it must do to comply
with H–2A requirements and to conform
its conduct to those requirements.
A trade association of agricultural
employers agreed with the shift to an
attestation-based process but believed
the process as outlined in the proposed
regulations was not a true attestationbased process and recommended the
process used in the H–1B program serve
as a model. Other commenters also
recommended use of a process similar
to the one used in the H–1B program.
Several commenters also suggested that
the Department combine the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification with the I–129 petition for
simultaneous submission to the
Departments of Labor and Homeland
Security.
In response to the proposals to
convert the proposed attestation-based
process into a process modeled after the
H–1B labor condition application, the
statutory differences between the two
programs are sufficiently substantial to
make such an idea impractical. In the
H–1B program, the Department is
statutorily limited to reviewing the
attestations made by an employer for
‘‘completeness and obvious
inaccuracies.’’ 8 U.S.C. 1182(n)(1)(G)(ii).
The Department believes the different
H–2A statutory language suggests that a
different application and review process
is appropriate for the H–2A program.
The Department appreciates the
suggestion that simultaneous
submissions to the Department and DHS
could lead to further application
efficiencies for employers. However, the
Department believes that the complexity
of the current statutory requirements for
the H–2A program would make it
unworkable to combine the
Department’s application with the
petition submitted to DHS. A proposal
presented by the Department several
years ago to employ such a process in
the H–2B program for temporary
nonagricultural workers was met with
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significant opposition. To attempt to
undertake a similar process with the
significantly more complex H–2A
program does not appear feasible at this
time.
Some commenters appeared not to
understand the proposed attestation
process. The Department received
comments stating that it is not clear
what should be included with the
attestation. The Department has
accordingly clarified in the Final Rule
that the application must be
accompanied by the prevailing wage
determinations obtained in anticipation
of the recruitment for the application as
well as the initial recruitment report.
The employer will be required to keep
all other supporting documentation in
case of an audit, which means the
employer should keep all records
relating to compliance with the H–2A
program, including advertising, job
orders, recruitment logs/reports, and
housing inspection requests. To
eliminate any lingering confusion over
document retention requirements, the
Department has spelled these out in a
new regulatory section (§ 655.119) in
this Final Rule.
(b) SWA Involvement/Application
Submission
The NPRM revised the application
submission requirements by proposing
to have employers submit applications
only to the NPC rather than to both the
NPC and SWA as currently required.
Most of the comments received about
this proposal were in favor of it, but a
few commenters expressed concerns
about the reduced role for SWAs. One
person commented that eliminating the
SWA involvement would leave
employers who seek assistance and
guidance from the government in
completing applications more disposed
to making errors and would increase
their potential liability. A farmworker
advocacy organization commented that
SWA knowledge has proven useful to
workers in the past and that the
advantage of SWA involvement is the
detailed knowledge their experienced
staff can bring to bear about local
agricultural practices and the use of
agricultural labor in their area. The
commenter also believed that the
proposed process, which requires the
employer to place a job order with the
SWA, means that the SWA must take on
faith that the employer’s job offer is
consistent with the terms of the H–2A
application because the SWA will no
longer receive a copy of the application.
This organization recommended that
applications should be filed with the
SWA as well as the NPC so the SWA
could advise the NPC if the application
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did not appear legitimate. A growers
and producers association believed
retaining responsibility for the
substantive review by the NPC staff
could remain a problem because of their
lack of expertise related to agriculture.
A State governor suggested the
process could be improved by
eliminating the Department from the
process. The governor believes the
States know their agricultural industry
better, can resolve issues more quickly,
and are in the best position to identify
and enforce sanctions against fraud.
Conversely, a professional association of
immigration attorneys recommended
the SWA be eliminated from the
recruitment process and, alternatively,
the employer handle all recruitment for
the positions, including accepting
applications received as a result of a job
order placed by the SWA in the
interstate and intrastate system.
The Department remains committed
to modernizing the application process
and continues to believe the submission
of applications directly to the NPC is the
most effective way of accomplishing
this goal. Eliminating the SWAs’
participation in the application review
process will provide more efficient
review of applications, as well as greater
consistency of review. The Department
disagrees that NPC staff have
insufficient knowledge of the
agricultural industry; to the contrary,
NPC reviewers who have handled H–2A
applications have, in some cases, more
experience with such applications than
many SWA staff.
The SWAs will, moreover, continue to
play an important role in the H–2A
application process. SWAs will be
responsible for posting job orders, both
intrastate and interstate, under
§ 655.102(e) and (f) and 20 CFR Part
653, thus reducing the risk for
employers to make mistakes with
respect to job descriptions, minimum
requirements, and other application
particulars. SWAs will review the job
offer, its terms and conditions, any
special requirements, and the
justifications therefor. As part of their
duties to post job orders pursuant to 20
CFR Part 653, SWAs will also refer
eligible workers to employers as well as
conduct housing inspections and follow
up on deficiencies in the job order.
Finally, SWAs will continue an active
role in conducting prevailing hourly
wage, prevailing piece rate, and
prevailing practice surveys.
Two commenters noted potential
coordination or communication issues
could result when the SWA did not also
receive the application. One commenter
was concerned there would be no
assurance that the job order posted by
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the SWA would be the same as that on
the application. The other commenter
pointed out the proposed regulations
provided that the SWA receive a copy
of the notice of deficiency when one
was issued, but the SWA would not
have a copy of the submitted
application and thus could have
inadequate information to be of
assistance to the involved employer. An
association of growers/producers
recommended the Department provide
training to H–2A employers about the
need to send a formal request to the
SWA to request a housing inspection
and also recommended the Department
notify the SWA when an application
was received for processing so the SWA
could, in turn, contact the employer.
The Department appreciates the
concerns about the need for
communication between the NPC and
the SWA and reiterates that there was
never any intent to eliminate the SWA
from all H–2A activity. As discussed
above, SWAs remain an integral partner
in key respects: The placing of the
intrastate/interstate job orders,
conducting prevailing hourly wage,
prevailing piece rate, and prevailing
practice surveys, referring eligible
workers, and conducting housing
inspections, all activities for which
SWAs will continue to receive grants
from the Department. Moreover, nothing
in the regulations precludes the
Department from contacting SWAs,
where there is reason to believe that it
is necessary, to verify that the terms in
the employer’s Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
are consistent with the terms of the job
offer.2 However, SWAs will no longer
process H–2A applications.
Accordingly, to minimize confusion
about roles and responsibilities, the
Department has removed from
§ 655.107(a)(3) (§ 655.107(b) of the Final
Rule) the provision requiring that SWAs
be sent deficiency notices.
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(c) Electronic Filing
The Department invited comments on
the concept of a future electronic filing
process for the H–2A program and
received comments supporting the
2 There is also no prohibition preventing a SWA
from contacting the Department to ensure that the
employer’s job order and Application for
Temporary Employment Certification are
consistent. As a practical matter, a SWA will rarely
be able to do so before posting a job order, because
Applications for Temporary Employment
Certification generally are not filed with the
Department under the Final Rule until at least 15
days after the job order has been submitted to the
SWA. Communication between SWAs and the
Department has always been essential to identifying
and putting a stop to deceitful employer behavior,
however, and the Department expects that such
communication will continue under the Final Rule.
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concept, although some also included
suggestions for on-line training, the
establishment of a toll-free help line,
and an outreach and education
component. A trade association
recommended that a paper-based option
should also remain available. One
commenter noted that the Department
did not provide an effective date for the
electronic filing process.
The Department appreciates the
support for electronic filing and is in the
process of developing a system that will
include the ability to complete and
submit an application form online with
sufficient security (PIN numbers,
features to deter fraud and maintain
system integrity, electronic
notifications, etc.). The Department is
aware of the need to provide outreach
and training prior to the implementation
of electronic filing and will involve user
groups in these efforts. Additionally, the
Department will ensure an adequate
notice process and timeframe for
transitioning to a new or revised
electronic application system.
(d) H–2A Labor Contractor Applications
The Final Rule has been clarified
slightly to more clearly state the
obligations of H–2A Labor Contractors
in filing applications. The proposed rule
stated that H–2ALCs must have a place
of business in the United States ‘‘to
which U.S. workers may be referred.’’
Because H–2ALCs may be mobile,
however, and because referrals during
the season may need to be made to
whatever location an H–2ALC is
working at rather than to the physical
location of the H–2ALC’s place of
business, the final rule has been
modified to state that H–2ALCs must
have a place of business in the United
States ‘‘and a means by which it may be
contacted for employment.’’ This
slightly modified requirement will
ensure that referrals can be made to H–
2ALCs during the course of a season
(where such referrals are provided for
by the Final Rule), and that U.S.
workers will have a means of contacting
the H–2ALC to secure employment. All
other changes made to the paragraph on
filing requirements for H–2ALCs were
purely stylistic and made for purposes
of clarity.
(e) Master Applications
Both the current and proposed
regulations require an association of
agricultural producers filing an
application to identify whether the
association is the sole employer, a joint
employer with its employer-members,
or the agent of its employer-members.
Although the current regulations do not
specifically describe a ‘‘master
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application’’ that can be filed by
associations, they are clearly
contemplated by 8 U.S.C. 1188(d), and
the Department has permitted them to
be filed as a matter of practice. See 52
FR 20496, 20498 (Jun. 1, 1987) (cited in
ETA Handbook No. 398).
The Department received several
comments objecting to the omission of
a provision in the NPRM for the filing
of master applications. An association of
growers/producers commented that the
Department should encourage
agricultural employers in small
commodity groups or large associations
of employers to jointly participate in the
H–2A program, as this will make
processing more efficient for both the
Department and farmers. Another
association of growers/producers stated
that using an association application is
the only possible solution for the H–2A
program to accommodate growers who
need harvest workers for a short period
of time (one month or less). A major
trade association also commented that
the master application significantly
reduces the paperwork and bureaucratic
burden for the associations and its
members, as well as for the Department.
A major trade association and other
associations of growers/producers
recommended that the Department
retain and improve the master
application process and fully
incorporate it into the H–2A regulatory
structure. The association recommended
the master application also be
simplified as part of the new H–2A
application process. It recommended
the regulations include the essential
components of the master application
process that has been followed in
practice, including the filing of one
application on behalf of multiple
employers seeking workers in virtually
the same occupation, permitting the
association to place the required
advertisements and conduct the
required positive recruitment on behalf
of all participants but without the listing
of every individual employer in the
advertisement as currently required,
permitting referral of workers to the
association, and allowing the
association to place workers in the job
opportunities. The association further
recommended the master application
process also apply to applications filed
by associations acting as agents.
The statute governing the H–2A
program requires that agricultural
associations be permitted to file H–2A
applications, see 8 U.S.C. 1188(d), and
that they be permitted to do so either as
agents or as employers, see 8 U.S.C.
1188(c)(3)(B)(iv) and (d)(2).
Consequently, the Department has, as a
matter of longstanding practice,
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accepted master applications from
agricultural associations. In response to
the comments received on this subject,
the Department has decided to include
specific language concerning such
applications in the regulation text at
§ 655.101(a)(3).
The basic theory behind master
applications is that agricultural
associations should be able to file a
single H–2A application on behalf of all
their employer members in essentially
the same manner that a single employer
controlling all the work sites and all the
job opportunities included in the
application would. Two important
limitations apply to such applications.
First, all the workers requested by the
application must be requested for the
same date of need. If an agricultural
association needs workers at different
times, it must file a separate Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification for each date of need, just
as a single employer would. Second, the
combination of job duties and
opportunities that are listed in the
application must be supported by a
legitimate business reason, which must
be provided as part of the application.
The purpose of this limitation is to
prevent agricultural associations from
creating undesirable combinations of job
duties and opportunities for the sole
purpose of discouraging U.S. workers
from applying for the jobs. So long as a
legitimate business reason exists
supporting the combination presented,
however, the Department will deem it
acceptable. An acceptable business
reason for a combination of job duties
and opportunities could include, for
example, the efficiencies that closely
proximate employers expect to gain
from having access to a flexible, readily
available pool of workers, even though
the employers in question do not grow
the same crops, which may be necessary
for agricultural employers to deal with
uncertain and weather-dependent
planting and harvesting times.
The Department is aware that this
may mean that at times a U.S. worker
wishing to perform only one type of job
duty, such as picking asparagus, may be
required to perform an additional job
duty, such as harvesting tobacco, in
order to secure an agricultural job with
that association. It is not at all
uncommon, however, for jobs in the
United States to include multiple job
duties, some of which workers may
view as more desirable than others.
Indeed, many job opportunities offered
under the current H–2A regulations
include multiple job duties, some of
which may be more desirable than
others. There is nothing in the statute
governing the H–2A program indicating
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that Congress intended to require
agricultural employers to allow
prospective workers to selectively
choose which job duties they want to
perform and which job duties they do
not, with regard to a particular job
opportunity. The Department is
requiring that combinations of job
duties be supported by a legitimate
business reason to prevent the
deliberate and unnecessary
discouragement of U.S. workers from
applying for job opportunities, but the
Department does not believe that further
restrictions on job duty combinations
are warranted or necessary to fulfill the
statutory criteria for certification.
(f) Timeliness of Filing Application
As required by statute, the provision
stating a completed application is not
required to be filed more than 45
calendar days before the date of need
was retained in the proposed rule. The
Department has continued that
requirement in § 655.101(c). The
Department received some suggestions
for changes to the proposed timeframes
for submitting applications. Two
commenters suggested the Department
should at least provide the employer
with the option of applying not more
than 45 days before the date of need,
undertaking the recruitment after the
application has been accepted, and
continuing to accept referrals under the
50 percent rule.
The Department may not require an
application to be filed more than 45
calendar days before the date of need
under 8 U.S.C. 1188(c). The Department
does not agree with the suggestion for
offering employers the option of
applying not more than 45 days prior to
the date of need, doing post-acceptance
recruitment, and continuing to accept
referrals under the 50 percent rule.
Given the need to maintain consistency
in the program’s requirements, the
Department cannot offer varying options
for recruitment timeframes.
(g) Emergency Situations
The NPRM did not contain the
current regulatory provision (currently
found at § 655.101(f)(2)) allowing the
Administrator/OFLC to waive the
required timeframe for application
submission for employers who did not
use the H–2A program during the prior
agricultural season or for any employer
for good and substantial cause. The
Department received a number of
comments objecting to its elimination. A
major trade association stated the
elimination would preclude many
employers from legalizing their
workforce simply because their decision
to join the program was made too late
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to meet the required timeframes.
Another major trade association
commented that a provision allowing
filing after the deadline is even more
essential because the de facto deadline
for meeting requirements under the final
regulation is further in advance of the
date of need than the current
requirement. One association of
growers/producers cited the situation
following Hurricane Katrina when many
employers needed to secure additional
H–2A workers as an example of the
need for an emergency application
process.
Most of those requesting that the
provision for an emergency application
be reinstated also commented that if an
emergency application is filed in an area
of intended employment and for a job
opportunity for which other employers
have previously been certified for the
same time frame, the emergency
application should be certified
immediately. These commenters also
suggested that post-application
recruitment could be extended for
emergency applications to ensure that
their availability would not create an
incentive to avoid the pre-filing
recruitment efforts.
The Department agrees that a
provision allowing the Certifying Officer
(CO) to waive the required timeframe for
submission of applications in
emergency situations is necessary and
has included such a provision in the
Final Rule at § 655.101(d). The
provision, which substantially
replicates the current regulatory
provision governing emergency
situations, requires submission of a
completed application, except for the
initial recruitment report that would
otherwise be required, and a statement
of the emergency situation giving rise to
the waiver request. The emergency
situation giving rise to a request for a
waiver may include a lack of experience
with the H–2A program obligations
(including housing and transportation
requirements) or for other good and
substantial cause. The Department
anticipates that employers who were
non-users of the program during the
previous year may fail to meet the filing
deadline due to miscalculation of the
time needed to complete the
application. The Department will
entertain waiver requests from
employers in this situation but will
consider them only after first verifying
that the employer did not use the
program during the prior year.
The Department is not providing an
explicit definition of good and
substantial cause in order to preserve
flexibility when faced with
unanticipated situations or conditions.
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We have provided some examples in the
regulatory text to assist employers in
determining what might constitute
sufficient cause warranting a waiver.
One example provided is a dramatic
change in the weather conditions
resulting in a substantial change to the
anticipated date of need for H–2A
workers with significant attendant crop
loss unless the waiver is granted.
However, the employer must be able to
demonstrate that the situation or
condition leading to the request for a
waiver was genuinely outside of the
control of the employer.
The Department is requiring, in the
Final Rule, that the employer who
requests a waiver must conduct some
recruitment as a condition for obtaining
that waiver. The employer will be
required to submit a job order to the
relevant SWA(s) and conduct positive
recruitment from the time of filing the
application until the date that is 30 days
after the employer’s date of need. The
SWA must transmit the job offer for
interstate clearance as in a normal
application process. We have also added
a provision that requires the CO to
specify a date upon which the employer
must submit a recruitment report
consistent with the requirements of this
part.
The Department recognizes that the
suggestions that waivers be approved if
other applications for similar
occupations and dates of need in the
same geographic locations have been
previously certified are intended to
expedite the process. However, each
application is unique and the
Department must consider each request
on its own merits, and therefore does
not believe it should commit to
approving requests solely because there
have been prior approvals for employers
with similar job opportunities and dates
of need in the same area.
Finally, the Department made changes
in § 655.101 to conform to other changes
made to the rule. Such changes include,
but are not limited to, changes to clarify
a potential electronic filing of future
applications. In addition, the
Department has made non-substantive
changes to enhance readability.
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Section 655.102
Activity
Required Pre-Filing
The Department has changed the title
of this section from ‘‘Required Pre-filing
Recruitment’’ to ‘‘Required Pre-filing
Activity’’ to include the activities other
than recruitment that are discussed in
this section.
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(a) Section 655.102(a) Time of Filing of
Application
The NPRM proposed requiring that
applications be filed at least 45 days
before the employer’s date of need (as
required by statute) with a pre-filing
recruitment period commencing no
more than 120 days prior to the date of
need and not less than 60 days prior to
the date of need. The Department
received a number of comments on the
change to a pre-filing recruitment
framework and the related timing for
that recruitment.
The Department received multiple
comments opposing this proposed
timeframe; several commenters were
generally opposed to the expanded
timeframe and others raised more
specific concerns. Several commenters
questioned the Department’s legal
authority for a shift to pre-filing
recruitment. The Department also
received comments arguing that the
proposed pre-filing recruitment
requirement has the effect of moving the
deadline for filing an application.
Several commenters argued that the
proposed requirement that employers
begin recruitment earlier than they are
required to file applications would be
inconsistent with the Congressionally
set timeframes and thus beyond the
Department’s statutory authority.
The Department disagrees strongly
with the premise that its revised
recruitment steps are a violation of the
statute. The INA is clear that the
Department may not require an
application for labor certification to be
filed more than 45 days prior to the date
of need. See 8 U.S.C. 1188(c)(1). The
statute is silent on how the Department
implements the certification process: It
does not specify when the recruitment
of U.S. workers should take place,
whether prior to or subsequent to filing.
The INA clearly contemplates at 8
U.S.C. 1188 that recruiting U.S. workers
is a separate activity from filing and
considering applications, and the statute
does not provide any express
timeframes during which recruitment
must be conducted. There is thus
nothing in the statute that prevents the
Department from requiring employers to
recruit before filing an application,
much as it requires that recruitment be
conducted prior to the filing of an
application in other immigration
programs. The Department has
determined that program integrity
would be improved by being able to
review a preliminary recruitment report
at the time the application is filed, a
requirement that is consistent with both
the intent and the language of the
statute.
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Several commenters opined that it
was not feasible for employers to make
accurate assessments of timeframes and
the number of workers needed so far in
advance and many questioned how
effective an early recruitment period
would be in helping employers to locate
U.S. workers who would still be
available at the time the work actually
began. Additionally, many commenters
believed the earlier recruitment would
not benefit U.S. agricultural workers
seeking employment because it is
inconsistent with the traditional jobseeking patterns of these workers.
Some commenters expressed concern
that extending the recruitment time
would either not increase the number of
U.S. worker applicants for a position, or
would increase the number of U.S.
workers who applied for a position but
would not translate into more actual
workers taking the jobs, as many would
not report to work. A trade association
also commented that the employer is
put at risk because, by the time the jobs
begin, U.S. applicants may have long
since changed their minds or accepted
other employment. A State government
agency commented that most
agricultural workers would not make a
commitment to a job so far in advance
of the start date. One individual
employer believed the proposed prefiling recruitment would actually have
the opposite effect the Department
anticipates because U.S. workers would
be reluctant to make commitments so far
in advance of the start date. An
employer association recommended that
the final regulation specifically permit
employers to ask workers identified
during the recruitment process to attest
to or affirm their intentions to actually
report to work to perform the jobs.
An association of growers/producers
shared its data from the 2006–2007
season which shows only 9 percent of
U.S. applicants applied during the first
15 days of the current 45-day
recruitment period and questioned
whether a longer timeframe would yield
additional applicants. The association
also reported 83 percent of the
applicants who applied during the
initial 15-days of the recruitment period
failed to report for work on the date of
need, as compared to a 60 percent
failure-to-report rate for applicants who
applied during the last 30 days of
recruitment leading up to the date of
need.
Some commenters stated that the
current recruitment timeframes are
adequate for identifying and hiring U.S.
workers and others advocated alternate
timeframes. Commenters presented a
number of options for the recruitment
timeframe, including the current
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timeframe, and options ranging between
90 to 75 days prior to the date of need
for beginning recruitment and 60 to 45
days prior to the date of need for filing
the application. In the words of one
trade association, which was
representative of the comments received
on this point: ‘‘For the sector for which
H–2A is predominantly applicable—
fruits and vegetables—the ability to
predict months in advance when labor
will be required is simply impossible.’’
The Department takes seriously its
twin obligations, consistent with all H–
2A statutory requirements, to ensure
both that an adequate workforce is
available to U.S. agricultural producers
and that U.S. workers have a meaningful
opportunity to apply for all open
agricultural job opportunities. The
Department believes it can best fulfill its
statutory responsibilities by requiring
employers to recruit in advance of
filing, which will enable employers to
submit preliminary recruitment reports
with their applications, giving the
Department better information than it
has ever had before about the
availability of U.S. workers before the
Department is required by the tight
statutory timeframes to make a
determination on an application. The
current pattern of forcing positive
recruitment combined with the
Department’s near simultaneous
evaluation of the application into a
substantially narrow window of only 15
days is simply inadequate to address
these workforce and program integrity
needs. Based on the comments received,
however, the Department has come to
believe that requiring employers to seek
and secure a workforce 120 days in
advance of need may not be practicable,
given the substantial likelihood that
over such an extended period variables
such as weather conditions, competition
from other industries for available
workers, and competition among farms
and crops could intervene and result in
increased labor uncertainty for
employers.
The Final Rule accordingly shortens
the pre-filing recruitment period
described in the NPRM. Employers will
be required to initiate recruitment no
more than 75 days prior and no less
than 60 days prior to the anticipated
date of need. Reducing the pre-filing
recruitment time period in this manner
from the time period that was proposed,
while simultaneously adjusting the
Department’s proposal by extending the
referral period beyond the date of need
(discussed further below), will ensure
U.S. workers have access to these job
opportunities, and enable employers to
recruit effectively for U.S. workers
without adversely affecting planting and
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harvesting schedules. This revised
recruitment schedule, which is closer in
time to the employer’s actual date of
need, also addresses the commenters’
concerns about the job search patterns
of likely U.S. workers. The Department
declines, at this time, to implement any
requirement that U.S. workers affirm in
writing their intent to show up for work
when needed, as that is a contractual
matter between the worker and the
employer. The Department notes that it
has afforded employers some flexibility
in the Final Rule in § 655.110(e),
‘‘Requests for determinations based on
nonavailability of able, willing, and
qualified U.S. workers,’’ to address
situations where U.S. workers have
failed to appear as promised.
(b) Section 655.102(b) General
Attestation Obligation
(1) General Comments Regarding the
Attestations
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations commented on the
language in the proposed regulation that
states ‘‘the employer shall attest that it
will continue to cooperate with the
SWA by accepting referrals of all
eligible U.S. workers who apply.’’ The
organization stated it is the employer’s
duty to hire all qualified U.S. workers
who apply and believed the proposed
language did not make this clear.
An association of growers requested
that the language describing the time
period for acceptance of referrals be
modified by adding the word ‘‘first’’
before ‘‘begin to depart’’ because not all
foreign workers depart on the same date.
A professional association requested the
regulation be changed to permit
employers to stop local recruitment
efforts no more than five days prior to
the date of need rather than three days
as proposed. This change was requested
to accommodate the actual transit time
required for workers to arrive from
abroad. As discussed in more detail
below, the points made by these
commenters have been rendered moot
by changes made to this provision.
(2) The ‘‘50 Percent Rule’’ and the
Cessation of Recruitment
The Department sought comments on
program users’ experience with the ‘‘50
percent rule,’’ which requires employers
of H–2A workers to hire any qualified
U.S. worker who applies to the
employer during the first 50 percent of
the period of the H–2A work contract.
We received numerous comments and
several commenters offered alternative
approaches.
Several commenters questioned the
Department’s authority to make changes
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to the 50 percent rule, citing the 1986
IRCA amendments which added the 50
percent rule to the INA as a temporary
3-year statutory requirement, pending
the findings of a study that the
Department was required to conduct
regarding its continuation. In 1990,
pursuant to what is now INA
§ 218(c)(3)(B)(iii), ETA published an
Interim Final Rule to continue the 50
percent requirement. See 55 FR 29356,
July 19, 1990. That rule was never
finalized.
As the Department stated in the
NPRM, since the 1990 publication of the
Interim Final Rule continuing the 50
percent rule, it has gained substantial
experience and additional perspective
calling into question whether the
Department’s 1990 decision was in fact
supported by the data contained in the
1990 study, and whether the rule is in
fact a necessary, efficient and effective
means of protecting U.S. workers from
potential adverse impact resulting from
the employment of foreign workers.
The Department received several
comments in support of retaining the 50
percent rule as it is currently
administered. Commenters asserted that
the rule is an important method for
granting U.S. workers job preference
over foreign temporary workers and
creates an incentive for pre-season
recruitment of U.S. workers. Some
commenters stated their belief that
many U.S. workers gain jobs under the
50 percent rule and that its elimination
would deprive many U.S. workers of
jobs unfairly, although these
commenters did not provide any data to
support their assertion.
Several commenters believed that few
employers have had to lay off H–2A
workers under the 50 percent rule, and
that the rule has enabled many U.S.
workers to secure jobs, and that
elimination of the rule would unfairly
deprive them of those jobs. The
commenters believed that by
eliminating this rule, the Department
may keep U.S. farmworkers from
applying for jobs they would otherwise
be able to take. Other commenters
believed that for those U.S. workers who
learn of an H–2A job, the proposal
would eliminate the protections that
safeguard against employers rejecting
qualified U.S. workers.
One commenter argued that the 50
percent rule provides an incentive that
should be maintained to create an
attractive working environment, and
that it is critical to the integrity of the
H–2A program. The commenter asserted
that it prevents growers from engaging
in practices that are tolerated by H–2A
workers only because of their greater
economic vulnerability and in turn
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ensures that labor standards are not
driven down for U.S. workers unable to
compete with H–2A workers who have
no choice but to endure such
conditions.
While one commenter admitted that
they could not provide data regarding
the cost and benefits of the 50 percent
rule, they expressed the belief that
employers will hire fewer domestic
workers without it, thereby adversely
affecting an already vulnerable
population. A number of commenters
noted that the elimination of the 50
percent rule would make it more
difficult for traditional farm workers
who move with crops along the
traditional migrant streams to secure
jobs. The commenter believed that U.S.
workers will be ‘‘absolutely foreclosed’’
from much if not most H–2A related
employment if they cannot be hired just
before, at, and past the date of need. An
obligation to continue to hire U.S.
workers after the departure of any
foreign workers to the U.S. for
employment was viewed by the
commenter as critical to maintaining
and developing a U.S. agricultural
workforce.
Finally, another commenter observed
that the 50 percent rule has served as an
important tool for ensuring that the H–
2A program does not adversely affect
U.S. workers, and that at a time of
increasing unemployment, the
Department should not choose this
particular moment to abandon these
long-standing labor protections for U.S.
workers.
Several other commenters argued the
50 percent rule should be abolished.
These commenters argued that H–2A
users have long considered the 50
percent rule to be unfair and
unreasonable. They observed that no
other temporary or permanent worker
program has an even remotely
corresponding requirement.
Commenters also observed that the 50
percent rule was purportedly designed
to enable domestic workers to accept
agricultural employment opportunities,
but that its costs outweigh its benefits.
Commenters shared experiences that
many of the domestic workers who
apply under the 50 percent rule do so
to maintain government benefits under
the Unemployment Insurance program
(the UI program requires unemployed
workers to show that they have actively
sought employment each week in order
to continue benefits). They also found
that while the rule does not actually
provide substantial additional
employment to domestic workers, it
creates needless insecurity and
uncertainty for H–2A workers who are
employed under H–2A contracts.
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A commenter from a state agency
asserted that the elimination of the rule
would relieve the SWA from having to
track these H–2A job orders and would
remove unnecessary burdens on
employers. The commenter believed
that there is no tangible evidence that
the rule produces the desired results of
increasing employment of domestic
workers:
My experience is that it is rare for [U.S.]
workers to search our Internet postings for
agricultural positions in the middle of a
growing season. Employers find this
requirement confusing and worrisome.
Smaller employers have expressed concern
that they could lose their fully trained and
settled foreign worker(s), suddenly
disrupting their operation. Unfortunately,
their experience is that U.S. workers who
drop in during a season have a tendency to
not stay till the end of the contract period.
If this practice had historically produced
significant results, the government-mandated
grower investment of time and money might
be justifiable, but it has not.
One commenter stated that there is no
need for the 50 percent rule where
recruiting indicates that there are no or
few local workers. The commenter also
found no need for the rule in situations
where the employers typically hire a
large number of local workers. The
commenter went on to argue that if the
Department wants to retain the rule, it
should do so only as a condition of
approval of an application where there
is evidence indicating that there are a
relatively large number of local workers
but the employer has indicated that it
intends to hire few if any local workers.
A number of commenters observed
that all available data support the view
that relatively few U.S. workers desire
employment in agriculture. They argued
that it necessarily follows from this fact
that the 50 percent rule provides almost
no benefit to U.S. workers, yet its
presence dissuades employers from
participating in the program because of
the uncertainty it creates. These
commenters concluded that the rule
should be abandoned. One commenter
believed that if the Department wished
to retain the rule, it should reserve the
right to do so on a case by case basis,
as a condition of approval for an
application where the CO and SWA
believed that insufficient local
recruiting has been accomplished. The
Department believes that this idea may
have some merit, but has not devised a
means to implement it at this time.
A number of agricultural employers
commented that the rule requiring H–
2A employers to hire any qualified U.S.
worker during the first 50 percent of the
H–2A work contract makes it very
difficult for a producer to manage labor
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supply and costs over the life of the
contract. Commenters from state
agencies found that the features of the
rule are seldom completely understood
by the growers who need the H–2A
program, adding to their impression that
the entire process is complicated and
rife with red tape. Another State
commenter found the rule to be
antiquated and ineffective.
Another commenter observed that the
rule has been disruptive and nonproductive for both workers and
employers and that its elimination will
provide much-needed stability in the
workforce obtained by the employer. A
commenter found that a cost-benefit
analysis of the situation indicates that
continuing to recruit U.S. workers
beyond the date of need results in no
corresponding benefit. One farmer
observed,
It’s just not right that after I have made the
best attempt to hire domestic workers that
once halfway through the season I be forced
to replace a trained H–2A worker. I really
would prefer to hire local workers and keep
that wage money at home, if I could find
them.
Commenters from various farm
bureaus around the country argued that
under current conditions, the 50 percent
rule is without foundation. They argued
that anecdotal evidence shows that few,
if any, employees referred for
employment after the employer’s date of
need apply for or maintain their work
status. They believed that agricultural
employers, especially those with
perishable crops, must be able to
operate with greater certainty. Once an
operation begins, the success of the
work effort is the product of coordinated
teamwork. Employers are willing to
make strong recruitment efforts before
the date of need, but they seek certainty
and continuity once the work period has
begun.
A commenter from a farming
association found that the actual
benefits of the 50 percent rule for
domestic workers are, to all practical
intent, illusory. The commenter strongly
supported eliminating the rule entirely,
arguing that such an approach would
result in a substantial improvement in
program operations. The commenter
argued that while the Department has a
statutory obligation to protect the rights
of U.S. workers when implementing the
program, it is necessary to strike a
balance between the priority given to
U.S. workers and the rights of
employers, who have met all of the legal
obligations that attach to employing H–
2A workers. It went on to argue:
The current 50 percent rule, while
seemingly a provision to protect U.S.
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workers, is more disruptive to farm
operations and a disincentive to program
participation than it is a true protection for
workers. There is no reason to mandate that
a grower’s obligations to find and recruit
eligible U.S. workers should extend past the
recruitment period; imposing such an
obligation serves only to disrupt operations
of the producer and does little to protect U.S.
workers * * *. The fact is, and all available
data support this view, relatively few U.S.
workers desire employment in agriculture
* * *. The work is arduous, episodic, taxing,
requires relatively little skill and virtually no
education. Within the U.S. economy the
pay—while increasing—is relatively low.
These jobs provide tremendous economic
opportunity for migrant workers but are not
perceived as offering the same benefit to U.S.
workers. In fact, approximately 10 million
individuals in the U.S. economy today
choose to work in jobs which pay them less
than they could earn in agriculture. The 50
percent rule provides virtually no benefit to
U.S. workers yet its presence has clearly been
a disincentive to program participation. It
should be abandoned.
Other commenters offered alternatives
to the 50 percent rule including a 25
percent rule, recognizing that referrals
after the date of need may serve a useful
purpose but extending through 50
percent of the contract completion
might be too long. One farming
association suggested that the obligation
to accept domestic referrals should
terminate not later than three days
before the date of need.
A number of state agencies suggested
that SWAs should leave job orders open
for 30 days after the date of need and
employers should be required to offer
employment to any qualified and
eligible U.S. workers who are referred
during that time, also recognizing that
the current 50 percent of the contract
period is too long and perhaps too
uncertain to manage.
Another commenter similarly
recommended that employers be
required to begin recruitment no more
than 60 days prior to the date of need
and continue until between one and 30
days after the date of need, with
adjustments made according to the
expected duration of the job
opportunity. Under this commenter’s
proposal, the determination of the end
date for recruitment should be no earlier
than the date of need, but the 50 percent
rule should be revisited and adjusted to
lessen its potential negative impact on
the agricultural employer’s workforce.
Finally, another commenter suggested a
continued obligation of 50 percent of
the work period or 30 days, whichever
is longer.
It is clear to the Department from
these comments that many view the
current 50 percent rule as a
substantially burdensome requirement
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that does not provide a corresponding
benefit to U.S. workers.3 Others see the
rule as benefiting U.S. workers by
providing them expanded job
opportunities. Based on the comments it
has received and its substantial
experience in operating the H–2A
program, the Department believes that
the 50 percent rule clearly does provide
some benefits to U.S. workers, but that
the rule creates substantial uncertainty
for employers in managing their labor
supply and labor costs during the life of
an H–2A contract and serves as a
substantial disincentive to participate in
the program.
Based on the comments it received,
the Department has decided to modify
the rule. The requirements of 8 U.S.C.
1188(c)(3)(B)(iii) were fully satisfied
when the Department promulgated
interim final regulations on July 19,
3 In December 2007, the Department
commissioned a survey of stakeholder
representatives to evaluate the effectiveness of the
50 percent rule as a mechanism to minimize
adverse impacts of the H–2A program on U.S. farm
workers. The Department had conducted a similar
study of the impact of the 50 percent rule in 1990,
but upon reviewing that study as part of the H–2A
review which led to this recent NPRM the
Department concluded that it was of limited utility
because it covered only two states—Virginia and
Idaho—and because, given the significant changes
that have occurred in the field of agricultural
employment over the last two decades, it was
substantially out of date. The surveyors for the new
study conducted interviews with a number of
stakeholders to gather information on the impact of
the 50 percent rule and how it is currently working.
The surveyors queried a far more representative
sample of entities affected by the 50 percent rule
than the 1990 study had, including employers, state
workforce agencies, and farm worker advocacy
organizations.
While the new study identified a diversity of
opinion about the value and effectiveness of the
current 50 percent rule, the researchers found that
the rule ‘‘plays an insignificant role in the program
overall, hiring-wise, and has not contributed in a
meaningful way to protecting employment for
domestic agricultural workers.’’ See ‘‘Findings from
Survey of Key Stakeholders on the H–2A ‘50
Percent Rule’,’’ HeiTech Services, Inc. Contract
Number: DOLJ069A20380, April 11, 2008. The
researchers estimated that the number of
agricultural hires resulting from referrals to
employers during the 50 percent rule period was
exceedingly small, with H–2A employers hiring less
than 1 percent of the legal U.S. agricultural
workforce through the 50 percent rule. All of the
categories of surveyed stakeholders, including
employers, state workforce agencies, and even farm
worker assistance and advocacy organizations,
reported that U.S. workers hired under the 50
percent rule typically do not stay on the job for any
length of time when hired, frequently losing interest
in the work when they learn about the job
requirements. Many of the survey respondents,
including representatives from each of the three
groups, suggested that the rule should be either
eliminated or modified.
The Department did not specifically rely on
either of the two surveys in crafting the Final Rule.
It does, however, believe that the information
provided adds some additional depth to the
discussion contained in this preamble. Accordingly,
it has posted the studies on the Department’s Web
site.
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1990. Nevertheless, the language of that
provision suggests that when issuing
regulations dictating whether
agricultural employers should be
required to hire U.S. workers after H–2A
workers have already departed for the
place of employment, the Department
should weigh the ‘‘benefits to United
States workers and costs to employers.’’
After considering its own experience
and the experience of its SWA agents,
the Department agrees, on balance, with
those commenters who argued that the
costs of the 50 percent rule outweigh
any associated benefits the rule may
provide to U.S. workers. It is beyond
dispute that the obligation to hire
additional workers mid-way through a
season is disruptive to agricultural
operations and makes it difficult for
agricultural employers to be certain that
they will have a steady, stable, properly
trained, and fully coordinated work
force. It is also apparent from the
comments received that the current rule
is poorly understood by employers,
difficult for the SWAs to administer,
and a disincentive for employers to use
the H–2A program. Finally, the rule
requires agricultural employers to incur
additional unpredictable and
unnecessary expenses, forcing them to
choose between either hiring a greater
number of workers than they actually
need to complete their work part-way
through a season, or discharging some
or all of their H–2A workers, in which
case the employer will lose its entire
investment in those workers and will be
required to incur the immediate
additional expense to transport the
workers back to their home countries. It
is for all of these reasons that no other
permanent or temporary worker
program administered by the
Department contains such a
burdensome requirement, even though
most of these programs are subject to
similar statutory or regulatory
requirements that the Secretary certify
(1) that there are not sufficient workers
in the United States who are able,
willing, and qualified to perform the
labor or services needed and (2) that the
employment of the aliens in such labor
or services will not adversely affect the
wages and working conditions of
workers in the United States similarly
employed.
It is clear to the Department that the
current 50-percent rule does provide
some benefits to U.S. workers, since at
least some U.S. workers secure jobs
through referrals made pursuant to the
rule. The number of such hires,
however, appears to be quite small.
Moreover, the comments indicate that
many workers hired pursuant to the 50-
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percent rule do not complete the entire
work period, adding costs to employers
and further diminishing the total
economic benefits derived from the rule
by U.S. workers. It is also relevant that
under the Final Rule, the period of time
that a job order is posted by a SWA
prior to an employer’s dates of need has
been substantially expanded from the
current rule, which will provide U.S.
workers with more up-front information
about agricultural job opportunities,
rendering mandatory post-date-of-need
hiring less necessary.
In sum, after considering the best
information currently available, the
Department has concluded that the
benefits of the 50-percent rule to U.S.
workers are not, on balance, sufficient to
outweigh its costs. The Department has
also determined that modifying or
eliminating the 50-percent rule would
not compromise the Department’s
ability to ensure that U.S. workers are
not adversely affected by the hiring of
H–2A workers, just as the absence of a
50-percent rule from the other
permanent and temporary worker
programs administered by the
Department has never been thought to
compromise the Department’s ability to
ensure that U.S. workers are not
adversely affected by the hiring of
foreign workers under those programs. If
it is true, as some commenters
suggested, that some U.S. agricultural
workers simply drift from employer to
employer without paying attention to
actual advertising about agricultural job
opportunities, the Department is
confident that farm worker advocacy
and assistance organizations will help to
spread the word about advertised
agricultural job openings, much as they
do today. The available hiring and
referral data strongly suggest, however,
that such workers only rarely secure
their jobs through the 50-percent rule
today. It is also worth noting that to the
extent workers can identify agricultural
job openings before those jobs have
started, they will gain the additional
benefit of a longer period of
employment.
Despite these conclusions, the
Department is concerned that the
sudden and immediate elimination of
the 50-percent rule might prove
disruptive to the access of some U.S.
workers to agricultural employment
opportunities. If some U.S. workers
have become accustomed to the ability
to secure H–2A-related employment
after the jobs have already started, those
workers may benefit from a transition
period that will allow those workers to
adjust their employment patterns. A
transition period would also allow the
Department to collect additional data
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about the costs and benefits of
mandatory post-date-of-need hiring
under the new rule structure over a
period of several years, allowing the
Department to assure itself that its
initial conclusions regarding the rule are
sound.
For these reasons, the Department has
created a five-year transitional period
under the Final Rule during which
mandatory post-date-of-need hiring of
qualified and eligible U.S. worker
applicants will continue to be required
of employers for a period of 30 days
after the employer’s date of need. In
determining precisely what form
mandatory hiring should take during
this transitional period, the Department
considered all of the various options
presented by commenters. Several
commenters suggested limiting the
period during which employers are
required to engage in mandatory postdate-of-need hiring to 30 days. The
Department has adopted this suggestion
as the transitional period rule, both for
ease of administration and to minimize
the extent to which the various costs
and considerations outlined above will
burden employers during the transition.
The Department believes that the use of
this 30-day post-date-of-need mandatory
hiring period during the five-year
transition period will allow a smooth
adjustment of the expectations of U.S.
workers and will provide the
Department additional time to collect
data on the effect of the rule. At the end
of the transition period, the mandatory
post-date-of-need hiring requirements
under the Final Rule will expire, and
employers will only be required to
accept referrals of U.S. workers until the
first date the employer requires the
services of H–2A workers. However, the
Department intends to conduct a study
of the impact of this transitional 30-day
rule on U.S. workers and on employers
during the five-year transition period,
and under the rule retains the ability to
indefinitely extend the 30-day rule by
notice published in the Federal Register
should the Department’s study
determine that the rule’s benefits
outweigh its costs.
We believe this framework addresses
the concerns of many of the
commenters, both for and against
continuation of the 50-percent rule, and
strikes an appropriate balance between
the concerns of agricultural employers
and the need to protect U.S. workers’
access to the employment opportunities
under the H–2A program. Having a set
period of time during the transition
period, not tied to a percentage of the
contract length, will provide employers
more predictability and be easier to
administer for employers, workers and
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SWAs making referrals. The language of
§ 655.102(b) as originally proposed
implied that mandatory post-date-ofneed hiring would no longer be required
by the H–2A regulations. The language
creating the transitional 30-day
mandatory hiring period outlined above
may be found at § 655.102(f)(3) of the
Final Rule.
To the extent that the 30-day rule
applies, the employer would require
similar safeguards as under the 50percent rule so long as the employer
continues to have an affirmative
obligation to hire U.S. workers beyond
the date of need. Accordingly, the
Department has included a provision in
§ 655.102(f)(3)(ii) of the Final Rule on
the prohibition of withholding of U.S.
workers. The provision is similar to the
provision in § 655.106(g) of the current
regulations, but has been modified to
reflect the centralization of the
application process with the NPC.
Under the final rule, the CO, and not the
SWA, receives and investigates the
complaint and makes a determination
whether the application of the 30-day
rule should be suspended with respect
to the employer.
(c) Section 655.102(c) Retention of
Documentation
The Department proposed in the
NPRM a 5-year retention requirement
for all H–2A applications and their
supporting documents. The vast
majority of commenters who provided
observations on this provision voiced
concern with the proposed 5-year
document retention period and
recommended 3 years, stating that they
did not have adequate staff to comply
with the requirement or that it is not an
industry standard and not legally
consistent with other regulations and
might even discourage use of the H–2A
program. The Department has
reconsidered its position and has
changed the retention requirement to 3
years.
One commenter suggested that all
record retention requirements and
periods be combined into one section of
the amended regulations to provide
program participants with clearer
guidance for these obligations. The
Department agrees and has added a new
§ 655.119 to the regulatory text. The
new section lists all the document
retention requirements.
Another commenter requested that
the Department add a sentence to the
rule indicating that the employer is not
liable for eliminating records after the
retention period expires. The
Department has not added an express
provision to this effect, as we believe
the cessation of the employer’s
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responsibility to retain the records after
the retention period expires is selfevident. The Department suggests,
however, that there may be some
benefits to employers keeping records
beyond the required 3-year period; if the
employer later faces an allegation of
fraud or some other alleged violation
that has a statute of limitations of longer
than 3 years, retained documents may
help the employer defend itself. Indeed,
if a proceeding or investigation relating
to the retained records has already been
initiated, it should be understood that
the employer is obligated to retain the
records that are the subject of the
proceeding or investigation until it has
come to a conclusion.
One commenter requested that the
Department allow applicants who are
denied certification to discard records
180 days after the denial. The
Department has decided to eliminate the
requirement to retain records pertaining
to denied certifications in its entirety. If
an application is denied on grounds of
fraud or malfeasance, the Department
expects that it will have already
obtained copies of any documents
necessary to prove the fraud or
malfeasance during the process of
denying the certification, and thus the
retention of such documents by the
employer would be needlessly
duplicative. Under the Final Rule, any
employer who has been denied
certification can discard the records
immediately upon receiving the denial
notice, or, if the employer appeals the
decision, whenever the decision to deny
certification becomes final. If the denial
is ultimately overturned on appeal and
certification is granted, the application
of course becomes subject to the
document retention requirements for
approved cases.
A SWA requested that we define who
is responsible for monitoring the
documentation and ensuring
compliance. This Final Rule places
responsibility squarely with the
employer to maintain the
documentation. The NPC, through the
audit function as well as the other
enforcement tools at its disposal, will
ensure compliance. SWAs would not be
responsible for monitoring
documentation or ensuring compliance
with this provision.
(d) Section 655.102(d) Positive
Recruitment Steps
The Department proposed ‘‘positive
recruitment’’ steps including posting a
job order with the SWA serving the area
of intended employment; placing three
print advertisements; contacting former
U.S. employees who were employed
within the last year; and recruiting in
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additional States designated by the
Secretary as States of traditional or
expected labor supply.
Many commenters, primarily
employers and employer associations,
expressed concerns with the specific
proposed pre-filing recruitment steps.
Many argued that the proposed longer
recruitment period and increased
advertising would simply increase the
cost of the recruiting effort without
increasing the benefits and that the
increased steps were duplicative. These
commenters believe that their workforce
shortage problem is not due to a lack of
awareness of available jobs, but rather is
because of a lack of willing and
available U.S. workers. They suggested
that rules be promulgated to use only
the current state employment service
system and not require agricultural
employers to perform a substantial
prolonged search for U.S. workers
before being able to apply for an H–2A
labor certification. According to these
commenters, the time required in the
current rules is sufficient to identify and
notify the U.S. work force of the
availability of particular jobs.
Requiring pre-filing recruitment is, in
the Department’s view, essential to the
integrity of an attestation-based process.
Only with sufficient time for adequate
recruitment can the Department ensure
that the potential U.S. worker pool is
apprised of the job opportunity in time
to access that opportunity. The current
recruitment time frame, in which
employers file applications 45 days
prior to the date of need, recruit for 15
days thereafter, and in which a CO must
adjudicate the application no later than
30 days prior to need, has proven
unworkable. COs are today certifying
the absence of U.S. workers based on, at
best, a handful of days of recruitment
activity, which is insufficient to apprise
U.S. workers of job opportunities
through either the SWA employment
service system or other positive
recruitment activities.
The belief of some commenters that
the time allotted in the present
regulatory scheme for recruiting is
sufficient to canvass the potential U.S.
workforce is, in the Department’s view,
incorrect. The Department has heard
significant concerns voiced by the
farmworker advocate community that
there is an inability to access job
opportunities within the short
recruitment period provided in the
current system. The Department takes
seriously these concerns about the
length of the recruitment, particularly in
light of the Department’s modification
of the 50 percent rule (discussed above
with respect to § 655.102(b)) and the
possibility that it will be phased out
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entirely after a period of five years. The
movement of the recruitment period to
a time prior to the filing of the
application provides a clear and welldefined time for the employer to make
available and for the U.S. farmworker to
access job opportunities, and provides
the Department with better information
with which to make its certification
determination. The establishment of a
30-day post-date-of-need referral period
for the next five years further ensures
that the expectations of workers will not
be unduly disrupted.
A trade association recommended
SWAs be removed from the recruitment
process altogether, and only be involved
in the inspection of worker housing and
workplace conditions after approval of
the labor certification and visa and the
commencement of work. A State agency
representative recommended the SWAs
receive copies of the ETA–750
(Application for Temporary
Employment Certification) and ETA–
790 not for review but to ensure the
SWA would have access to accurate
information.
The Department notes that it is
statutorily prohibited at this time from
amending the Wagner-Peyser
regulations to remove SWAs from the
H–2A process. See Public Law 110–161,
Division G, Title I, Section 110. Nor
does it believe such a step would be
beneficial at this time. SWAs provide an
effective means of completing many
required activities, such as inspections
of employer-provided housing. SWAs
are also integral to the process of
receiving and posting agricultural job
orders. The Department declines to
require that SWAs also receive the form
ETA–750, as they will receive far more
significant information in the form
ETA–790 job clearance order request.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations also claimed that the
proposed changes to the recruitment
process were inconsistent with INA
requirements, portions of the WagnerPeyser Act, and MSPA. The
organization believed the proposed
regulations changed the standards for
employer recruitment efforts to the
detriment of U.S. workers and did not
address recruitment violations that had
been uncovered in the past. Specifically,
the organization objected to the
elimination of the standard for positive
recruitment based on comparable efforts
of other employers and the H–2A
applicant employer as found in the
current regulation at § 655.105(a). This
organization was also concerned about
the elimination of the current provision
requiring that ‘‘[w]hen it is the
prevailing practice in the area of
employment and for the occupation for
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non-H–2A agricultural employers to
secure U.S. workers through farm labor
contractors and to compensate farm
labor contractors with an override for
their services, the employer shall make
the same level of effort as non-H–2A
agricultural employers and shall
provide an override which is no less
than that being provided by non-H–2A
agricultural employers.’’ 20 CFR
655.103(f). The organization made
several recommendations for revisions
regarding recruitment, including
preserving the burden on the employer
(under Departmental review) to identify
and positively recruit in locations with
potential sources of labor, and the
obligation to work with the SWA to do
so; retaining current regulatory
provisions requiring that employers
engage in the same kind and degree of
recruitment for U.S. workers as they
utilize for foreign workers; and
requiring adequate compensation of
farm labor contractors who find U.S.
workers. Additionally, it recommended
preserving the role of SWAs contained
in the current regulations and detailed
in the internal Departmental H–2A
Program Handbook.
Other commenters expressed concern
that the Department’s proposal to
reduce the scope and type of required
recruitment efforts while increasing the
length of time to perform recruitment
was primarily intended to streamline
the program, but would not actually
benefit U.S. workers. These commenters
disagreed with the proposed rule’s
elimination of the current regulatory
requirement to contact farm labor
contractors, labor organizations,
nonprofits and similar organizations to
recruit domestic employees. If the
Department seeks to revise the current
recruitment practices, in the opinion of
these commenters, it would be more
effective to maintain or increase current
recruitment standards, while giving
agricultural employers additional time
within which to meet their obligations;
otherwise the Department is reducing
opportunities for U.S. workers.
One commenter suggested that the
Department bolster word-of-mouth
recruitment because it is, in the
commenter’s opinion, the only way that
U.S. workers find out about jobs in the
agricultural sector and it encourages
free-market competition as long as the
information is accurate. This commenter
believes too many H–2A employers do
not provide accurate information to U.S.
workers because it is in their best
interests to hire H–2A workers who
must stay tied to that employer for the
entire agricultural season.
While the Department appreciates the
concerns expressed, it believes these
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concerns are misplaced in light of the
recruitment methods that the
Department will be requiring employers
to undertake under the Final Rule. The
Department will continue, and in some
respects expand, those core positive
recruitment requirements that have a
proven track-record of providing costeffective information to U.S. workers
about available job opportunities. For
example, the Final Rule retains the
current requirement that employers run
two newspaper advertisements in the
area of intended employment, but
expands that requirement, as laid out
more fully in § 655.102(g), by requiring
that one of the advertisements be placed
on a Sunday, which typically is the
newspaper edition that has the highest
circulation. The Department declines,
however, to continue obscure and
difficult-to-administer provisions
requiring employers and the Department
to abstractly measure the amount of
‘‘effort’’ that employers put into their
domestic positive recruitment, or to
determine precisely what the prevailing
practice is in a given area with respect
to the payment of labor contractor
override fees. Provisions that call for the
measurement of employer effort require
the Department to make highly
subjective judgments and are extremely
difficult to enforce. Moreover, the
Department’s program experience has
shown that most of the discontinued
recruitment methods cited by
commenters—radio ads and contacting
fraternal organizations, for example—
substantially add to the burden of using
the program, but add little to the total
amount of information about
agricultural job opportunities that is
made available to U.S. workers through
the positive recruitment methods that
are required by the Final Rule. The
elimination of specific requirements to
contact entities such as fraternal
organizations does not mean that
interested entities will be entirely
deprived of information about open
agricultural job opportunities. Rather, it
means that interested entities should
pay attention to newspaper
advertisements and SWA job orders.
The Department appreciates the
suggestion that it should develop
methods for encouraging word-of-mouth
as a recruitment tool, and that word-ofmouth is frequently a successful way for
U.S. workers to learn about job
opportunities. We do not believe that
word-of-mouth recruitment can
effectively be mandated by regulation,
however. Rather, the Department
anticipates that word-of-mouth
communication will be instigated by the
positive recruitment efforts that the
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Final Rule requires, particularly through
the assistance of farm worker assistance
and advocacy organizations, which can
spread the word about available job
openings.
The Department takes seriously its
statutory obligation to determine
whether there are sufficient numbers of
U.S. workers who are able, available,
willing, and qualified to perform the
labor or services involved in the petition
and to ensure that U.S. workers’ wages
and working conditions are not
adversely affected by the hiring of H–2A
workers. The Department believes that
the positive recruitment methods it has
selected for inclusion in the Final
Rule—the use of newspaper
advertisements, the state employment
service system, contact with former
workers, and recruitment in traditional
or expected labor supply States—
provide notice of job opportunities to
the broadest group of potential
applicants in an efficient and costeffective manner, while avoiding
burdening employers with requirements
that have proven costly and at times
difficult to administer without yielding
clear benefits. The Department notes
that employers stand to gain a great deal
from recruiting eligible U.S. workers
rather than incurring the considerable
time and expense of securing foreign
workers from thousands of miles away.
The various provisions of these
regulations, including wage, housing,
and transportation requirements, ensure
that it is virtually always more
expensive for employers to hire H–2A
workers than it is for them to hire U.S.
workers outside the H–2A program.
Thus, employers have significant
incentives to use the positive
recruitment methods prescribed by
these regulations to maximum effect,
and the Department is confident that
these methods will adequately spread
the word to U.S. workers about available
job opportunities. The Department
expects that many employers will also
engage in additional recruitment efforts
that can, in the absence of rigid and
overly prescriptive regulatory
requirements, be flexibly tailored to the
particular circumstances of local labor
markets.
(e) Section 655.102(e)
Job Order
Proposed § 655.102(e) required that,
prior to filing its application with the
NPC, the employer place a job order,
consistent with 20 CFR part 653, with
the SWA serving the area of intended
employment. The NPRM also required
the job order to be placed at least 75 but
no more than 120 days prior to the
anticipated date of need.
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Several commenters focused on the
requirements for placement of the job
order. Three commenters posited that
the rule would create problems for
program users by establishing
requirements for acceptable job offers
that are subject to the Department’s
discretion, while employers would have
to conduct the recruitment before the
terms and conditions of the employer’s
job offer have been reviewed and
approved by the Department. According
to these commenters, the rule is silent
on what happens if, after the employer
conducts the pre-filing recruitment, the
Department does not approve the
employer’s job offer. Under the current
program, the recruitment would be
considered invalid, and the employer
would be required to revise the job offer
and repeat the recruitment. This
situation, according to these
commenters, introduces an
unacceptable degree of uncertainty and
risk into the process. A trade association
further commented that, because there
will be no prior approval of the job offer
by the NPC, all SWAs would be
independently interpreting and making
decisions about the job offers, and
believed that such a process would lead
to inconsistencies among SWAs. The
association was also concerned there
would be inconsistency between what a
local SWA employee would accept and
what the CO would later find
acceptable. The association
recommended retaining the existing
process as an option for employers.
The Department requires that the
employer submit an acceptable job order
(current form ETA–790) to the
appropriate SWA for posting in the
intrastate and interstate clearance
system. The ETA–790 describes the job
and terms and conditions of the job
offer: the job duties and activities, the
minimum qualifications required for the
position (if any), any special
requirements, the rate of pay (piece rate,
hourly or other), any applicable
productivity standards, and whether the
employee is expected to supply tools
and equipment. This form is submitted
to the SWA for acceptance prior to the
employer’s beginning positive
recruitment. As long as the employer’s
advertisements do not depart from the
descriptions contained in the accepted
job order, the advertisements will be
deemed acceptable by the Department.
Thus, employers should place
advertisements after the form ETA–790
has been accepted for intrastate/
interstate clearance, eliminating any
chance that recruitment will later be
rejected by the NPC due to problems
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with the job offer and corresponding
advertisements.
The Department also does not
anticipate significant problems in
uniform decision making among SWAs.
SWAs will be, as they have been for
some time, the primary arbiter of
whether job descriptions and job orders
are acceptable. In response to comments
on the subject, however, the Department
has clarified in the text of the rule that
employers may seek review by the NPC
of a SWA rejection, in whole or in part,
of a job description or job order. The
regulations have also been revised to
permit the NPC to direct the SWA to
place the job order where the NPC
determines that the applicable program
requirements have been met and to
provide the employer with an
opportunity for review if the NPC
concludes that the job order is not
acceptable. This modification renders
concrete what has long been the
informal practice with respect to H–2A
related job orders, as the NPC has
worked hand-in-hand with the SWAs to
ensure that job orders comply with
applicable requirements. It is also
implicit in the status of the SWAs as
agents of the Department, assisting the
Department in the fulfillment of its
statutory responsibilities.
One trade association noted that the
job order must be filed in compliance
with part 653, and that § 653.501
requires that the employer give an
assurance of available housing as part of
the job offer. This commenter opined
that this would be impossible to do
since employers cannot guarantee the
availability of housing that far in
advance for purposes of using the
proposed housing voucher. The
Department’s disposition of the
proposed housing voucher, discussed
below, renders this comment moot.
The same commenter noted that
§ 653.501(d)(6) requires that the SWA
staff determine whether the housing to
be provided by the employer meets all
of the required standards before
accepting a job order, and argued that
this would be an impossible task 120
days before the actual date of need, as
the proposed rule purported to allow.
As explained above in the discussion of
§ 655.102(a), the Department has
amended the timeframe for recruitment
by moving the first date for advertising
and placement of the job order to no
more than 75 days and no fewer than 60
days prior to the date of need. Moreover,
in response to the comments received,
the Department has specified in the
Final Rule that SWAs should place job
orders into intrastate and interstate
clearance prior to the completion of the
housing inspections required by 20 CFR
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653.501(d)(6) where necessary to meet
the timeframes required by the
governing statute and regulations. This
will maximize the time that job orders
are posted, providing better information
to workers. The Final Rule further
directs SWAs that have posted job
orders prior to completing a housing
inspection to complete the required
inspections as expeditiously as possible
thereafter. This provision is consistent
with the current regulations, which
already permit job orders to be posted
prior to the completion of a housing
inspection pursuant to § 654.403. If a
SWA notes violations during a
subsequent housing inspection, and the
employer does not cure the violations
after being provided a reasonable
opportunity to do so, the corresponding
job order may be revoked. With these
amendments, the Department believes it
has adequately addressed the concerns
contained in this comment.
In addition, a group of farmworker
organizations objected to the use of the
language ‘‘place where the work is
contemplated to begin’’ in describing
which SWA should receive a job order
when there are multiple work locations
within the same area of intended
employment and the area of intended
employment is found in more than one
State. It believed this language would
allow employers to choose where they
wanted to recruit U.S. workers simply
by ‘‘contemplating’’ that the work
would begin in an area unlikely to have
U.S. workers. The Department received
other comments that supported this
requirement. After considering these
comments, the Department has revised
the language of the provision to state
that an employer can submit a job order
‘‘to any one of the SWAs having
jurisdiction over the anticipated
worksites.’’ The revised language affords
employers some flexibility in
determining where to initially send job
orders, but it does not allow employers
to use this flexibility to avoid
recruitment obligations, as § 655.102(f)
provides that the SWA that receives the
job order ‘‘will promptly transmit, on
behalf of the employer, a copy of its
active job order to all States listed in the
job order as anticipated worksites.’’
Thus, no matter where the job order is
initially sent, the scope of required
recruitment will be the same, covering
all areas in which anticipated worksites
are located.
A sentence has also been added to the
Final Rule, simply as a procedural
direction to the SWAs, that ‘‘[w]here a
future master application will be filed
by an association of agricultural
employers, the SWA will prepare a
single job order in the name of the
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association on behalf of all employers
that will be duly named on the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification.’’
(f) Section 655.102(f) Intrastate/
Interstate Recruitment
The proposed regulation instructs the
SWA receiving an employer’s job order
to transmit a copy to all States listed as
anticipated worksites and, if the
worksite is in one State, to no fewer
than three States. Each SWA receiving
the order must then place the order in
its intrastate clearance system and begin
referral of eligible U.S. workers.
The Department received some
general comments regarding the referral
process for U.S. workers. One group of
farmworker advocacy organizations
expressed concern about the lack of
referrals by SWAs to H–2A employers in
the past and believed the proposed
regulation would not cure this
deficiency. One association of
agricultural employers expressed
concern regarding the ability of the
SWAs to adequately handle the referral
process.
The Department believes these
concerns are misplaced, especially
under a modernized system in which
SWA responsibilities with respect to
each H–2A application is reduced. A
core function of the SWA system is the
clearance and placement of job orders
and the referral of eligible workers to
the employers who placed those job
orders. Past program experience
demonstrates the occurrence of a
sufficient number of referrals to sustain
this requirement.
One SWA commented that although
the NPRM states the purpose of
removing the SWA is to remove
duplication of effort, one important
duplicative effort is retained—the
requirement for sending job orders to
other labor supply States and
neighboring States. This agency
suggested that if the job orders are
uploaded to the national labor exchange
program, then the transmittal of job
orders to other States is unnecessarily
duplicative. Other commenters
recommended all agricultural job orders
be posted in an automated common
national job bank.
The Department acknowledges the
potential benefits of a national online
system for posting job offers. However,
automating interstate job clearance
would require regulatory reforms that
the Department is currently constrained
from undertaking by Congress. See
Public Law 110–161, Division G, Title I,
Section 110. There is currently no
online national exchange organized
under the auspices of the Department to
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which such jobs could be posted. The
Department’s former internet-based
labor exchange system, America’s Job
Bank, was disbanded in 2007 because
the private sector provides much more
cost-effective and efficient job search
databases than the federal government
can provide. The Department, however,
does not wish to impose mandatory
participation in such job databases on
SWAs or employers at this time.
Because the Department already has an
existing system in place for handling
interstate job orders, and given the
current legal and operational constraints
of changing that system, the Department
has determined that the only feasible
and prudent approach at this time is to
continue to require SWAs to process the
interstate job orders in accordance with
20 CFR Part 653.
An association of growers/producers
opposed the requirement for
transmitting job orders to additional
States and recommended the job orders
be circulated only in the State where the
job is located. This association also
suggested that any out of State
notifications should list only the
location of the job offer and never list
the employer’s name.
The Department’s circulation of the
job order to any States that are
designated by the Secretary as labor
supply States is required by statute.
Section 218(b)(4) of the INA prohibits
the Secretary from issuing a labor
certification after determining that the
employer has not ‘‘made positive
recruitment efforts within a multi-state
region of traditional or expected labor
supply where the Secretary finds that
there are a significant number of
qualified United States workers who, if
recruited, would be willing to make
themselves available for work at the
time and place needed.’’ The interstate
recruitment must be conducted ‘‘in
addition to, and shall be conducted
within the same time period as, the
circulation through the interstate
employment service system of the
employer’s job offer.’’ The Department
does not have the ability to eliminate or
alter the requirement absent
Congressional amendment.
At the same time, the Department
does not read the statutory language to
require the Secretary to designate
traditional or expected labor supply
States with respect to all States in which
H–2A applications may be filed. Rather,
the Department believes that the
statutory language is most reasonably
read to require the Secretary to make a
determination for each area (which the
Secretary has elected to do on a Stateby-State basis) whether, with respect to
agricultural job opportunities in that
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area, there are other areas (which the
Secretary has also elected to examine at
the State-by-State level) in which ‘‘there
are a significant number of qualified
United States workers who, if recruited,
would be willing to make themselves
available for work at the time and place
needed.’’ In other words, the
Department reads the statute as
contemplating that with respect to
agricultural job opportunities in certain
States at certain times, as a factual
matter there simply will not be other
States in which there are ‘‘a significant
number of qualified United States
workers who, if recruited, would be
willing to make themselves available for
work at the time and place needed.’’
Under this reading of the statute, the
word ‘‘where’’ in 8 U.S.C. 1188(b)(4)
essentially means ‘‘if’’: If the Secretary
determines that the statutory criteria
have been met, then she is required by
the statute to designate the area of
traditional or expected labor supply, but
if the Secretary determines that the
statutory criteria have not been met,
then the requirement is simply
inapplicable. This sensible reading of
the statute comports with the realities of
the agricultural sector: The pattern of
seasonal migrant work has clearly
changed over time, and in some cases
older patterns have become wellestablished while others have fallen
away. The changeable nature of the
agricultural labor flow, which is highly
dependent upon weather patterns, crop
distribution, the availability of
transportation, and even the price of
gasoline, are all recognized under this
system of flexible, fact-specific
designations by the Secretary.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations pointed out that the
proposed regulations do not provide a
timeframe for how long the local SWA
can wait before placing the H–2A job
order into interstate clearance, and only
require the SWA to ‘‘promptly transmit’’
the job offer. The Department does not
believe that its requirement of ‘‘prompt’’
transmission requires further
clarification, however. Posting job
orders is one of the core functions of the
SWAs, and the Department is confident
the SWAs will continue to act
responsibly in promptly transmitting
and posting job orders as they have in
the past.
The organization was also concerned
about the clarity of the instructions to be
followed by SWAs for circulating job
orders among other States. The
proposed regulations require the SWA
to transmit a copy of the open job order
to all States listed in the employer’s
application as anticipated worksites or,
if the employer’s anticipated worksite is
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within a single State, to no fewer than
three States, including those designated
as traditional or expected labor supply
States. However, the organization
believed the proposed regulation would
be read to not require any additional job
order circulation by the SWA if the
employer has anticipated worksites in
two States, and thus would provide less
circulation of job orders and no contact
of labor supply States in such situations.
The Department agrees and has clarified
the language of § 655.102(f)(1) by
removing the phrase, ‘‘If the employer’s
anticipated worksite location(s) is
contained within the jurisdiction of a
single State’’ to make clear that job
orders with locations in more than one
State must be circulated to any
traditional or expected labor supply
States designated by the Secretary for
either of the work locations.
An attorney for an association of
growers/producers suggested the H–2A
process could be further improved by
allowing State officials to affirm that
employers need agricultural workers in
their State. The Department believes it
cannot implement such an affirmation
process, as similar processes for
determining the unavailability of U.S.
workers have been found to be
insufficient for the factual
determination required by the Secretary.
See First Girl, Inc. v. Reg. Manpower
Admin. DOL, 361 F. Supp. 1339 (N.D.
Ill. 1973) (availability of U.S. workers
could not be determined by generic
listing of available workers listed with
state agency).
A public legal service firm
recommended that the Department
require employers to circulate all job
orders in Texas, which they said is a
traditional agriculture labor surplus
state. If the commenter’s factual
assertions about labor availability in
Texas are correct, the Department would
expect that Texas will frequently be
designated as a labor supply State. The
Department is cognizant of the
changeable nature of worker flows,
however, and therefore does not wish to
require the mandatory inclusion of one
or more specific States in the
designation process. It is subject to
question, for example, whether
significant numbers of agricultural
workers in Texas would be willing to
accept seasonal employment in Alaska
or Hawaii. Rather, the Department will
rely on annually updated information in
designating labor supply States to
ensure the accuracy of the assertions
that farm workers are indeed available
in the purported labor supply State and
that recruitment there for out of State
jobs would not take needed workers
away from open agricultural jobs in the
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labor supply State. In response to these
concerns, however, the Department
notes it will announce, at least 120 days
in advance of the Secretary’s annual
designation, an opportunity for the
public to offer information regarding
States to be designated.
Finally, a group of farmworker
advocacy organizations expressed
concern regarding the content of job
orders placed by agricultural
associations. It objected to the
placement of job orders with a range of
applicable wage offers with a statement
that ‘‘the rate applicable to each member
can be obtained from the SWA.’’
In promulgating this rule, the
Department made no changes to current
practice. An association is permitted to
pay a different wage for each of its
members, should it choose to do so, as
long as that wage meets the criteria
established in the regulations (now
found at § 655.108). U.S. workers
seeking a job opportunity from or within
an association can acquire from the
SWA a list of member locations and the
wages associated with each so that the
worker can make a fully informed
decision as to which job, if any, the
worker wishes to apply.
We made several minor edits that are
consistent with the above discussion to
the language of § 655.102(f) for purposes
of clarity. Some language was also
moved to other sections or deleted,
again for purposes of clarity and
without substantive effect. Section
655.102(f)(3), which describes the
recruitment period during which
employers are required to accept
referrals of U.S. workers, was added to
the rule for reasons described at length
in the discussion of the 50 percent rule
under § 655.102(b).
(g) Section 655.102(g) Newspaper
Advertisements
The Department proposed that in
addition to the placement of a job order
with the SWA, employers be required to
place three advertisements (rather than
the current two) with a newspaper or
other appropriate print medium. Most
who commented on this suggestion
believed the additional advertising
would result in additional costs without
any additional benefits. An association
of growers/producers stated:
‘‘Additional newspaper advertising is a
very expensive alternative of recruiting
workers in today’s world and should not
be the only method allowed.’’
A trade association also questioned
the expansion of the advertising
requirements in the proposed
regulations and commented that
newspapers are not a usual or even
occasional source of labor market
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information for farm workers. The
association and other commenters
referenced the National Agricultural
Worker Survey (NAWS) which reported
that percent of seasonal crop workers
(both legal and illegal) learn about jobs
from a friend or relative or already know
about the existence of the job (although
how such knowledge is attained was not
reported). The association further
commented that the proportion of
workers who learn about their jobs from
a ‘‘help wanted’’ ad was apparently too
small even to warrant inclusion in the
report. Several of these commenters
suggested it would be more efficient to
simply allow for posting to the SWA’s
job bank which is more practical, less
expensive, and reaches applicants more
readily.
A few employers objected to the very
concept of newspaper advertising. One
employer objected to having to advertise
in a newspaper, commenting that
newspaper advertisement is ‘‘not only
expensive, but doesn’t find any hiding
sheep shearers.’’ Another employer
objected to the increase in required
newspaper advertising for U.S. workers
‘‘when it is clear that local workers are
simply not available for seasonal jobs.’’
Many commenters were particularly
concerned that increasing the number of
ads from two to three in addition to
requiring that one be placed in a Sunday
edition would greatly increase employer
costs. One trade association commented
that it is likely that in the typical
situation an employer’s advertising
costs would increase by three to four
times under the proposed regulations,
adding hundreds to thousands of dollars
to the employers’ application costs. That
commenter did not provide data
supporting this conclusion, however.
Several commenters were in favor of
the proposal to increase advertising and
expressed support for the additional ad
in the expectation it would provide
additional notice to the target
population. An association of growers/
producers supported the increase in
advertisements from two to three,
believing it would enhance the ability of
an eligible U.S. worker to identify and
apply for agricultural job openings
before the job begins. A farmworker/
community advocacy organization
agreed that requiring three instead of
two advertisements would be a step
toward improving the recruitment of
U.S. workers.
The Department appreciates that a
newspaper ad frequently may not, of
itself, result in significant numbers of
U.S. workers applying for employment.
However, such advertising has been
required for decades and remains the
central mechanism by which jobs are
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advertised, especially to workers who
may have only limited access to the
Internet. The ads may not necessarily be
seen by all farmworkers, but may be,
and indeed are, seen by those who
participate in the greater farm work
community and who can pass along a
description of the jobs ads through
‘‘word-of-mouth.’’ Newspaper
advertising remains, along with the state
employment service system network, an
objective mechanism by which notice of
upcoming farm work can be assessed by
the Department and communicated to
those who are interested.
The study referenced by many
commenters suggesting that most
referrals in the agricultural sector take
place through word-of-mouth rather
than through newspaper advertisements
was actually conducted by the
Department, and, as noted above, the
Department acknowledges that word-ofmouth frequently results in U.S.
workers learning about job
opportunities. However, the Department
believes it would be nearly impossible
to effectively implement and enforce a
word-of-mouth regulatory standard. The
Department believes the combination of
job orders and required newspaper
advertisements are cost-effective, easily
administrable, and readily enforceable,
and will make job information available
in ways that will result in word-ofmouth referrals.
Although it may be true that few
agricultural workers themselves read
such advertisements, others do read
them, including farm labor advocacy
organizations, community
organizations, faith-based organizations,
and others who seek out such
opportunities on behalf of their
constituents. The newspaper becomes a
very visible source of information for
such organizations that are in turn able
to spread the word to workers. Through
publication to this wide audience, the
information ultimately reaches those for
whom it is intended.
The Department appreciates the
substantial concern raised by a number
of commenters regarding the placement
of multiple ads and has thus revised its
proposal on the number of ads that must
be placed in the area of intended
employment. The Department has
decided to revert from the proposed
three to the existing rule’s requirement
for two ads. The Department is retaining
its proposal, however, to require that
one of the newspaper advertisements be
run on a Sunday, as that is typically the
newspaper edition with the broadest
circulation and that is most likely to be
read by job-seekers.
In response to the various comments
about the proposed advertising
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requirements, the Department is also
slightly modifying the language of
§ 655.102(g)(1) to provide some limited
flexibility in selecting the newspaper in
which the job advertisement should be
run. The Final Rule clarifies that the
newspaper must have a ‘‘reasonable
distribution.’’ Thus, advertisements
need not be placed in the New York
Times, even if the New York Times is
the newspaper of highest circulation in
a given area, but also cannot be placed
in a local newspaper with such a small
distribution that it is unlikely to reach
local agricultural workers. The Final
Rule also clarifies that the newspaper
must be ‘‘appropriate to the occupation
and the workers likely to apply for the
job opportunity,’’ but deletes the
modifier requiring that the newspaper
must be the ‘‘most’’ appropriate. This
change was made out of a recognition
that in many areas there are multiple
newspapers with a reasonable
distribution and that are likely to reach
U.S. workers interested in applying for
agricultural job opportunities, and that
as long as these criteria are met, an
employer’s positive recruitment should
not be invalidated. If an employer is
uncertain whether a particular
newspaper satisfies these criteria, it can
seek guidance from the local SWA or
the NPC.
The Final Rule also instructs
employers not to place the required
newspaper advertisements until after
the job order has been accepted by the
SWA for intrastate/interstate clearance;
this replaces the time frame contained
in the NPRM and shifts the initiation of
recruitment back to the submission to
and clearance by the SWA of the job
order. This ensures that advertisements
reflect the job requirements and
conditions accepted by the SWA and
minimizes the risk that employers’
advertisements will later be determined
to be invalid by the NPC.
One commenter suggested that a
better alternative to employer-placed
advertisements would be for the
Department to maintain an up-to-date
database listing advertisements for
farming and ranching jobs and directing
interested workers to contact the SWA
in the States where the jobs were
located. The commenter believed this
approach would expand the ability of
U.S. workers to select more varied jobs
in a larger geographic area. The
Department does not disagree; however,
as noted above, amending the current
job order clearance process is not an
option at this time.
A private citizen commented that the
SWA, not the employer, is in the best
position to know which newspaper is
most likely to reach U.S. workers, and
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that the SWA should, therefore,
continue to have a role in determining
where advertising is conducted.
Nothing, of course, prevents an
employer from consulting with the SWA
regarding the most appropriate
publication in which to place
advertising and thus ensure compliance
with the regulations, particularly in
instances in which a professional, trade
or ethnic publication is more
appropriate than a newspaper of general
circulation. In fact, a representative of a
State government agency suggested the
advertising requirements should be
limited to local area media and trade
publications where available, and that
the specific publications should be
agreed to by the employer and the SWA
based on the potential for attracting
candidates and historical experience.
While we are not incorporating this
suggestion for coordination into the
regulation as a requirement, we note
that the regulation at § 655.102(g)(1)
already requires the ads to be placed in
the ‘‘newspaper of general circulation
serving the area of intended
employment that has a reasonable
distribution and is appropriate to the
occupation and the workers likely to
apply for the job opportunity.’’
(h) Section 655.102(h) Contact With
Former U.S. Workers
The Department proposed that
employers be required to contact by
mail former U.S. workers as part of the
recruitment process. A group of
farmworker organizations objected to
the requirement and commented: ‘‘if
DOL had intended to come up with the
least effective way of contacting former
employees, it could not have selected a
better method than by mail.’’ This
organization was concerned because
they claimed a majority of farm workers
are not literate in English or their
primary language and, therefore, might
not understand the written
communication and the regulation does
not require the written communication
to be in any language other than
English. The organization also
recommended contact by telephone or
through crew leaders or foremen as
alternative methods of contact. In
response, we have modified this
provision in the Final Rule to permit
employers to also contact former U.S.
workers through alternative effective
means, and document those means in
some manner (telephone bills or logs,
for example).
Additionally, the organization
believes many workers would be missed
by the proposed mailing effort because
the proposed regulation limits the
requirement to contacting former
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workers ‘‘employed by the employer in
the occupation at the place of
employment, during the previous year’’
and does not require that H–2ALCs
contact a growers’ former workers who
did not work for the H–2ALC during the
previous season. The Department
declines to adopt a requirement that
employers contact workers who did not
work for them during the previous
season, as such a requirement would be
quite impractical, and the other positive
recruitment requirement methods
included in the Final Rule are intended
to reach such workers. It is not at all
clear how H–2ALCs would even gain
access to the necessary contact
information for former employees of
other employers, and in the judgment of
the Department such a requirement
would be excessively burdensome.
One association of growers/producers
suggested the proposed rule be modified
to allow employers the ability to deny
work to employees hired in previous
years who demonstrated an
unsatisfactory work history/ethic even if
the worker was not terminated for
cause. A trade association and other
commenters expressed concern about
former employees who were the subject
of no-match letters from the Social
Security Administration and requested a
safe harbor or common sense exception
in such situations.
The Department appreciates that
employers that do not participate in the
H–2A program generally are not
required to rehire employees who have
a poor work history. The Department
also appreciates that employers
frequently may allow short-term
workers who prove to be poor
performers to finish their job terms if it
is easier and, in light of potential
litigation risks, less costly than firing
them. There is a countervailing concern,
however, that if the Department allowed
employers to reject former workers who
completed their previous job term on
the alleged ground that the workers
were actually poor performers, it would
open the door for bad actor employers
to reject former workers on the basis of
essentially pretextual excuses. The
Department has therefore decided to
address employers’ concerns about
poorly performing workers by creating
an exception allowing employers not to
contact certain poor performers, but
only in the narrow circumstance where
the employer provided the departing
employee at the end of the employee’s
last job with a written explanation of the
lawful, job-related reasons for which the
employer intends not to contact the
worker during the next employment
season. The employer must retain a
copy of the documentation provided to
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the worker for a period of 3 years, and
must make the documentation available
to the Department upon request. The
Department will review the propriety of
the employer’s non-contact in such
situations on a case-by-case basis. The
Department believes that the insertion
of this provision is responsive to the
comment in that it relieves employers
from the burden of being required to
rehire truly poorly performing workers,
while ensuring that workers who will
not be recontacted are aware of the
employer’s intentions and reasons well
in advance of the next employment
season and have the opportunity to
bring reasons they regard as pretextual
to the Department’s attention.
With respect to the comment about
no-match letters, we note that
employers are not required to hire a
worker who cannot demonstrate legal
eligibility to work. Receipt of a nomatch letter may give rise to a duty on
the employer’s part to inquire about
work eligibility, but the letter in and of
itself is not sufficient legal justification
to refuse to hire a U.S. worker.
One trade association expressed
concern about the related requirement
for documenting contact with former
employees and stated, ‘‘This
requirement could reasonably be
interpreted to mean that the employer
must maintain a copy of its
correspondence with each former
employee demonstrating that it had
been mailed. The only practical way to
do this would be to send each letter by
certified mail or some other means
providing evidence of attempt to
deliver. Such a requirement would be
unnecessarily burdensome and costly.’’
The association recommended this be
simplified by requiring the employer to
keep a copy of the form of the letter sent
and a statement attesting to the date on
which it was sent and to whom.
Additionally, the association questioned
what kind of documentation would
demonstrate that the employee ‘‘was
non-responsive to the employer’s
request.’’ The association suggested the
employer’s recruitment report should be
sufficient to document which
employees were responsive and
requiring documentation of nonresponsiveness is unreasonable.
The Department does not intend this
requirement to be overly burdensome to
employers and agrees that copies of
form letters together with the
employer’s attestation that the letters
were mailed to a list of former
employees would be sufficient to meet
the requirements of this provision. The
Department also agrees that the
recruitment report can be used to
sufficiently document the non-
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responsiveness of former employees.
The Department inserted language into
the Final Rule clarifying the
Department’s expectations regarding the
type of documentation that should be
maintained.
(i) Section 655.102(i) Additional
Positive Recruitment
(1) Designation of Traditional or
Expected Labor Supply States
In the NPRM, the Department
continued to impose on employers the
requirement that the employer make
‘‘positive recruitment efforts within a
multi-state region of traditional or
expected labor supply where the
Secretary finds that there are a
significant number of qualified U.S.
workers who, if recruited, would be
willing to make themselves available for
work at the time and place needed,’’ as
mandated by 8 U.S.C. 1188(b)(4). The
Department proposed that each year the
Secretary would make a determination
with respect to each State in which
employers sought to hire H–2A workers
whether there are other States in which
there a significant number of eligible,
able and qualified workers who, if
recruited, would be willing to make
themselves available for work in that
State. The Department also proposed to
continue the current regulatory
provision stating that the Secretary will
not designate a State as a State of
traditional or expected labor supply if
that State had a significant number of
local employers recruiting for U.S.
workers for the same types of
occupations. The Department proposed
to publish an annual determination of
labor supply States to enable applicable
employers to conduct recruitment in
those labor supply States prior to filing
their application. The Department
received several comments on this
provision.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations opined that the
Department’s proposal contravenes the
H–2A statutory requirements regarding
positive recruitment. The organization
believes the Department’s proposal will
result in employers not competing with
one another for migrant workers and
workers not receiving job information
even though a particular job in another
State may offer a longer season, a higher
wage, or better work environment.
Another farmworker advocacy
organization commented that it makes
no sense in a market economy which
recognizes competition as good to stop
requiring employers to recruit for
farmworkers in areas where other
employers are seeking farmworkers. A
labor organization commented that this
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provision demonstrates a lack of
understanding of farmworker
recruitment and what it believes is an
inappropriate desire to ease the
recruitment obligations for growers at
the expense of U.S. farmworkers. This
organization recommended the current
positive recruitment rules should be
retained and enforced. A U.S. Senator
was concerned that the NPRM would
cost American workers jobs because
they would not have access to
information about jobs in other areas.
Employers seeking farmworkers are
statutorily required to recruit out-ofState if the Secretary has determined
that other States contain a significant
number of workers who, if recruited,
would be willing to pick up and move
in order to perform the work advertised
in accordance with all of its
specifications. The commenters
referenced above appear to believe that
the Department’s proposal is a new
regulatory provision. That is incorrect.
The current regulations at 20 CFR
655.105(a), which have been in place for
20 years, specify that Administrator,
OFLC should ‘‘attempt to avoid
requiring employers to futilely recruit in
areas where there are a significant
number of local employers recruiting for
U.S. workers for the same types of
occupations.’’ This longstanding
provision reflects two judgments on the
part of the Department. First, it reflects
the Department’s reading that 8 U.S.C.
1188(b)(4) was intended to require outof-State advertising only in areas with a
surplus labor supply, and was not
intended to deleteriously impact
farmers in certain areas by instituting
federal program requirements that
would draw away their local workers.
Second, it reflects the Department’s
judgment that where a ‘‘significant’’
number of local employers are already
recruiting U.S. workers in a given area
for the same types of occupations, there
is already significant competition for
workers in that area and the addition of
further out-of-State advertising would
likely be futile. The Department’s
program experience in applying this
limitation over a long period of time
leads it to believe that it has worked
well in practice to aid program
administration and avoid the imposition
of unnecessary program expense. The
Department notes that this limitation
does not mean that out-of-state
recruitment will cease in States where
workers are being locally recruited,
since SWAs will continue to have
discretion to post job orders in those
States where appropriate.
Several commenters sought more
information on the methodology that
would be used in making the
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determinations about labor supply
States. A group of farmworker/
community advocacy organizations
voiced its concern that ‘‘The annual
survey is flawed in many respects and
not designed to identify sources of labor
at the time of need.’’ The organization
was also concerned about the timing
and specificity of the survey to be used.
A representative of a State Workforce
Agency requested additional
information about the designation of
labor supply States for the logging
industry in her State. A trade
association commented that ‘‘the same
types of occupations’’ should mean
something more than merely
agricultural work. An individual
commenter believed that just because an
employer in a State may request H–2A
workers for a certain crop activity for a
certain time period should not mean
that State should not be considered a
labor supply State for other crop
activities and time periods.
The Department has addressed many
of these concerns by modifying the
provision to allow for notice to be
published in the Federal Register at
least 120 days before the announcement
of the annual determination, allowing
anyone to provide the Department with
information they believe will assist the
Secretary in making her determination
about labor supply states. The
Department will consider all timely
submissions made in response to this
notice. In addition to the information
presented by the public, the Department
expects that it will continue to consult
SWAs, farmworker organizations,
agricultural employers and employer
associations, and other appropriate
interested entities. As discussed above,
the ‘‘same types of occupations’’
language in the Final Rule has been
carried over from the current
regulations, and the Department intends
to apply the term in the same manner
that it has in the past. The Department
agrees that the phrase is not intended to
lump all agricultural work together as
the ‘‘same type of occupation.’’
(2) Required Out-of-State Advertising
The Department proposed that each
employer would be required to engage
in positive recruitment efforts in any
State designated as a labor supply State
for the State in which the employer’s
work would be performed. This
recruitment obligation would consist of
one newspaper advertisement in each
designated State.
Several commenters felt the
newspaper advertisement requirements
were too burdensome on employers and
that the additional time and expense of
recruiting in traditional or expected
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labor supply States should be borne by
the Department rather than the
employer. An association of growers/
producers recommended that the
regulation only require SWAs to send
the job orders to those States designated
as labor supply States as they do now.
A United States Senator recommended
that after the employer has satisfied the
intrastate recruitment requirements and
has attested that insufficient domestic
workers are available, the burden of
proof that U.S. workers are unavailable
should shift to the Department.
The Department does not consider a
requirement to place a single out-ofstate advertisement in each designated
labor supply state to be unjustifiably
onerous on employers and is of the
opinion at this time that the potential
benefit to be gained in locating eligible
and available U.S. workers outweighs
the costs of the advertising. This is
required in the current program and the
Department has received little negative
feedback on the burden of such
advertising. The Department does not
agree that this is an expense the
Department should bear, beyond the
expense of the interstate agricultural
clearance system that the Department
already finances. The INA at sec.
218(b)(4) is clear that it is an employer
who must engage in such out-of-state
positive recruitment, not the
Department.
Several associations of growers/
producers commented that placing
newspaper advertisements should be
limited to no more than three States, to
avoid the possibility that the
Department could require recruitment
in 50 States and the additional
territories because the language in the
companion recruitment provision for
SWAs at § 655.102(f) reads ‘‘no fewer
than 3 States.’’ A United States Senator
also endorsed a limit on the number of
States in which an employer is required
to recruit and suggested the Department
should provide a means of indemnifying
employers from liability associated with
mandatory out-of-State advertising.
The Department anticipates the
number of States to be so designated
will be no more than three for any one
State, but that the number of States
designated will vary by State. In some
cases, no State or only one or two States
may meet the relevant criteria. In
response to these comments, the
Department has added to the Final Rule
language specifying that ‘‘[a]n employer
will not be required to conduct positive
recruitment in more than three States
designated in accordance with
paragraph (i)(1) for each area of
intended employment listed on the
employer’s application.’’ This is
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generally consistent with past practice
concerning required out-of-State
recruitment, as employers have only
very rarely been required to conduct
advertising in more than three States of
traditional or expected labor supply.
Providing this modest cap will provide
employers with needed certainty
regarding expected advertising costs.
A farmworker advocacy organization
believed the requirement should be for
three advertisements, not one, in each
designated State and also recommended
that the Department require that the
language predominant among
agricultural workers in the region be
used. A representative of a State
government agency commented that the
proposed regulations were not clear as
to how an employer’s ad in another
State would be handled. The individual
commented that the advertising
instructions indicate interested
applicants should contact the SWA, but
asserted that this procedure would not
work well for an ad placed out of State
and recommended the ads placed out of
State should advise applicants to
contact the employer directly. Another
commenter recommended the
newspaper ads in other States should
direct all applicants to the SWA and the
SWA should then refer them to the
employer’s SWA. An association of
growers/producers recommended the
required newspaper advertisements
should contain only the job
specifications and the SWA contact
information.
The Department agrees that more
clarity on the mechanics of out-of-state
recruitment is appropriate. The
Department has added language to the
regulation to clarify that one
advertisement is to be placed in each
State identified for the area of intended
employment as a traditional or expected
labor supply State. The Department
declines to require more than one ad in
each State, which would be a significant
departure from the advertising
requirements under the current
regulations and would add additional
program expense. In response to
comments, and out of recognition that
employers often will not be well-versed
in the characteristics of out-of-State
newspapers, the Department has
included language in the Final Rule
specifying that its annual Federal
Register notice will not only announce
the designation of labor supply States,
but will also specify the acceptable
newspapers in the designated States that
employers may utilize for their required
out-of-State advertisements. In no case
will an employer be required to place an
ad in more than one newspaper in a
labor supply State. In response to
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comments, the Final Rule has also been
modified to specify that ads should refer
interested employees to the SWA
nearest the area in which the
advertisement was placed. The SWA
will then refer eligible individuals to the
SWA of the employer’s State. The
Department believes these procedures
will provide a workable advertisementand-referral system to provide
farmworkers information about
available jobs and to supply needed
labor to prospective users of the H–2A
program.
(j) Section 655.102(j) Referrals of
Verified Eligible U.S. Workers
The Department proposed to require
SWAs to ‘‘refer for employment only
those individuals whom they have
verified through the completion of a
Form I–9 are eligible U.S. workers.’’
These provisions are consistent with the
Department’s statutory mandate.
Although the INA prohibits the referral
of workers where it is known that they
are unauthorized to work in the United
States, this rule clarifies and spells out
the Department’s expectations. Based
upon comments received and the
Department’s experience with this
requirement, which has been in effect
administratively since the issuance of
TEGL 11–07, Change 1 on November 14,
2007, and with respect to which ETA
has provided recent training webinars
for SWAs, the Department believes that
SWAs should be required to verify the
identity and employment authorization
of referred workers by completing
USCIS Form I–9 in accordance with
DHS regulations at 8 CFR 274a.2 and
274a.6. The NPRM, ETA’s written
guidance, and an opinion by the
Solicitor of Labor, all of which have
been shared with SWAs over the past
year, explain both the rationale for the
SWA verification requirement.
Comments on this subject were
received from a national association
representing state agencies, 12
individual SWAs, several civil rights
and labor advocacy organizations,
members of Congress, and numerous
employer groups and individual
employers. Commenters supporting the
proposal generally cited the
longstanding need for a reliable
employment service system that is
based on affirmative verification and
refers only workers who are authorized
to work in the U.S. Commenters
opposing the proposal raised a variety of
legal, programmatic, resource-related,
and policy-based concerns.
Many commenters considered the
employment verification requirement to
be a change in policy after decades of
contrary Departmental interpretation.
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77137
Another argued that the requirement
runs afoul of the Department’s FY08
Appropriations Act, Public Law 110–
161, Division G, Title I, Section 110, in
which Congress prohibited ETA from
finalizing or implementing any rule
under the Wagner-Peyser or Trade
Assistance Acts until each is
reauthorized.
The Department has always required
that SWAs fulfill the requirements of
the INA to refer only eligible workers by
verifying their employment
authorization. Recent instructions by
the Department (including TEGL 11–07,
Change 1) have clarified the way that
employment verification is required to
be accomplished. To the extent that
these requirements were thought by
some to represent a shift in
Departmental policy, they are now being
clearly stated in the Department’s
regulations. The Department has not
reviewed the H–2A regulations
comprehensively since the current
program’s inception in 1986. After a
top-to-bottom review of the program
requested by the President in August
2007, the Department is revising and
modifying a number of established
practices based on program experience,
years of feedback from stakeholders, and
changing economic conditions.
As discussed in the NPRM our
clarification of SWAs’ obligation to
affirmatively verify employment
eligibility is in direct response to
longstanding concerns about the
reliability of SWA referrals. The referral
of workers not authorized to work
undermines the integrity of the H–2A
program, can harm U.S. workers, and
can disrupt business operations.
Many commenters argued that the
requirement is inconsistent with INA
provisions at 8 U.S.C. 1324a, and DHS
regulations at 8 CFR 274a.6, which
permit but do not require SWAs to
verify employment eligibility for
individuals they refer. The USCIS
regulations expressly permit SWAs to
verify the identity and employment
authorization of workers before making
referrals, and certainly do not prohibit
such verification. See 8 CFR 274a.6. The
Acting General Counsel of DHS has
issued an interpretive letter stating that
while the USCIS regulations do not
require SWAs to verify the eligibility of
workers before referring them, those
regulations do not prevent other
agencies with independent authority
from imposing such a requirement. See
November 6, 2007 letter from Gus P.
Coldebella, DHS Acting General
Counsel, to Gregory F. Jacob, Senior
Advisor to the Secretary of Labor. The
Department is now exercising its
independent statutory authority under
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the INA to require through regulation
that SWAs verify employment eligibility
of referrals. Further, to ensure that the
regulated community has appropriate
notice of the specific requirement, and
to ensure a standard process for
verification remains in place consistent
with the procedures already approved
by Congress, we have clarified in the
regulatory text that states must at a
minimum use the I–9 process for
purposes of verification. The
Department also strongly suggests (but
does not require), as it did in the NPRM,
that States utilize the DHS-administered
E-Verify system. State agencies with
procedures that do not comply with the
minimum requirements of the Form I–
9, however, such as verification through
scanned documents transmitted over the
Internet, must revise their processes to
ensure that agricultural referrals are
made only as a result of in-person
verification.
The INA requires that employers
execute a Form I–9 for all new
employees. Some commenters
interpreted the NPRM to shift this
employer responsibility to SWAs. A
subset of these commenters raised
concern that removing responsibility for
verification from agricultural employers
alone would be unfair to other, nonagricultural employers who would still
be required to complete the Form I–9
form.
This Final Rule does not govern
employment eligibility verification, nor
does it seek to change, for purposes of
H–2A labor certification, the basic
responsibility of employers under the
INA. As we strongly cautioned in the
NPRM, a SWA’s responsibility to
perform threshold, pre-referral
verification exists separate from an
employer’s independent obligation
under the Immigration Reform and
Control Act of 1986 to verify the
identity and employment authorization
of every worker to whom it has
extended a job offer. However, the
governing statute does permit employers
to rely on an employment verification
conducted by the SWA to fulfill their
statutory responsibilities. The INA—at
sec. 274A(a)(5)—exempts employers
from the verification requirement and
provides a ‘‘safe harbor’’ from legal
liability to employers, regardless of
industry, who unwittingly hire an
unauthorized worker where the hire is
based on a SWA referral made in
compliance with 8 CFR 274a.6,
requiring appropriate documentation
from the SWA certifying that
verification has taken place. As
discussed more fully below, the
Department requires in this Final Rule
that SWAs provide documentation
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meeting the requirements of sec.
274A(a)(5) of the INA and 8 CFR 274a.6
to each employer at the time the SWA
refers the verified worker to the
employer. Employers must retain a copy
of the SWA certificate of verification
just as it would retain a copy of Form
I–9. Employers must still verify
employment eligibility for workers who
do not have a state certification that
complies with all of the applicable
statutory and regulatory requirements.
Some commenters were concerned
that employers who hire SWA-referred
workers may seek to hold SWAs
responsible for referring unauthorized
workers. The Department expects that
any referrals a SWA makes to individual
employers will comply with the
requirements of Federal law, including
those established in this Final Rule. For
example, the preamble to the proposed
rule directs SWAs to provide all referred
employees with adequate
documentation that verification of their
employment has taken place, and
clarifies that employers may invoke
‘‘safe harbor’’ protection only where the
documentation complies with all
statutory and regulatory requirements.
We have clarified in the Final Rule the
SWA’s obligation to complete Form I–9
and provide evidence of such
completion by providing the employer
with a certification that complies with
the DHS requirements for such
certificate at 8 CFR 274a.6. However,
employers have no obligation to hire a
job applicant, whether or not referred by
the SWA, who does not present the
employer with appropriate
documentation evidencing the
applicant’s work eligibility. As stated in
the NPRM, an employer will not be
penalized by the Department for turning
away applicants who are not authorized
to work. Additionally, as long as a SWA
complies with the process established
by DHS for State Workforce Agencies
and undertakes good faith efforts to
establish the employment eligibility of
referred workers, it will not incur any
potential liability. Although the
Department certainly intends to hold
SWAs responsible for complying with
all program requirements, just as it has
in the past, the Department is not aware
of any basis under which SWAs could
be held liable to third parties for failing
to properly perform their employment
verification responsibilities in the
absence of willful or malicious conduct.
Many commenters raised a concern
that these new procedures would have
an unlawful, disparate impact on a
protected class, or at least make states
vulnerable to legal claims of disparate
impact that would require the
expenditure of significant resources to
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defend. More specifically, these
commenters felt that to the extent the
verification process is not applied to
non-agricultural workers, it would have
a disparate impact on agricultural
workers, many of whom are Hispanic,
and that could be perceived as unlawful
discrimination on the basis of race or
ethnicity. Some commenters were
concerned that states would be forced to
expend significant resources to defend
lawsuits or, alternatively, that in order
to protect against lawsuits, would be
forced to apply the verification
procedures to all job referrals.
The requirement to verify
employment eligibility does not violate
constitutional prohibitions against
disparate impact. The eligibility
requirement is established by statute
and is similar to verification
requirements to gain access to other
similar public benefits. See, e.g., Section
432, Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996,
Public Law 104–193, 110 Stat. 2105
(employment eligibility verification
requirement for most federal public
benefits for needy families). As this
regulation governs the H–2A foreign
labor certification program, the
clarification made here is limited to that
program and to agricultural job referrals,
but the Department proposed an
analogous provision in the H–2B NPRM
published on May 22, 2008, seeking to
extend the same procedural
employment verification requirements
to that program. More generally, the
clarification of the requirement in this
regulation does not mean the
Department’s policy is limited only to
agricultural referrals, as the
Department’s expectation is that SWAs
will do what they can, including
exercising their authority under 8 U.S.C.
1324a, to avoid expending public
resources to refer unauthorized workers
to any job opportunities, regardless of
program area. The employment
verification provisions included in this
regulation are part of a much broader,
concerted effort—one that includes
regulation, written guidance, and
outreach and education—to address
longstanding weaknesses in the system
and to strengthen the integrity of foreign
labor certification activities.
Some commenters opined that the
employment eligibility verification
requirement presents an obstacle to
employment for, and will reduce the
pool of, the U.S. workers it is designed
to protect. For example, these
commenters stated that States are
increasingly moving toward web-based
employment services. The commenters
believe an in-person verification
requirement will require potentially
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onerous visits by job seekers who they
believe currently could be referred to
work without ever visiting a workforce
center. The commenters stated that,
especially in the larger States, this will
present a greater and perhaps
insurmountable hurdle for a larger
number of U.S. workers, who will be
discouraged from travelling great
distances to obtain a job referral.
In practice, an in-person verification
requirement will not significantly
change the operation of referrals in most
States. In the Department’s program
experience, States often require that
agricultural job applicants visit the
workforce center to receive information
on the terms and conditions of the job,
which must be provided prior to
referral. See 20 CFR 653.501(f)
(placement of the form within local
offices). While we do not disagree that
an in-person verification requirement
may impact the decisions of a limited
number of otherwise eligible workers, at
this juncture the impact is speculative
and does not outweigh the significant
value of verification. Moreover, it is a
problem that SWAs may be able to
adjust to by designating or creating
additional in-person locations where
eligibility can be verified. This is not a
problem unique to SWAs given that
workers often must travel great
distances to reach a prospective
employer, who then (absent a SWA
certification) would be required to
verify work eligibility. Although
employment eligibility verification does
require some amount of time and effort,
Congress has determined that simple
convenience must cede to the
overarching goal of achieving a legal
workforce and the Department has
drafted its regulations accordingly.
Commenters opposing the eligibility
provision uniformly complained that
the verification requirement would add
potentially significant workload and
strain the already inadequate resources
of many State Workforce Agencies.
Many saw it as an unfunded federal
mandate in violation of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act. More than one
referred to the Department’s recent
inclusion of the requirement as a
condition for receiving further labor
certification grant funding.
As stated in the preamble to the
NPRM, the Department is not
insensitive to the resource constraints
facing state agencies in their
administration of the H–2A program.
However, as we stated in the NPRM, we
do not believe that the requirement will
result in a significant increase in
workload or administrative burden. We
have provided training to SWAs to meet
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their obligations in this context and will
continue to do so.
In addition, notwithstanding funding
limitations, there is a strong,
longstanding need for a consistent and
uniform verification requirement at the
state government level. Verification is a
statutory responsibility of the
Department and the SWAs under the
INA and the Wagner-Peyser Act, and the
Department has further determined
employment verification is a logical and
necessary condition for the issuance of
foreign labor certification grants to
states. Precisely to ensure that available
federal funding supports verification
activities, the Department has added the
verification requirement as an allowable
cost under the foreign labor certification
grant agreement. While cognizant of the
challenges posed by funding limitations,
we expect states to comply as they do
with other regulatory requirements and
other terms and conditions of their
grant.
Commenters raised a number of
concerns with the use of E-Verify,
including potential system problems,
delays and inaccuracies. The
Department strongly encourages state
agencies to use the system, which
provides an additional layer of accuracy
and security over and above the basic I–
9 process, but it has not mandated use
of E-Verify. SWAs can comply with this
Final Rule without the use of E-Verify.
One commenter pointed out that the
regulation does not describe the
penalties to SWAs for non-compliance
or delayed compliance with this
requirement, or the implications for H–
2A employers who may seek services
from SWAs that are not in compliance
with the requirement. For instance, the
commenter inquired whether, if the
Department were to suspend Foreign
Labor Certification grant funding,
employers would be required to accept
referrals funded exclusively by WagnerPeyser funding. The commenter also
inquired whether the SWA in an
employer’s state would be required to
verify the work eligibility of a worker
that was referred to it by a noncompliant out-of-State SWA. As the
verification requirement is
implemented, the Department’s
guidance will evolve in response to the
experience of the regulated community
and our own. We do note that these
problems already exist under the
Department’s current regulations and
policies, and the Department is working
through them as they arise. The
problems are substantially alleviated by
the fact that virtually every State and
territory administering the H–2A
program has already agreed to come into
compliance with the employment
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eligibility verification requirements
established by current Departmental
policies, minimizing the chance that a
State will need to be de-funded due to
non-compliance or that non-compliant
referrals will be made by out-of-State
SWAs. Nevertheless, we do not discount
the importance of the questions posed
by the commenter, but see them as
issues of implementation that should be
addressed, as they arise, through
appropriate guidance.
In addition, we note that the SWA
may not refuse to make a referral and
the employer may not refuse to accept
a referral because of an E-Verify
tentative nonconfirmation (TNC), unless
the job seeker decides not to contest the
TNC. SWAs and employers may not
take any adverse action, such as
delaying a referral or start date, against
a job seeker or referred worker based on
the fact that E-Verify may not yet have
generated a final confirmation of
employment eligibility.
(k) Section 655.102(k) Recruitment
Report
The Department proposed requiring
employers to submit an initial
recruitment report with their
applications and to supplement that
report with a final recruitment report
documenting all recruitment activities
related to the job opportunity that took
place subsequent to the filing of the
application. The Department proposed
that the initial recruitment report to be
filed with the application be prepared
not more than 60 days before the date
of need, and that the supplemental, final
report be completed within 48 hours of
the date H–2A workers depart for the
worksite or 3 days prior to the date of
need, whichever is later. Many
individuals and members of agricultural
associations expressed concern that
recruitment reports will not simplify the
application process and will instead
inflict an undue burden on employees
of small farms. Some agricultural
associations argued that having two
recruitment reports will double the
work for employers and stated that the
supplemental report is not justified
because of its limited utility in resolving
compliance issues.
The Department disagrees that a
supplemental recruitment report will
have limited benefit, given the
Department’s intended use of
supplemental reports in the event of an
audit. The supplemental recruitment
report will provide assurance to the
Department that an employer has
complied with all of its obligations with
respect to the domestic workforce.
Compliance throughout the program,
including after filing of an application,
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is necessary for the appropriate
enforcement of the H–2A program and
its requirements. By requiring a
supplemental report, the Department is
not requiring a duplicative effort but is
in fact effectively requiring employers to
split the current comprehensive total
report (of all referrals that are required
to be reported) into two smaller, more
manageable reports. The Department
does not believe that this splitting of the
comprehensive total report will require
significantly more effort on the part of
employers.
Several commenters specifically
mentioned the timing of the recruitment
report as the biggest problem with the
requirement. One farm association
noted that since the initial application
cannot be submitted without the
recruitment report, and the recruitment
report must be prepared not more than
60 days prior to the date of need, the
application itself cannot be filed until
60 days ahead of time. In order to rectify
this issue, the commenter believed the
application itself should be required to
be filed not more than 60 days prior to
the date of need. Another farm
association suggested that the timeline
for the recruitment report be moved up
to no later than 45 days before the date
of need, rather than 60 days before the
date of need. The Department also
received comments in support of the
supplemental recruitment reports.
The Department has learned through
experience that if recruitment is begun
no more than 45 days before the date of
need, it is virtually impossible for the
Department to receive an adequate
recruitment report by the time it is
statutorily required to make a
certification determination 30 days
before the date of need. As discussed
above, we have in response to
comments amended the timeframe for
pre-filing recruitment to reflect a
recruitment period closer to the date the
workers are needed. In addition, in
accordance with the revisions to the
time frame specified in § 655.102(e) for
submitting job orders, the original
proposal regarding the timing of the
filing of recruitment reports has been
revised in the Final Rule and now
provides that the initial recruitment
report may not be prepared more than
50 days prior to the employer’s date of
need. The Final Rule also revises the
proposed timing for the completion of
the supplemental recruitment report,
and now requires the employer to
update the recruitment report within 2
business days following the last date
that the employer is required to accept
referrals; that is, the end of the
recruitment period as specified in
§ 655.102(f)(3). With respect to
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employers who wish to file an
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification prior to 50 days before the
date of need, they are welcome to do so
to initiate processing of the application,
but the application will not be
considered to be complete, and thus
eligible for a final determination, until
the initial recruitment report is
submitted.
Finally, the Department has made
additional clarifying edits to the
regulatory text. These edits are to ensure
this provision comports with other
sections of this Final Rule, to improve
readability, and to clarify its
requirements. These include the
deletion of the redundant phrase ‘‘who
applied or was referred to the job
opportunity’’ which appeared twice in
the NPRM paragraph (k)(2) (which is
now (k)(1)(iii)); simplifying the
reference to the contents of the
supplemental recruitment report
through the use of cross-references; and
placing the paragraph regarding the
updating of recruitment reports before
the paragraph regarding document
retention requirements. In addition, the
Department has added a requirement
that the recruitment report must contain
the original number of openings
advertised. This last addition will
enable the Department to grant an
employer a partial certification in the
event it can meet part but not all of its
need through the recruitment of U.S.
workers.
Section 655.103 Advertising
Requirements
The Department proposed detailed
instructions for the content of the
newspaper advertisements to be placed
by employers as part of the required prefiling recruitment in § 655.103. A few
comments were received on the specific
contents of the ads. Other comments
regarding the rule’s advertising
requirements are discussed in the
section of the preamble pertaining to
§ 655.102(g).
An association of growers/producers
commented that the advertising
requirements are inefficient and
wasteful, particularly when ‘‘numerous
virtually identical ads are appearing at
the same time.’’ Another association
suggested that employers be allowed to
advertise jobs by simply referencing the
job order placed with the SWA, and
suggested that employers should not be
required to include all of the detailed
information contained in the proposed
regulation. Another association
suggested that if more than one grower
is simultaneously recruiting in an area
covered by only one newspaper, their
ads should be combined and placed by
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the SWA. The association suggested that
the names of the growers could all be
provided in the ad, but applicants
would be directed to the SWA to get
additional information about the jobs
and referrals to the employers.
The Department has considered but
declines to adopt these suggestions at
this time. The Final Rule significantly
clarifies the H–2A advertising
requirements. The Department believes
that it has struck a careful and
appropriate balance, based on its
program experience, between the
expense of advertising to employers and
workers’ need for basic job information
when considering whether to pursue
advertised employment opportunities.
The Final Rule contains several
clarifying and conforming changes to
the proposed text for § 655.103, none of
which are substantive. The Final Rule
also paraphrases in § 655.103 the equal
treatment requirement already stated in
§ 655.104(a). Section 655.103 requires
that an employer’s recruitment ‘‘must
contain terms and conditions of
employment which are not less
favorable than those that will be offered
to the H–2A workers.’’
Section 655.104
Contents of Job Offers
(a) Section 655.104(a)
Treatment of Aliens
Preferential
The Department’s proposed regulation
stated: ‘‘The employer’s job offer shall
offer no less than the same benefits,
wages, and working conditions that the
employer is offering, intends to offer, or
will provide to H–2A workers.’’ A group
of farmworker advocacy organizations
opposed the removal of the words ‘‘U.S.
worker’’ from this section of the rule.
This commenter believes that the
proposed wording allows employers to
treat U.S. workers less favorably than
H–2A workers.
While the Department does not agree
that the new wording would have
allowed employers to treat U.S. workers
any less favorably than H–2A workers,
the words ‘‘U.S. worker’’ have been
reinserted.
(b) Section 655.104(b)
Minimum Offered
No Less Than
The NPRM proposed that the ‘‘job
duties and requirements specified in the
job offer shall be consistent with the
normal and accepted duties and
requirements of non-H2A employers in
the same or comparable occupations
and crops in the area of intended
employment and shall not require a
combination of duties not normal to the
occupation.’’ Several commenters
expressed concern that the proposed
requirements would prove unworkable,
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unadministrable, and exceedingly
difficult for employers to comply with,
as what is ‘‘normal’’ and ‘‘accepted’’ are
substantially subjective determinations.
All of the commenters who provided
input on this provision suggested that
the Department should not second guess
an employer’s business decision
regarding an occupation’s job duties
when they are unique to that employer.
These commenters believe that the
Department’s proposal would give the
Department more discretion to deny an
application than is contemplated by the
statute.
The Department agrees with the basic
thrust of these comments. Section
218(c)(3)(A) of the INA requires the
Department, when determining whether
an employer’s asserted job qualifications
are appropriate, to apply ‘‘the normal
and accepted qualifications required by
non-H–2A employers in the same or
comparable occupations and crops.’’
There is a substantial difference,
however, between job duties and job
qualifications; job qualifications
typically describe the minimum skills
and experience that an employee must
have to secure a job, while job duties
describe the tasks that qualified workers
are expected to perform. The
Department agrees that, as a general
matter, employers are in a far better
position than the Department to assess
what job duties workers at a particular
establishment in a particular area can
reasonably be required to perform in an
H–2A eligible position.
The Department is therefore altering
this provision to conform more closely
to the language of the statute, and is
limiting the restriction in § 655.104(b) to
job qualifications. The Department is
aware that this may mean that at times
a U.S. worker wishing to perform one
type of job duty, such as picking
asparagus, may be required by an
employer to perform an additional job
duty, such as harvesting tobacco, in
order to secure an agricultural job. It is
not at all uncommon, however, for jobs
in the United States to include multiple
job duties, some of which workers may
view as more desirable than others.
There is nothing in the statute governing
the H–2A program indicating that
Congress intended to require
agricultural employers to allow
prospective workers to selectively
choose which job duties they want to
perform and which job duties they do
not, with regard to a particular job
opportunity. In the Final Rule, this
provision states that ‘‘[e]ach job
qualification listed in the job offer must
not substantially deviate from the
normal and accepted qualifications
required by employers that do not use
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H–2A workers in the same or
comparable occupations and crops.’’
The Department is sensitive, however,
that in certain circumstances a listed job
duty may act as a de facto job
qualification, because the listed duty
requires skills or experience that
agricultural workers may not typically
possess. When such circumstances
arise, the Department reserves the right
to treat the listed job duty as a job
qualification, and to apply the ‘‘normal’’
and ‘‘accepted’’ standard that is set forth
in the statute and restated in the
regulations in determining whether the
qualification is appropriate.
One commenter suggested that this
provision should be made consistent
with those in the PERM regulations at
20 CFR 656.17. The Department
declines to apply the PERM standard to
the H–2A program, as that standard is
based on a substantially different
statutory structure. The Department is
confident that the revised standard for
§ 655.104(b) that is set forth in the Final
Rule, which hews closely to the
language of sec. 218(c)(3)(A) of the INA,
is appropriately tailored to the H–2A
program and will prove workable in
practice.
(c) Section 655.104(c) Minimum
Benefits
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations pointed out that proposed
§ 655.104 does not correlate exactly to
current § 655.102(b). Specifically, in this
commenter’s opinion the proposed
section does not require the employer to
pay the worker at least the adverse effect
wage rate in effect at the time the work
is performed, the prevailing hourly
wage rate, or the legal federal or State
minimum wage rate, whichever is
highest, for every hour or portion
thereof worked during a pay period as
required in the current regulation.
According to this commenter, under the
proposed rule, H–2A workers would
have only contract law as their primary
enforcement tool. With proposed
§ 655.104(c) stating that every job offer
must include the wage provisions listed
in paragraphs (d) through (i) of this
section but no longer requiring precisely
what the current § 655.102(b)(9)(i)
requires, this commenter argued that
workers will be left at a disadvantage if
the employer fails to specify the
required wage provisions in the work
contract.
The Department appreciates this
commenter’s analysis. However, we do
not agree that the employer will no
longer be bound to pay the employee
the wage promised, nor that the only
enforcement tool available is through
contract law. Under the new program
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the employer’s attestation required
under § 655.105(g) is an enforceable
program requirement. The failure of an
employer to comply with any program
requirement subjects the employer to
the Department’s enforcement regime.
A commenter pointed out the illogical
consequences of rigid rules governing
wages for agricultural workers. It is the
commenter’s contention that the
Department should add a phrase at the
end of § 655.104(c) that would not force
employers to pay the NPC prescribed
wage until the date of need and instead
would allow employers to pay U.S.
workers a mutually agreed upon wage
between the time they recruit the
workers and the date the H–2A workers
are needed in order to train the U.S.
worker and retain them until and
throughout the period of the H–2A
contract. The commenter reports that if
they do not offer those U.S. workers
employment immediately, they will
most likely not be available when the
H–2A work begins. The commenter
believes that any employment prior to
the date of need and prior to the date
that foreign H–2A workers arrive should
not be governed by the H–2A contract
or its wage provisions.
The Department agrees that the H–2A
required wage takes effect on the
effective start date of the H–2A contract
period. However, the Department does
not believe that any changes to the
regulatory text need to be made under
this section because § 655.105(g)
provides that the requirement to pay the
offered wage applies only during the
valid period of the approved labor
certification. U.S. workers who are hired
in response to H–2A recruitment and
who perform work for an employer
before the date of need specified in the
H–2A labor certification are not
required by these regulations (but may
be required by contract) to be paid the
H–2A wage until the period of the H–
2A contract begins, without regard to
the type of work performed.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations argued that under the
proposed rule, employers would no
longer be required to disclose in job
offers their obligation to provide
housing to workers. That is incorrect.
Section 655.104(c) provides that
‘‘[e]very job offer accompanying an H–
2A application must include each of the
minimum benefit, wage, and working
condition provisions listed in
paragraphs (d) through (q) of this
section.’’ Paragraph (d) of that section
provides, in turn, that ‘‘[t]he employer
must provide housing at no cost to the
worker, except for those U.S. workers
who are reasonably able to return to
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their permanent residence at the end of
the work day.’’
(d) Section 655.104(d) Housing
Section 218(c)(4) of the INA requires
employers to furnish housing in
accordance with specific regulations.
The employer may fulfill this obligation
by providing housing which meets the
applicable Federal standards for
temporary labor camps or providing
housing which meets the local
standards for rental and/or public
accommodations or other substantially
similar class of housing. In the absence
of local standards, the rental and/or
public accommodations or other
substantially similar class of housing
must meet State standards, and in the
absence of State standards, such
housing must meet Federal temporary
labor camp standards. By statute, the
determination of whether employerprovided housing meets the applicable
standards must be made no later than 30
days before the date of need. The
Department proposed three changes to
the current housing requirements.
First, the Department proposed
allowing employers to request housing
inspections no more than 75 and no
fewer than 60 days before the date of
need. The Department further proposed
that the NPC would, as required by
statute, make determinations on H–2A
applications 30 days before the
employer’s date of need, even if the
housing referenced in the application
had not yet been physically inspected
by the SWA, so long as (1) the employer
requested a housing inspection within
the time frame specified by the
regulations and (2) the SWA failed to
conduct the inspection for reasons
beyond the employer’s control. Under
the Department’s proposal, SWAs
would have the authority and the
responsibility under such circumstances
to conduct post-certification housing
inspections prior to or during
occupancy. If such a post-certification
housing inspection identified
deficiencies that the employer failed to
act promptly to correct, the proposal
provided that the SWA would inform
the NPC of the deficiencies in writing so
that the NPC could take appropriate
corrective action, potentially including
revocation of the labor certification. The
Department proposed these changes in
part to alleviate the problems SWAs
currently face in trying to conduct large
numbers of required housing
inspections during the short 15-day
window provided by the statute
between the time that applications are
required to be filed (45 days before the
date of need) and the time that the
Department is required to make a
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determination on the application (30
days before the date of need). The
changes were also intended to avoid
penalizing employers for the failure of
SWAs to comply with their legal duty
to meet the timeframes established by
the statute.
The Department heard from a number
of SWAs on the issue of timely housing
inspections, many of which declared
their ability to conduct housing
inspections within the 15-day window.
One SWA acknowledged that at times
delays may occur in conducting housing
inspections, but attributed those delays
to incomplete or inaccurate information
being provided to inspectors. This SWA
suggested that providing a copy of the
job order with the housing inspection
request would alleviate the problem of
inspectors investigating the wrong
housing. Finally, an anonymous
commenter tied the delays in housing
inspections to a lack of funding at the
state level.
The Department recognizes that many
SWAs conduct housing inspections in
advance of the statutory deadline of 30
days before the date of need, but cannot
ignore the fact that SWA delays in
conducting housing inspection have in
many instances resulted in labor
certification determinations being made
by the Department outside of the
statutorily required timeframes. This
result is not acceptable to the
Department or to employers seeking H–
2A certification. As one employer
commenter stated:
[u]ntimely housing inspections are one of the
most common reasons for delays in making
labor certification determinations. Therefore,
the provision in the proposed regulations for
making a pre-application housing inspection,
and the provision that certification will not
be delayed if a timely housing inspection is
not made, and that occupancy of the housing
is permitted, are important improvements in
the program.
While employers and employer
associations favored the proposed
conditional labor certifications, several
commenters representing employer
interests had concerns with the
proposed requirement that housing
inspections be requested no fewer than
60 days before the date of need.
Employers stated that in some parts of
the U.S., housing may still be
winterized 60 days before the date of
need and therefore may be unavailable
for inspection, or unable to pass
inspection. In certain areas, inspection
agencies require that the employer rent
the housing before an inspection is
conducted and the earlier time frame for
requesting an inspection requires
employers to pay an additional month
or two of rent for the housing,
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substantially adding to the cost of
providing housing. Other growers stated
that current inspection procedures
prohibit the inspection of occupied
housing and therefore this proposal
would require that regulations be
adjusted to permit inspection of
occupied housing. Some said that the
earlier time frame for requesting
housing inspections may be before
many farmers plant their crops, let alone
know the dates of the harvest.
Commenters representing employer
interests also included questions
concerning implementation of the
proposal. Many argued that employers
should be provided a specific and
reasonable period of time for abatement
of violations found in postdetermination inspections conducted by
SWAs, and that employers who correct
violations within the specified period
should not be penalized for the
violations. One employer association
argued that ‘‘the fact that employers
continue to face consequences for
having deficient housing will prevent
any adverse effects for workers.’’
Employers also questioned the proposed
requirement that housing inspection
requests be made in writing, and some
employers recommended that the
Department provide training to SWA
staff on conducting housing inspections
of occupied housing. Finally, one
employer commented that in the state in
which he operates, the state’s
Department of Health conducts
inspections of temporary labor camps
and that to require SWAs to conduct
these inspections would result in
confusion.
Employee advocacy organizations and
state agencies expressed concern that
the granting of pre-inspection labor
certification determinations could
potentially result in cases where
housing is not inspected prior to
occupancy, which in turn could result
in workers being housed in substandard
conditions. Several commenters
objected to this proposed revision
stating that pre-occupancy housing
inspections are an effective incentive for
employers to take corrective action, thus
ensuring that workers are housed in safe
and sanitary housing. Other commenters
urged the Department to continue the
requirement that housing be inspected
before workers arrive.
A few comments from both
organizations representing employer
interests and from organizations
representing employee interests
questioned the Department’s legal
authority to establish a requirement that
housing inspections be requested more
than 45 days before the date of need,
which is the earliest date that the
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Department may under the statute
require applications to be filed. One
commenter asserted that the proposed
changes contradict the Department’s
Wagner-Peyser regulations requiring
that the housing be inspected to
determine compliance with applicable
housing safety and health standards
before a job order can be posted (and,
thus, before the housing can be
occupied).
The Department has carefully
considered the comments and has
determined that the framework of the
Department’s original proposal strikes
an appropriate balance between the
need to ensure that housing for H–2A
workers meets all applicable safety and
health standards, that agricultural
employers are able to secure H–2A
workers in a timely manner, and that
the Department complies with the
statutory requirement to render a
determination no fewer than 30 days
before the date of need. To ensure that
SWAs have adequate time to complete
housing inspections before the statutory
deadline of 30 days before the date of
need, the Final Rule requires employers
to request housing inspections no fewer
than 60 days before the date of need,
except when the emergency provisions
contained in § 655.101(d) are used. The
Department is eliminating in the Final
Rule the proposed restriction on
housing inspections being requested
more than 75 days before date of need.
Eliminating this restriction will provide
SWAs additional flexibility to manage
the workload of completing required
inspections with respect to those cases
where an employer’s housing is ready
for inspection well in advance of the
date of need.
The INA at 8 U.S.C. 1188(c)(3)(A)
expressly requires the Secretary of Labor
to make a determination on an
employer’s application for temporary
labor certification no fewer than 30 days
before the employer’s date of need. The
INA also requires that the Secretary
make a determination as to whether
employer-provided housing meets the
applicable housing standards by the
same deadline—no fewer than 30 days
before the employer’s date of need.
Although the Department has delegated
its statutory housing inspection
responsibilities to the SWAs, the
statutory deadline applicable to that
responsibility continues to apply. This
is made explicit by § 655.104(d)(6)(iii) of
the Final Rule, which states that ‘‘[t]he
SWA must make its determination that
the housing meets the statutory criteria
applicable to the type of housing
provided prior to the date on which the
Secretary is required to make a
certification determination under sec.
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218(c)(3)(A) of the INA, which is 30
days before the employer’s date of
need.’’
Some commenters read the language
of sec. 218(c)(4) of the INA as
prohibiting the Secretary from making a
determination on an employer’s
application for temporary labor
certification until the employer’s
housing has been physically inspected.
The Department strongly disagrees with
that interpretation. The language of sec.
218(c)(4) is not phrased as a limitation
on the Secretary’s duty under sec.
218(c)(3)(A) to make determinations on
applications no later than 30 days before
the employer’s date of need. In fact, the
language of sec. 218(c)(4) does not
require that housing inspections be
completed prior to the Secretary’s
certification determination, although
Congress certainly could have phrased
the requirement that way had it wanted
to do so. Instead, the language of sec.
218(c)(4) is most naturally read as
imposing a statutory duty on the
Department to complete required
housing inspections ‘‘prior to the date
specified in paragraph (3)(A)’’—which,
as noted previously, is 30 days before
the employer’s date of need. The
provision does not specify what
consequence should follow in the event
that the Department fails to comply with
this mandate. Presumably, however, if
Congress had intended that the primary
consequence of the government’s failure
to meet its statutory responsibility to
complete housing inspections in a
timely manner would be to penalize
employers by releasing the Department
from its independent statutory
responsibility to make determinations
on applications no later than 30 days
before the employer’s date of need—a
deadline that was indisputably
established to ensure that employers can
secure needed H–2A workers in a timely
fashion without undue delays caused by
the government—it would have said so
explicitly.
Of course, the Department greatly
prefers that housing inspections be
conducted prior to certification, as this
gives the Department the strongest
possible assurance that ‘‘the employer
has complied with the criteria for
certification’’ as required by sec.
218(c)(3)(A)(i) of the INA. To this end,
the Final Rule requires that employers
make requests for housing inspections
no fewer than 60 days before the
employer’s date of need, ensuring that
SWAs have adequate time to meet the
statutory deadline for conducting
housing inspections. Moreover, SWAs
remain under an express statutory and
regulatory mandate to complete housing
inspections by 30 days before the
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employer’s date of need, an obligation
that the Department expects SWAs will
not take lightly. The Department
therefore believes that under the Final
Rule, post-certification housing
inspections will be the very rare
exception rather than the rule.
The Department has never read sec.
218(c)(3)(A)(i), however, as requiring
that the government directly observe for
itself that the employer has satisfied all
of the statutory criteria for certification.
For example, under the current
regulations a substantial portion of
required recruitment takes place after a
certification has been made, and SWAs
typically do not conduct precertification inspections of rental
housing or public accommodations
secured by employers pursuant to sec.
218(c)(4). It is important to note that
under the Final Rule employers are
required to provide or secure housing
that meets all applicable standards, and
that a certification cannot be granted,
with or without an inspection, unless
the employer has attested that its
housing fully complies with those
standards. Sanctions and penalties may
be imposed for violations of the
attestation requirements and the
housing standards, including revocation
of a labor certification, regardless of
whether a pre-certification housing
inspection was conducted.
As to commenters who argued that it
is unacceptable that housing might in
some rare circumstances be occupied by
H–2A workers before it is inspected, the
Department notes that under MSPA,
U.S. workers often occupy agricultural
housing before it is inspected, and the
Department has not seen any data
indicating that this arrangement has
caused harm to U.S. workers. The
Department does not believe that H–2A
workers will be harmed by this rule
when being afforded the same level of
protection that Congress has afforded to
U.S. workers. Moreover, the Department
believes that any chance that H–2A
workers would be placed in substandard
housing under the Final Rule—a
possibility that can never fully be
guarded against as a practical matter,
and occurs on occasion even under the
current rule—is minimized by the fact
that a certification cannot be granted
unless the employer has attested that its
housing fully complies with all
applicable standards. If this attestation
is later shown to be false, the employer
risks substantial penalties, including the
possibility of a revoked labor
certification and/or debarment.
The Department is not persuaded by
employers’ arguments for specific
language allowing employers in all
cases to abate housing violations
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without penalties where the housing has
already been occupied. Penalties for
failing to meet the applicable standards
help ensure compliance. As with all
Department investigations to determine
compliance with Federal safety and
health standards for housing, however,
the employer is as a matter of practice
provided a reasonable opportunity to
correct or abate any violations that are
found. This also is true when the SWA
or other state agency conducts the
inspection. Time frames for abatement
are directly related to the severity of the
violation and its potential impact on the
safety and health of the workers.
Therefore, language in this regulation
specifying an abatement period for the
correction of housing violations is
unnecessary. Current regulations at 29
CFR 501.19(b) and the Final Rule at
§§ 655.117 and 655.118 address the
factors considered by the Department in
determining the appropriateness of
penalties and sanctions. The
Department will continue to ensure that
the penalties assessed and sanctions
imposed for violations of housing safety
and health standards are appropriate to
the violation.
The Department is cognizant that
requiring employers to request housing
inspections no fewer than 60 days
before the date of need may present a
challenge to some employers. However,
we believe that overall this requirement
will be beneficial to employers, workers
and the SWAs by allowing more time
for the SWAs to schedule and conduct
pre-occupancy housing inspections, and
more time for employers to correct any
deficiencies prior to the arrival of the
workers. The Department expects that
SWAs will continue to work with
employers on the scheduling of housing
inspections and that SWAs will
endeavor to minimize the expense to the
SWA and maximize the benefit to the
employer and workers by avoiding
scheduling inspections of facilities at
times that they are not winterized or
otherwise unlikely to pass inspection. In
response to comments about obstacles
that currently exist in some jurisdictions
to securing timely housing inspections,
the Department has also included an
instruction to SWAs in the Final Rule
not to adopt rules or restrictions that
would inhibit their ability to conduct
inspections by 30 days before the date
of need, such as requirements that rental
housing already be formally leased by
the employer before the SWA will
conduct an inspection, or rules that
occupied housing will not be inspected.
It is solely the employer’s responsibility,
however, to ensure that the SWA has
access to the housing to be inspected so
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that the inspection may take place. For
the reasons set forth in the discussion of
§ 102(a) concerning the Final Rule’s prefiling recruitment requirements, the
Department does not agree that the
statute prohibits the Department from
requiring that housing inspection
requests be submitted to SWAs prior to
the date that applications must be
submitted to the NPC.
The Department also disagrees that
the possibility that some housing
inspections will take place after
certification under the Final Rule
violates the Wagner-Peyser regulations.
The current regulations at 20 CFR
654.403 already permit job orders to be
posted prior to the completion of a
housing inspection. If an SWA identifies
violations during a subsequent housing
inspection, and the employer does not
cure the violations after being provided
a reasonable opportunity to do so, the
corresponding job order may be
revoked. Although some commenters
expressed the view that the regulatory
process under § 654.403 is more
protective of workers because
§ 654.403(e) requires that the SWA
‘‘shall assure that the housing is
inspected no later than the date by
which the employer has promised to
have its housing in compliance with the
requirements of this subpart,’’ that
provision is actually less protective of
workers than the Final Rule. The Final
Rule unequivocally recapitulates the
statutory requirement that housing
inspections be completed no later than
30 days before the employer’s date of
need, a date that is actually earlier than
that required by the conditional access
provisions set forth in § 654.403. Thus,
both the Final Rule and § 654.403
contain clear mandates for preoccupancy inspections. Significantly,
however, § 654.403 does not specify any
particular consequence if an SWA fails
in its duty to conduct the required preoccupancy inspection; under that
provision, it is only if the SWA fulfills
its duty to conduct the required
inspection and finds violations that the
employer’s job order is removed from
clearance. Thus, in specifying that the
Department will adhere to its statutory
obligation to make certification
determinations on applications no later
than 30 days before the employer’s date
of need even where an SWA has failed
in its statutory duty to conduct the
required housing inspection in a timely
fashion, the Department is not depriving
workers of any protections that they
have under § 654.403. Both provisions
fundamentally depend on SWAs to
protect workers by fulfilling their
responsibilities under the law—and the
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Department notes that in its experience,
the SWAs take those responsibilities
very seriously.
The Department is retaining the
proposed requirement that the
employer’s request for housing
inspections must be in writing. This
requirement provides the employer with
the documentation necessary to
demonstrate that their request for a
housing inspection was made within the
required time frame.
While the Department refers to the
SWAs as the entities responsible for
making housing inspections related to
labor certification determinations, the
Department does not intend to limit the
flexibility afforded SWAs in fulfilling
this requirement. For example, some
SWAs have agreements with other State
agencies for conducting housing
inspections and it is not the
Department’s intention to change such
arrangements.
Finally, in response to concerns that
SWA staff is not sufficiently trained to
conduct inspections of occupied
housing, the Department anticipates that
there will be additional training of SWA
staff on the conduct of housing
inspections.
The Department’s second housingrelated proposal was the creation of a
housing voucher as an additional option
employers could use to meet the H–2A
housing requirements. The Department
did not explain in detail in the NPRM
how such a voucher program would
work, but instead requested suggestions
and comment from the public about
how the program should be constructed
and operated. The Department’s NPRM
did, however, propose to include
several safeguards in the voucher
program to ensure that workers would
be provided housing meeting the
applicable safety and health standards,
including requirements that the voucher
could not be used in an area where the
Governor of the State has certified that
there is inadequate housing available in
the area of intended employment. Other
safeguards included the provision that
the voucher could only be redeemed for
cash paid by the employer to a third
party, that the housing obtained with
the voucher had to be within a
reasonable commuting distance of the
place of employment and that workers
could ‘‘pool’’ their vouchers to secure
housing (e.g., to secure a house instead
of a motel room) but that such pooling
may not result in a violation of the
applicable safety and health standards.
The Department also included as a
safeguard the requirement that if
acceptable housing could not be
obtained with the voucher, the
employer would be required to provide
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housing meeting the applicable safety
and health standards to the worker. The
Department requested comments on
whether such a program would
adequately balance the needs of
employers and workers and how such a
program should operate. The
Department received a number of
comments from employers, employer
associations, employee advocacy
organizations and State agencies on the
housing voucher option.
A number of comments from
stakeholders representing both
employer and employee interests led us
to conclude that the proposal was not
well understood. Several commenters
stated that ‘‘the voucher program would
effectively eliminate the requirement
that all housing for H–2A workers must
meet health and safety standards.’’
Some employer associations stated that
they supported the concept of ‘‘using
vouchers to provide housing in lieu of
actually providing housing’’ while
another commenter asserted that the
housing voucher option would
‘‘undermine Congressional intent by
eliminating the requirement that
employers provide non-local workers
with free housing that meets the basic
safety and health standards.’’
While noting a few concerns with the
proposal (e.g., the employer’s
responsibility for violations of safety
and health standards at housing
obtained by the voucher), employers
and employer associations generally
praised the Department for the much
needed flexibility a voucher program
would create. Some commenters opined
that the use of housing vouchers would
‘‘greatly stimulate H–2A participation’’
and ‘‘would encourage others to use
legal workers.’’ Other commenters
stated that the H–2A current
requirement to provide housing to
workers is a serious impediment to
program participation and that the
implementation of a housing voucher
option would make the H–2A program
more usable and effective.
Comments from individuals and
organizations representing employee
interests criticized the voucher option,
stating that the proposed safeguards
were illusory and provided no
substantive protections to workers.
Virtually all criticism of the proposal,
including from SWAs, misunderstood
the Department’s position and assumed
health and safety standards would not
apply to housing obtained with a
voucher. Many commenters argued that
the voucher idea ‘‘ignores the reality of
the situation for both U.S. and H–2A
workers’’ in that many farmworkers,
particularly H–2A workers, do not have
the resources to conduct a long-distance
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housing search, such as access to the
Internet, knowledge of the area, and
language difficulties. Several found it
unreasonable to expect that a worker
will travel from another country, or
even across the State, for employment
and be able to quickly find a motel or
landlord that will accept vouchers for a
short-term stay.
The comments received from SWAs
on the housing voucher option were
generally opposed to the proposal and
also reflected a misunderstanding of the
Department’s proposal. One SWA cited
concerns that a voucher would
eliminate established standards that
ensure safety and healthful conditions
of housing. Another SWA argued that
‘‘[t]he use of vouchers and the failure to
cover the full cost of housing reflects an
unrealistic understanding of the housing
market for seasonal workers.’’ Another
SWA suggested that it would be
impossible for the Governor to
determine whether there was
inadequate housing available in the area
since the SWAs would not be the
recipient of the labor condition
applications, and therefore, would not
know the number of workers in need of
housing.
Some commenters criticized the
Department’s proposal on the grounds
that many basic questions about how
the voucher would function were not
adequately addressed in the NPRM,
including the lack of: A mechanism for
determining the amount or value of the
voucher; a definition of ‘‘reasonable
commuting distance;’’ criteria to be used
in determining whether the employer
made a good faith effort to assist the
worker in identifying, locating and
securing housing in the area of intended
employment; and standards to be used
in the Governor’s certification of
insufficient housing for migrant workers
and H–2A workers in the area of
intended employment. Other
commenters took issue with the
Department’s proposal to allow workers
to ‘‘pool’’ the vouchers, claiming that
such pooling would result in workers
overpaying for overcrowded and/or
substandard housing. Several
commenters questioned the Department
on the rationale for not allowing the
voucher to be redeemed for cash by the
employee to a third party.
The requirement that employers
furnish housing that meets applicable
safety and health standards is a
statutory requirement in the INA. The
Department does not have authority to
waive this statutory requirement, nor
did the Department intend to do so in
proposing a voucher option. In
proposing a voucher option, the
Department sought comment on how
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best to provide much needed flexibility
to employers in fulfilling their
obligation to furnish housing while
ensuring that workers are not housed in
substandard conditions. After reviewing
the comments received on this proposal,
the Department is persuaded that it
should drop the proposal at this time
because it would be extremely difficult
to implement. The extent to which the
Department’s proposal was
misunderstood by commenters on all
sides also caused the Department
concern that, if implemented, the
proposal would result in numerous
program violations and become a
substantial enforcement problem. If, in
the future, the Department is able to
design an effective, enforceable and
viable alternative, it will develop a
proposal and request public comment.
We are sympathetic to the concerns of
many growers and employer
associations who supported the
proposal and noted that the cost of
providing housing is a major deterrent
for many to participate in the H–2A
program and that in many parts of the
country, restrictive building and zoning
codes can prevent growers from
building housing to accommodate
workers. The Department notes that
many of these problems can be
overcome by employers under the
statute and the Final Rule by securing
‘‘housing which meets the local
standards for rental and/or public
accommodations or other substantially
similar class of habitation.’’ These
options do not require employers to
build and furnish their own housing. As
is noted in ETA Handbook No. 398,
there is nothing to preclude an
employer who does not actually own
housing on his/her property from
renting non-commercial housing from
other individuals or entities. If there are
areas where rental and public
accommodation options, including noncommercial housing, are not readily
available, it is difficult to imagine how
workers could have secured housing in
those areas through the use of a
voucher, such that the voucher program
would not have been viable in those
areas anyway.
Third, the Department proposed in
the NPRM to clarify and codify
additional limited flexibility under
certain circumstances to make postcertification changes to housing. The
Department’s current policy 4 allows the
employer to substitute rental or public
accommodations for certified housing in
the event that certified housing becomes
unexpectedly unavailable for reasons
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outside of the employer’s control. The
employer is required to notify the SWA
in writing of the housing change and the
qualifying reason(s) for the change, and
provide evidence that the substituted
housing meets the applicable safety and
health standards. The SWA may inspect
the substitute housing to determine
compliance with applicable safety and
health standards. The NPRM sought to
clarify and codify this policy and
included a provision for the SWA to
notify the CO of any housing changes
and the results of housing inspections
conducted on substitute housing.
Employer commenters and commenters
representing employer interests
universally favored the clarification in
the proposal:
The inclusion of language that permits
employers to use substitute housing in the
event that their approved housing becomes
unavailable for reasons beyond their control
will be beneficial for the obvious reason that
in the rare circumstances where this occurs,
an employer has a housing option without
being in violation.
Commenters on behalf of employees
questioned the Department’s authority
to propose such a change and thought
the proposed change would result in
workers being housed in substandard
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[T]his change is not permitted by the
statute [INA 218(c)(4)] and would encourage
potentially fraudulent ‘‘bait and switch’’
tactics perpetrated by H–2A employers with
respect to employer-provided housing.
Commenters also questioned which
standards are the applicable standards
to the substitute housing.
The Department maintains that this
additional limited flexibility with
respect to substitute housing is the best
approach in those rare circumstances
where the certified housing becomes
unavailable for reasons beyond the
employer’s control. The Department
believes that the requirements that the
substitute housing be rental or other
public accommodations and that the
employer provide evidence that the new
housing meets the applicable safety and
health standards offer workers the
necessary protections. Indeed, the
proposal in no way lessens the
applicable housing standards, as
substitute housing must meet the
standards that typically apply to H–2A
housing of the same type. Failure to
create a substitute housing provision
could leave H–2A employers in the
untenable position of having workers
arrive at the worksite and having no
permissible place to house them.
Therefore, the Department has included
this provision in the Final Rule. This
Final Rule specifically references the
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applicable standards to which rental or
public accommodation housing,
including substitute housing, is subject.
The Department has made several
modifications to this provision in the
Final Rule for purposes of clarity and to
conform the standard to the structure of
the rest of the Final Rule. First, the
proposal states that the unavailability
provision would apply in ‘‘situations in
which housing certified by the SWA
later becomes unavailable.’’ To ensure
that the full range of applicable
situations is covered, the Final Rule
provides that the unavailability
provision applies where housing
becomes unavailable ‘‘after a request to
certify housing (but before certification),
or after certification of housing.’’ There
is no reason to exclude housing that has
not yet been inspected from the scope
of the provision, since the initially
designated housing has become
unavailable anyway. Second, the phrase
‘‘applicable housing standards’’ has
been replaced in the Final Rule with
‘‘the local, State, or Federal housing
standards applicable under paragraph
(d)(1)(ii) of this section,’’ which is more
specific. Third, the phrase ‘‘in
accordance with the requirements of
paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section’’ has
been added to the end of the second
sentence of the provision, and the
phrase ‘‘from the appropriate local or
State agency responsible for
determining compliance’’ has
accordingly been deleted as
unnecessary; as noted in the discussion
of paragraph (d)(1)(ii), that paragraph
has been separately modified to reflect
the evidentiary standard that is
currently in place in ETA Handbook No.
398. For the same reason, the proposal’s
admonition that SWAs ‘‘should make
every effort to inspect the
accommodations prior to occupation,
but may also conduct inspections
during occupation, to ensure that they
meet applicable housing standards’’ has
been removed in the Final Rule. As
current ETA Handbook No. 398 explains
at page II–15, ‘‘[i]f DOL standards are
not applicable, no pre-occupancy
inspections need be conducted, and the
employer need only document to the
RA’s satisfaction that the housing
complies with the local or State
standards which apply to the situation.’’
To the extent that some SWAs may
typically inspect rental or public
accommodation housing despite the fact
that they are not required by these rules
to do so, they should make every effort
to inspect substitute housing prior to
occupation.
The Department received comments
on other housing-related issues for
which no changes were proposed. A
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number of commenters noted that the
text of proposed § 655.104(d)(1)(i)
referred to employer-owned housing,
whereas the current regulation at
§ 655.102(b)(1)(i) and the preamble to
the proposed rule referenced employerprovided housing. The Department did
not intend to change the current
requirements for employer-provided
housing and has corrected this
inadvertent reference to ‘‘employerowned’’ housing in the regulatory text.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations commented that, in its
view, all rental and/or public
accommodations should be required by
the Department, at a minimum, to meet
the Federal standards for temporary
labor camps. The commenter asserted
that State and local standards for rental
and/or public accommodation housing
may in many instances be grossly
inadequate, and that the application of
Federal minimum standards is therefore
essential. The Department does not
believe, however, that it has the
authority under the INA to impose such
a minimum requirement. Section
218(c)(4) of the INA expressly provides
that to satisfy their housing obligation
employers may, at their option, either
‘‘provide housing meeting applicable
Federal standards for temporary labor
camps’’ or ‘‘secure housing which meets
the local standards for rental and/or
public accommodations or other
substantially similar class of
habitation.’’ An employer that secures
rental and/or public accommodations
that meet all of the applicable local
standards has satisfied its housing
obligation under the statute. The statute
provides that rental and/or public
accommodation housing does not need
to meet Federal temporary labor camp
standards unless there are no
‘‘applicable local or State standards.’’
The Department is not at liberty to issue
regulations that are inconsistent with
the structure of employer housing
obligations under the INA.
A few commenters urged the
Department to relieve employers in
certain border communities (e.g., Yuma,
AZ) of the requirement to provide
housing to H–2A workers from Mexico
who are able to commute back to their
homes across the border on a daily
basis. According to one association
commenter, Yuma, Arizona employers
have traditionally attracted tens of
thousands of seasonal workers daily,
approximately half of whom reside in
the U.S. while the other half choose to
maintain their residences in Mexico.
This association believes that requiring
employers in such instances to provide
housing and transportation not only
hinders participation but ignores reality.
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The INA at sec. 218(c)(4) requires
employers to provide housing to all H–
2A workers. The Department does not
believe it has a legal basis upon which
to permit employers to employ H–2A
workers without providing those
workers with housing. Of course, there
is no statutory requirement that workers
actually reside in the employerprovided housing. So, an H–2A worker
who resides within commuting distance
of a home across the border could
presumably return home each night if
the worker wanted to, provided the
employer didn’t require its workers to
reside in specific housing as a condition
of the work agreement. Nevertheless, the
employer would be required by statute
to make appropriate housing available
to the worker.
Some commenters suggested that U.S.
Department of Agriculture sec. 514
Farm Labor Housing Loans should be
made available for the construction of
housing used for H–2A workers. The
Department has no authority to allocate
Farm Labor Housing Loans, but has
passed along the comment to the USDA.
Several commenters raised specific
concerns about the attestation process as
related to housing for agricultural
workers. These commenters believe that
the attestation process will lead to
abuses in housing because there is no
process in place for establishing
compliance with the housing inspection
request. Pursuant to the Final Rule,
housing inspections are still required to
be completed by SWAs. The Department
believes that the extended timeframes
for required pre-certification housing
inspections will give the housing
inspectors more time to complete
inspections and should actually lead to
more thorough inspections that in turn
will help ensure violations are
corrected.
So as not to inadvertently alter the
availability of the conditional access
provisions of § 654.403, which were
cited favorably by some commenters,
the Department has added language to
§ 655.104(d)(6)(i) clarifying that the
required attestation ‘‘may include an
attestation that the employer is
complying with the procedures set forth
in § 654.403.’’
Finally, the Department notes it has
made several non-substantive changes
to the text of § 655.104(d) to provide
clarity. For example, the NPRM noted
the obligation to provide housing to
those workers who are not reasonably
able to return to their permanent
residence ‘‘within the same day.’’ The
Department has amended this phrase to
‘‘at the end of the work day’’ to clarify
that a work day may go beyond the same
24-hour period (for example, a late shift
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may not necessarily end within the
same day but would still be considered
part of the same work day after which
an H–2A worker could not be
reasonably expected to return to the
home residence). For the same reason,
the term ‘‘without charge’’ has been
amended to read ‘‘at no cost to the
worker,’’ in order to ensure clarity and
understanding. The Department has also
included language in § 655.104(d)(1)(ii)
to clarify the kind of documentation that
employers are expected to retain if they
secure rental and/or public
accommodations for their workers to
show that the accommodations comply
with the applicable legal standards. The
language is taken directly from ETA
Handbook No. 398, which provides at
page I–26 that such documentation
‘‘may be in the form of a certificate from
the local or State Department of Health
office or a statement from the manager
or owner of the housing.’’ In addition,
non-substantive changes have been
made to comport with plain English
standards (for example, the use of active
voice, such as the change in
§ 655.104(d)(6)(iii) to read ‘‘The SWA is
required by Section 218(c)(4) of the INA
to make its determination’’). Finally, a
provision that is in the current
regulation regarding charges for public
housing, which was inadvertently
omitted from the NPRM and whose
absence was noted by several
commenters, has been restored.
(e) Section 655.104(e) Workers’
compensation
The NPRM proposed to continue the
current requirement that the job offer
must contain a statement promising that
workers’ compensation insurance will
be provided. This is a statutory
requirement. The INA at Section
218(b)(3) requires the employer to
provide the Secretary with satisfactory
assurances that ‘‘if the employment for
which certification is sought is not
covered by State workers’ compensation
law, the employer will provide, at no
cost to the worker, insurance covering
injury and disease arising out of and in
the course of the worker’s employment
which will provide benefits at least
equal to those provided under the State
workers’ compensation law for
comparable employment.’’ One
commenter noted the State of
Washington has an unusual Worker’s
Compensation statute that requires
workers to contribute 50 percent of the
premium unless the employer is selfinsured, whereas the NPRM required
the employer to provide such insurance
at no cost to the worker. The intent of
the workers’ compensation provision in
the INA is to ensure that no worker is
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left without insurance in those States
that exclude agricultural work from
coverage. In fact, Section 218(b)(3)
provides that if ‘‘employment for which
the certification is sought is not covered
by State workers’ compensation law, the
employer will provide, at no cost to the
worker, insurance covering injury and
disease arising out of and in the course
of the workers’ employment which will
provide benefits at least equal to those
provided under the State workers’
compensation law for comparable
employment’’ (emphasis added). Where
the employment in question is covered
by State workers’ compensation law, but
subject to certain rules applied by the
State, the statutory provision is
inapplicable. Therefore, the Department
has modified language in § 655.104(e) to
clarify that the employer should follow
State law, but if the State excludes the
type of employment for which the
certification is being sought, then the
employer must purchase the insurance
at no cost to the worker.
Other commenters complained that
the Department no longer requires
submission of proof of Worker’s
Compensation Insurance. These
commenters believe that employers
circumvent this requirement by having
inadequate coverage or by allowing the
coverage to lapse after receiving
certification, or by not buying it at all
because State law does not require it.
The Department is confident that the
attestation-based application system
will allow the Department to enforce
these provisions because these
attestations are made under penalty of
perjury. If it is revealed during an audit
that an employer fraudulently claimed
to have met all program requirements,
the employer would be subject to
penalties, including debarment from the
program.
Other changes made to the language
of this provision were non-substantive,
and made for purposes of clarification,
or (as in the case of the recordkeeping
language) to conform to changes made
elsewhere in the rule.
(f) Section 655.104(f) EmployerProvided Items
The NPRM proposed to continue the
current requirement that employers
provide workers with ‘‘all tools,
supplies, and equipment required’’ to
perform the duties of the job. The NPRM
allowed employers to require workers to
provide tools or equipment where the
employer can demonstrate such a
practice was ‘‘common’’ in the area of
employment.
The Department received one
comment relating to its proposal,
asserting that the Department should
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not have deleted the current language
mandating approval from the
Department if employers seek to require
employees to purchase any tools and
equipment because it is common
practice to do so. The ‘‘common
practice’’ standard is not new, but has
been carried over from the current
regulation. Whether a common practice
exists will still be a determination of
fact to be decided by the Department
and not by the employer. The only
change in this determination is that the
employer will now bear the burden of
proof in the event of an audit or
investigation to show that the practice
claimed is common. In determining
whether a practice is ‘‘common’’ in a
particular area, the Department will
apply a simple mathematical formula. If
an employer can demonstrate that 25
percent of non-H–2A workers in the
crop activity and occupation in the
particular area are required to provide
tools or equipment, the Department will
consider the practice to be ‘‘common.’’
This simple standard will be relatively
easy to administer, and will ensure that
employers have fair notice of their legal
obligations.
Clarifying language was also inserted
referencing the requirements of sec.
3(m) of the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29
U.S.C. 203(m) (FLSA), which does not
permit deductions for tools or
equipment primarily for the benefit of
the employer that reduce an employee’s
wage below the wage required under the
minimum wage, or, where applicable,
the overtime provisions of the FLSA.
(g) Section 655.104(g) Meals
Section 655.104 (g) concerns the
provision of meals to workers and the
amount employers may charge workers
for meals each day. Although the
Department proposed no changes to this
section, a few comments were received
stating that the amount allowed to be
charged/reimbursed does not reflect the
true cost of the employer’s providing or
the worker’s purchase of meals. Section
655.114 provides for annual
adjustments of the previous year’s
allowable meal charges based upon
Consumer Price Index (CPI) data. Each
year the maximum charges allowed are
adjusted from the charges allotted the
previous year by the same percentage as
the twelve-month percent change in the
CPI for all Urban Consumers for Food
(CPI–U for Food) between December of
the year just concluded and December
of the year prior to that. The Department
reminds employers of their ability to
petition for higher meal charges, a
practice that has been continued in the
Final Rule in § 655.114. The amount of
the meal charge, which in the NPRM
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was listed in § 655.104(g), has for
purposes of clarity been listed instead in
§ 655.114.
(h) Section 655.104(h) Transportation
Existing regulations at § 655.102(b)(5)
require employers to provide or pay for
workers’ daily subsistence and
transportation from the place from
which the worker has come to the place
of employment. The employer is to
advance these costs to the worker when
it is the prevailing practice of non-H–2A
employers in the occupation and area to
do so. If the employer has not advanced
transportation and subsistence costs or
otherwise provided or paid for these
costs and the worker completes 50
percent of the work contract period, the
employer is required to reimburse the
worker for these costs at that time. The
Department proposed no change to this
requirement, but sought comments and
information on the costs and benefits to
employers and workers of continuing to
require employers to pay for the
workers’ inbound and outbound (return)
subsistence and transportation costs.
The Department received several
comments on this requirement. Some
comments from employers and
employer associations advocated that
employers and employees should share
the costs of workers’ inbound
subsistence and transportation. These
commenters argued that both employees
and employers benefit from the H–2A
employment relationship and therefore
should share the costs. Others suggested
that the employees should bear the full
cost of their inbound subsistence and
transportation, arguing that the inbound
travel employment once they are in the
country. Some commenters also noted
that no other nonimmigrant workrelated program requires employers to
pay for the workers’ inbound
subsistence and transportation.
Comments from employee advocates
urged the Department to continue the
requirement that employers provide or
pay for workers inbound subsistence
and transportation costs, asserting that
inbound subsistence and transportation
costs:
[a]re necessary for many reasons—to attract
U.S. workers; to encourage employers to fully
employ the workers in whom they have
invested and to recruit only those workers
needed; * * * and, because farmworkers
wages are so low, to prevent farmworkers
from becoming even more deeply indebted
(and more exploitable) or from seeking lowcost transportation that is often unregulated
and deadly.
While there was disagreement among
commenters on the current requirement
that employers pay inbound subsistence
and transportation, there was agreement
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that employers should continue to pay
for workers’ outbound transportation.
Employer and worker advocate
commenters agreed that payment of
outbound travel is a critical means to
help ensure that workers depart the U.S.
at the end of their H–2A contract.
Many comments addressed the timing
of reimbursement to workers for
inbound subsistence and transportation
costs. Most commenters referenced the
appellate court’s decision in Arriaga v.
Florida Pacific Farms, L.L.C., 305 F.3d
1228 (11th Cir. 2002), which held that
growers violated the minimum wage
provisions of the FLSA by failing to
reimburse farmworkers during their first
workweek for travel expenses (and visa
and immigration fees) paid by the
workers employed by the growers under
the H–2A program. Under the FLSA,
pre-employment expenses incurred by
workers that are properly business
expenses of the employer and primarily
for the benefit of the employer are
considered ‘‘kick-backs’’ of wages to the
employer and are treated as deductions
from the employees’ wages during the
first workweek. 29 CFR 531.35. Such
deductions must be reimbursed by the
employer during the first workweek to
the extent that they effectively result in
workers’ weekly wages being below the
minimum wage. 29 CFR 531.36.
Although the employer in the Arriaga
case did not itself make direct
deductions from the workers’ wages, the
Court held that the costs incurred by the
workers amounted to ‘‘de facto
deductions’’ that the workers absorbed,
thereby driving the workers’ wages
below the statutory minimum. The
Eleventh Circuit reasoned that the
transportation and visa costs incurred
by the workers were primarily for the
benefit of the employer and necessary
and incidental to the employment of the
workers and stated that
‘‘[t]ransportation charges are an
inevitable and inescapable consequence
of having H–2A foreign workers
employed in the United States; these are
costs which arise out of the employment
of H–2A workers.’’ Finally, the court
held that the growers’ practices violated
the FLSA minimum wage provisions,
even though the H–2A regulations
provide that the transportation costs
need not be repaid until the workers
complete 50 percent of the contract
work period. The Eleventh Circuit noted
that the H–2A regulations require
employers to comply with applicable
federal laws, and in accepting the
contract orders in this case, the ETA
Regional Administrator informed the
growers in writing that their obligation
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to pay the full FLSA minimum wage is
not overridden by the H–2A regulations.
Comments from employers
recommended continuing the
Department’s requirement that workers
be reimbursed at the 50 percent point of
the work contract, stating that the
current policy appropriately balances
the interests of employers and
employees by creating an incentive for
employees to complete at least half of
the contract. Many employers urged the
Department not to require immediate
reimbursement to workers and that the
Department:
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should explicitly state that an employer of
H–2A workers does not have an obligation
under the INA, the Fair Labor Standards Act
(‘‘FLSA’’), or DOL regulations to reimburse a
worker’s in-bound transportation expense
until the 50 percent point of the work
contract and that if a worker’s payment of
inbound transportation and subsistence costs
reduces his/her first week’s wage below the
minimum wage, such reduction does not
result in a violation of the FLSA.
Employee advocates, on the other
hand, pressed the Department to require
employers to comply with the FLSA
which, they state, requires the
reimbursement of costs at the beginning
of employment when those costs are for
the benefit of the employer and
effectively reduce the workers’ weekly
income below the minimum wage.
Another employee advocate suggested
that the Department consider requiring
H–2A employers to advance to workers
inbound costs and to pay referral fees to
domestic labor contractors to encourage
the movement of low-wage U.S. workers
to labor shortage areas.
After due consideration of the
comments, the Department has
determined to continue the current
policy of requiring employers to provide
or pay for workers’ inbound and
outbound subsistence and
transportation and the corresponding
requirement for reimbursement of such
inbound costs upon the worker’s
completion of 50 percent of the work
contract period. Thus, reimbursement at
the 50 percent point is all that the Final
Rule requires pursuant to the
Department’s rulemaking authority
under the INA. Moreover, the
Department believes that the better
reading of the FLSA and the
Department’s own regulations is that
relocation costs under the H–2A
program are not primarily for the benefit
of the employer, that relocation costs
paid for by H–2A workers do not
constitute kickbacks within the meaning
of 29 CFR 531.35, and that
reimbursement of workers for such costs
in the first paycheck is not required by
the FLSA.
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The FLSA requires employers to pay
their employees set minimum hourly
wages. 29 U.S.C. 206(a). The FLSA
allows employers to count as wages
(and thus count toward the satisfaction
of the minimum wage obligation) the
reasonable cost of ‘‘furnishing [an]
employee with board, lodging, or other
facilities, if such board, lodging, or other
facilities are customarily furnished by
such employer to his employees.’’ 29
U.S.C. 203(m). The FLSA regulations
provide that ‘‘[t]he cost of furnishing
‘facilities’ found by the Administrator to
be primarily for the benefit or
convenience of the employer will not be
recognized as reasonable [costs within
the meaning of the statute] and may not
therefore be included in computing
wages.’’ 29 CFR 531.3(d)(1). The FLSA
regulations further provide examples of
various items that the Department has
deemed generally to be qualifying
facilities within the meaning of 29
U.S.C. 203(m), see 29 CFR 531.32(a), as
well as examples of various items that
the Department has deemed generally
not to be qualifying facilities, see 29
CFR 531.3(d)(2), 29 CFR 531.32(c).
Separate from the question whether
items or expenses furnished or paid for
by the employer can be counted as
wages paid to the employee, the FLSA
regulations contain provisions
governing the treatment under the FLSA
of costs and expenses incurred by
employees. The regulations specify that
wages, whether paid in cash or in
facilities, cannot be considered to have
been paid by the employer and received
by the employee unless they are paid
finally and unconditionally, or ‘‘free
and clear.’’ 29 CFR 531.35. Thus, ‘‘[t]he
wage requirements of the Act will not be
met where the employee ‘kicks-back’
directly or indirectly to the employer or
to another person for the employer’s
benefit the whole or part of the wage
delivered to the employee. This is true
whether the ‘kick-back’ is made in cash
or in other than cash. For example, if
the employer requires that the employee
must provide tools of the trade that will
be used in or are specifically required
for the performance of the employer’s
particular work, there would be a
violation of the Act in any workweek
when the cost of such tools purchased
by the employee cuts into the minimum
or overtime wages required to be paid
him under the Act.’’ Id. The regulations
treat employer deductions from an
employee’s wages for costs incurred by
the employer as though the deductions
were a payment from the employee to
the employer for the items furnished or
services rendered by the employer, and
applies the standards set forth in the
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77149
‘‘kick-back’’ provisions at 29 CFR 531.35
to those payments. Thus, ‘‘[d]eductions
for articles such as tools, miners’ lamps,
dynamite caps, and other items which
do not constitute ‘board, lodging, or
other facilities’ ’’ are illegal ‘‘to the
extent that they reduce the wages of the
employee in any such workweek below
the minimum required by the Act.’’ 29
CFR 531.36(b).
In sum, where an employer has paid
for a particular item or service, under
certain circumstances it may pursuant
to 29 U.S.C. 203(m) count that payment
as wages paid to the employee. On the
other hand, when an employee has paid
for such an item or service, an analysis
under 29 CFR 531.35 is required to
determine whether the payment
constitutes a ‘‘kick-back’’ of wages to the
employer that should be treated as a
deduction from the employee’s wages.
The Arriaga court seems to have
assumed that all expenses necessarily
fall into one of these two categories—
that either they qualify as wages under
29 U.S.C. 203(m) or they constitute a
‘‘kick-back’’ under 29 CFR 531.35. See
Arriaga, 305 F.3d at 1241–42 (stating
that if a payment ‘‘may not be counted
as wages’’ under 29 U.S.C. 203(m), then
‘‘the employer therefore would be
required to reimburse the expense up to
the point the FLSA minimum wage
provisions have been met’’ under 29
CFR 531.35 and 29 CFR 531.36). That is
incorrect. For example, if an employer
were to give an employee a valuable
item that was not ‘‘customarily
furnished’’ to his or her employees, the
employer would not be able to count the
value of that item as wages under 29
U.S.C. 203(m) unless the employer
‘‘customarily furnished’’ the item to his
or her employees. Nevertheless, since
the employee paid nothing for that item,
it clearly would not constitute a ‘‘kickback’’ of wages to the employer that
would have to be deducted from the
employee’s wages for purposes of
determining whether the employer met
its minimum wage obligations under 29
U.S.C. 206(a). Similarly, if a grocery
employee bought a loaf of bread off the
shelf at the grocery store where he or
she worked as part of an arms-length
commercial transaction, the payment
made by the employee to the employer
would not constitute a ‘‘kick-back’’ of
wages to the employer, nor would the
loaf of bread sold by the employer to the
employee be able to be counted toward
the employee’s wages under 29 U.S.C.
203(m). Both parties would presumably
benefit equally from such a
transaction—it would neither be
primarily for the benefit of the
employer, nor would it be primarily for
the benefit of the employee.
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Expenses paid by an employer that
are primarily for the employer’s benefit
cannot be counted toward wages under
29 U.S.C. 203(m). See 29 CFR 531.3(d).
Similarly, expenses paid by an
employee cannot constitute a ‘‘kickback’’ unless they are for the employer’s
benefit. See 29 CFR 531.35. An analysis
conducted under 29 U.S.C. 203(m)
determining that a particular kind of
expense is primarily for the benefit of
the employer will thus generally carry
through to establish that the same kind
of expense is primarily for the benefit of
the employer under 29 CFR 531.35.
Each expense, however, must be
analyzed separately in its proper
context.
The question at issue here is whether
payments made by H–2A employees for
the cost of relocating to the United
States, whether paid to a third party
transportation provider or paid directly
to the employer, constitutes a ‘‘kickback’’ of wages within the meaning of
29 CFR 531.35. If the payment does
constitute a ‘‘kick-back,’’ then the
payment must, as the Arriaga court
decided, be counted as a deduction from
the employee’s first week of wages
under the FLSA for purposes of
determining whether the employer’s
minimum wage obligations have been
met.
The Department does not believe that
an H–2A worker’s payment of his or her
own relocation expenses constitutes a
‘‘kick-back’’ to the H–2A employer
within the meaning of 29 CFR 531.35.
It is a necessary condition to be
considered a ‘‘kick-back’’ that an
employee-paid expense be primarily for
the benefit of the employer. The
Department need not decide for present
purposes whether an employee-paid
expense’s status as primarily for the
benefit of the employer is a sufficient
condition for it to qualify as a ‘‘kickback,’’ because the Department does not
consider an H–2A employee’s payment
of his or her own relocation expenses to
be primarily for the benefit of the H–2A
employer.
Both as a general matter and in the
specific context of guest worker
programs, employee relocation costs are
not typically considered to be
‘‘primarily for the benefit’’ of the
employer. Rather, in the Department’s
view, an H–2A worker’s inbound
transportation costs either primarily
benefit the employee, or equally benefit
the employee and the employer. In
either case, the FLSA and its
implementing regulations do not require
H–2A employers to pay the relocation
costs of H–2A employees. Arriaga
misconstrued the Department’s
regulations and is wrongly decided.
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As an initial matter, any weighing of
the relative balance of benefits derived
by H–2A employers and employees
from inbound transportation costs must
take into account the fact that H–2A
workers derive very substantial benefits
from their relocation. Foreign workers
seeking employment under the H–2A
nonimmigrant visa program often travel
great distances, far from family, friends,
and home, to accept the offer of
employment. Their travel not only
allows them to earn money—typically
far more money than they could have in
their home country over a similar period
of time—but also allows them to live
and engage in non-work activities in the
U.S. These twin benefits are so valuable
to foreign workers that these workers
have proven willing in many instances
to pay recruiters thousands of dollars (a
practice that the Department is now
taking measures to curtail) just to gain
access to the job opportunities, at times
going to great lengths to raise the
necessary funds. The fact that H–2A
farmworkers travel such great distances
and make such substantial sacrifices to
obtain work in the United States
indicates that the travel greatly benefits
those employees. Many of the comments
received by the Department support this
conclusion.
Most significantly, however, the
Department’s regulations explicitly state
that ‘‘transportation furnished
employees between their homes and
work where the travel time does not
constitute hours worked compensable
under the Act and the transportation is
not an incident of and necessary to the
employment’’ are qualifying ‘‘facilities’’
under 29 U.S.C. 203(m). 29 CFR
531.32(a). As qualifying facilities, such
expenses cannot by definition be
primarily for the benefit of the
employer. 29 CFR 531.32(c). The
wording of the regulation does not
distinguish between commuting and
relocation costs, and in the context of
the H–2A program, inbound relocation
costs fit well within the definition as
they are between the employee’s home
country and the place of work.
The Arriaga court ruled that H–2A
relocation expenses are primarily for the
benefit of the employer in part because
it believed that under 29 CFR 531.32, ‘‘a
consistent line’’ is drawn ‘‘between
those costs arising from the employment
itself and those that would arise in the
ordinary course of life.’’ 305 F.3d at
1242. The court held that relocation
costs do not arise in the ordinary course
of life, but rather arise from
employment. Id. Commuting costs and
relocation costs cannot be distinguished
on those grounds, however. Both kinds
of expenses are incurred by employees
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for the purpose of getting to a work site
to work. Moreover, an employee would
not rationally incur either kind of
expense but for the existence of the job.
Both the employer and the employee
derive benefits from the employment
relationship, and, absent unusual
circumstances, an employee’s relocation
costs to start a new job cannot be said
to be primarily for the benefit of the
employer.
That is not to say that travel and
relocation costs are never properly
considered to be primarily for the
benefit of an employer. The regulations
state that travel costs will be considered
to be primarily for the benefit of the
employer when they are ‘‘an incident of
and necessary to the employment.’’ 29
CFR 531.32(c). This might include, for
example, a business trip, or an
employer-imposed requirement that an
employee relocate in order to retain his
or her job. Relocation costs to start a
new job will rarely satisfy this test,
however.
In a literal sense it may be necessary
to travel to a new job opportunity in
order to perform the work, but that fact,
without more, does not render the travel
an ‘‘incident’’ of the employment.
Inbound relocation costs are not, absent
unusual circumstances, any more an
‘‘incident of * * * employment’’ than is
commuting to a job each day. Indeed,
inbound relocation costs are quite
similar to commuting costs in many
respects, which generally are not
considered compensable. Cf. DOL
Opinion Letter WH–538 (August 5,
1994) (stating that travel time from
home to work is ‘‘ordinary home-towork travel and is not compensable’’
under the FLSA); Vega ex rel. Trevino
v. Gasper, 36 F.3d 417 (5th Cir. 1994)
(finding travel to and from work and
home not compensable activity under
Portal-to-Portal Act). In fact, there is no
reason to believe that the drafters of 29
U.S.C. 203(m) and 206(a) ever intended
for those provisions to indirectly require
employers to pay for their employees’
relocation and commuting expenses. To
qualify as an ‘‘incident of * * *
employment’’ under the Department’s
regulations, transportation costs must
have a more direct and palpable
connection to the job in question than
merely serving to bring the employee to
the work site.
Taking the Arriaga court’s logic to its
ultimate conclusion would potentially
subject employers across the U.S. to a
requirement to pay relocation expenses
for all newly hired employees—or at
least to pay relocation expenses for all
newly hired foreign employees, since
international relocation is perhaps less
‘‘ordinary’’ than intranational
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relocation. That simply cannot be
correct. The language of 29 U.S.C.
203(m) and 206(a) and their
implementing regulations provide a
very thin reed on which to hang such
a seismic shift in hiring practices,
particularly so many years after those
provisions have gone into effect. Nor
does the fact that H–2A workers are
temporary guest workers change the
equation. Even assuming that H–2A
workers derive somewhat less benefit
from their jobs because they are only
temporary, that fact alone would not
render the worker’s relocation expenses
an ‘‘incident’’ of the temporary job. If it
did, ski resorts, camp grounds, shore
businesses, and hotels would all be
legally required to pay relocation costs
for their employees at the beginning of
each season—again, a result that is very
difficult to square with the language and
purpose of 29 U.S.C. 203(m) and 29 CFR
531.35.
A stronger argument could be made,
perhaps, that employers derive a
greater-than-usual benefit from
relocation costs when they hire foreign
guest workers such as H–2A workers,
because employers generally are not
allowed to hire guest workers unless
they have first attempted but failed to
recruit U.S. workers. Thus, such
employers have specifically stated a
need to hire non-local workers. Given
the substantially greater benefit that
foreign guest workers generally derive
from work opportunities in the United
States than they do from employment
opportunities in their home countries,
however, the Department believes that
this at most brings the balance of
benefits between the employer and the
worker into equipoise. Moreover, the
employer’s need for non-local workers
does nothing to transform the relocation
costs into an ‘‘incident’’ of the job
opportunity in a way that would render
the employee’s payment of the
relocation expenses a ‘‘kick-back’’ to the
employer. If it did, courts would soon
be called upon every time an employer
hired an out-of-state worker to assess
just how great the employer’s need for
the out-of-state employee was in light of
local labor market conditions.
Conversely, the courts would also have
to inquire into the employee’s
circumstances, and whether the
employee had reasonably comparable
job prospects in the area from which the
employee relocated. Again, the
Department does not believe such a
result is consistent with the text or the
intent of the FLSA or the Department’s
implementing regulations.
It is true, of course, that H–2A
employers derive some benefit from an
H–2A worker’s inbound travel. To be
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compensable under the FLSA, however,
the question is not whether an employer
receives some benefit from an item or
paid-for cost, but rather whether they
receive the primary benefit.
Significantly, despite the fact that
employers nearly always derive some
benefit from the hiring of state-side
workers as well, such workers’
relocation costs generally have not been
considered to be ‘‘primarily for the
benefit of the employer.’’ That is so
because the worker benefits from the
travel either more than or just as much
as the employer.
The Department obligated H–2A
employers to pay H–2A workers’
transportation costs not because it
believed that the workers were entitled
to such payments under the FLSA, but
rather in the discharge of its
responsibilities under the INA to insure
the integrity of the H–2A program. The
Department carefully crafted its
regulation to give H–2A workers a
strong incentive to complete at least 50
percent of their work contract. The
practical effect of the Arriaga decision,
however, is to require H–2A employers
to pay for H–2A workers’ inbound
transportation costs without any
reciprocal guarantee that the workers
will continue to work for the employer
after the first workweek. The
Department believes that the payment of
such transportation costs unattached to
a reciprocal guarantee that the needed
work will ultimately be performed
substantially diminishes the benefit of
the travel to the employer, and certainly
would not allow the travel to be
considered primarily for the employer’s
benefit.
In sum, the Department believes that
the costs of relocation to the site of the
job opportunity generally is not an
‘‘incident’’ of an H–2A worker’s
employment within the meaning of 29
CFR 531.32, and is not primarily for the
benefit of the H–2A employer. The
Department has publicly stated that ‘‘in
enforcing the FLSA for H–2A workers,
the Department’s general policy is to
ensure that workers receive
transportation reimbursement by the
time they complete 50 percent of their
work contract period (or shortly
thereafter) rather than insisting upon
reimbursement at the first pay period.’’
The Department continues to believe
that this is the appropriate
interpretation of the interplay between
the H–2A program regulations and the
FLSA in regards to transportation
reimbursement. The Department states
this as a definitive interpretation of its
own regulations and expects that courts
will defer to that interpretation.
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The current regulation uses the phrase
‘‘place from which the worker has
departed’’ to describe the beginning
point from which employers are
required to provide or pay for inbound
transportation and subsistence, and, if
the worker completes the work contract
period, the ending point to which
employers are required to provide or
pay for outbound transportation and
subsistence. This phrase has at times
been interpreted by the Department to
mean the worker’s ‘‘home,’’ or the place
from which the worker was recruited.
Most recently, the phrase was addressed
in ETA Training and Employment
Guidance Letter No. 23–01, Change 1
(August 2, 2002): ‘‘ ‘Home’ is where the
worker was originally recruited.’’ While
the Department proposed no changes to
this regulatory language or
interpretation, comments were received
on this point. One agricultural
association suggested that the
Department clarify that transportation
from and back to the place from which
the worker came to work should be
considered to require transportation
from or to the site of the U.S. Consulate
that issued the visa. This commenter
stated:
For the past 20 years the phrase ‘‘from the
place from which the worker has come to
work for the employer to the place of
employment,’’ has meant payment of
transportation from the location of the U.S.
Consulate which issued the H–2A visa to the
place of employment of the petitioning
employer. Although the Department in its
memoranda refers to ‘‘place of recruitment’’
its examples of how this rule works speaks
only of transportation from and back to the
worker’s home country. There is no mention
of the worker’s village. This interpretation is
in line with the INA and DHS regulations
which do not allow a worker to enter the U.S.
until that foreign worker has an H–2A visa.
Thus, the worker cannot ‘‘come to work for
the employer’’ until he or she has an H–2A
visa. It is at the point that the worker has the
H–2A visa that he or she is eligible to go to
work for the employer.
The Department finds this to be a
compelling argument. It is the
Department’s program experience that
workers, particularly H–2A workers,
gather in groups for processing and
transfer to the U.S. The logical gathering
point for these workers is at the U.S.
Consulate location where the workers
receive their visa. In most countries that
send H–2A workers to the U.S., such
processing is usually centrally located
(in Monterrey, Mexico, for example,
rather than in Mexico City or another
Consulate location). Designating the
Consulate location where the visa is
issued provides the Department with an
administratively consistent place from
which to calculate charges and
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obligations. We have therefore made
corresponding changes in the regulatory
text to clarify that the ‘‘place from
which the worker has departed’’ for
foreign workers outside of the U.S. is
the appropriate U.S. Consulate or port of
entry.
Finally, the Department sought to
clarify that minimum safety standards
required for employer provided
transportation between the worker’s
living quarters (provided or secured by
the employer pursuant to INA sec.
218(c)(4)) and the worksite are the
standards contained in MSPA (29 U.S.C.
1841). The Department does not seek to
apply MSPA to H–2A workers and has
no authority to do so. This clarification
is intended to remove any ambiguity
concerning the appropriate minimum
vehicle safety standards for H–2A
employers and should simplify
compliance for those H–2A employers
that also employ MSPA workers.
Other changes to the language of the
proposed provision—most significantly,
the notation that an employer’s return
transportation obligation under
§ 655.104(h)(2) applies where ‘‘the
worker has no immediately subsequent
H–2A employment’’—are nonsubstantive and have been made for
purposes of clarification.
(i) Section 655.104(i) Three-Fourths
Guarantee
The Department chose, in the NPRM,
to continue the so-called ‘‘three-fourths
guarantee,’’ by which it ensures that H–
2A workers are offered a certain
guaranteed number of hours of work
during the specified period of the
contract, and that if they are not offered
enough hours of work, that they are paid
as though they had completed the
specified minimum number of work
hours. In doing so, the Department
suggested some minor changes to make
the guarantee easier to apply in practice.
One grower association objected to
the continuation of the three-fourths
guarantee. They stated that it needs to
be eliminated because it is arcane, is
seldom understood by the growers, and
complicates the system by creating more
‘‘red tape’’ for the growers. Other
commenters supported the rule, but
commented on the nuances of the
changes made to the rule under the
NPRM. A few commenters expressed
the view that the guarantee deters
employers from over-recruiting, which
may create an oversupply of workers
and drive wages down, and also assures
long-distance migrants that attractive
job opportunities exist. However, some
commenters also believe that the
guarantee requirement results in
employer abuses, such as employers
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misrepresenting the length of the
season. They suggested the Department
add language to allow workers to collect
the three-fourths guarantee ‘‘based on
the average number of hours worked in
a particular crop region and upon a
showing of having worked through the
last week in which the employer offered
work to a full complement of his
workforce.’’
The Department believes the rule
provides essential protection for both
U.S. and H–2A workers, in that it
ensures their commitment to a
particular employer will result in real
jobs that meet their reasonable
expectations. The Department also
believes the rule is not easy to abuse or
circumvent, as it is based on a simple
mathematical calculation. For those
employers that might try to evade their
responsibilities, the Department has
enforcement measures and penalties to
act as a deterrent.
Changing the three-fourths guarantee
to be based on a per-crop harvest
calculation using an average of hours
worked rather than a contract period
would make it nearly impossible to
track and enforce the guarantee. To
require employers to keep track of
workers on a per-crop basis and allow
the workers to collect money based on
the three-fourths guarantee when the
U.S. workers transition from one
employer to another during the peak
harvesting times appears patently unfair
and the Department is not willing to
create such an option.
Two commenters also suggested that
the Department take out the reference to
‘‘work hours’’ and return the term
‘‘workday’’ because the commenters
believed that the employer might
otherwise submit job orders based on a
‘‘bogus’’ hourly work day or work week.
The Department believes that this
concern is misplaced. The new
terminology proposed by the
Department is no more susceptible to
abuse than the old terminology is; under
either phrasing, employer fraud requires
submitting false calculations of work.
The Department purposely added the
sentence with ‘‘work hours’’ and kept
the old references to ‘‘workday’’ in the
NPRM to make the formula for
calculation of the total amount
guaranteed easier to understand and
calculate. The end result is the same
under either phrasing, however.
A farm bureau requested that we
insert language at the end of
§ 655.104(i)(1) to protect employers
from the costs resulting from U.S.
workers who voluntarily abandon
employment in the middle of the
contract period and then return at the
end of the contract period or from those
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U.S. workers who show up in the
middle of the contract period. This
commenter does not believe that an
employer should have any liability
under the three-fourths guarantee rule
for such unreliable employees. The
guarantee has never applied to workers
who voluntarily abandon employment
or who never show up for the work,
provided notice of such abandonment or
no-show is provided to DOL within the
time frames for reporting an
abandonment that are set forth in
§ 655.104(n). The Department has
further clarified that provision in the
Final Rule by defining abandonment of
the job as the worker failing to report for
work for 5 consecutive days.
Farmworker advocates expressed
concern that the Department would not
enforce this provision. The Department
appreciates the concerns raised and
assures the public it intends to enforce
this provision fully, as it intends to
implement the entire rule.
Another commenter requested
clarification on what hours an employer
may count toward the three-fourths
guarantee when an employee
voluntarily works more than the
contract requires. The commenter asked
for language to be inserted into
§ 655.104(i)(3) stating that all hours of
work actually performed including
voluntary work over and above the
contract requirement can be counted by
the employer. The Department believes
that this principle was already made
clear by § 655.104(i)(1), but it has added
the requested language for purposes of
clarification.
In proposed § 655.104(i)(4) the
Department sought to reiterate the
employer’s obligation to provide
housing and meals to workers during
the entire contract period,
notwithstanding the three-fourths
guarantee. The proposed paragraph,
while properly entitled ‘‘Obligation to
provide housing and meals,’’
inadvertently discussed an obligation to
provide meals and transportation. Two
comments were received on this
paragraph. One employer association
suggested that the text of the paragraph
be revised to reflect that employers are
not obligated to provide housing to
workers who quit or are terminated for
cause. One employee advocacy
organization commented that the
clarification that the employer is not
allowed to shut down the labor camp or
the camp kitchen during the contract
period is a positive change. The
Department has modified the paragraph
to clarify that it is the employer’s
obligation to provide housing and meals
during the contract period that is not
affected by the three-fourths guarantee,
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and to clarify that employers are not
obligated to provide housing to workers
who voluntarily abandon employment
or are terminated for cause.
Finally, in the NPRM the Department
inadvertently deleted some qualifying
phrases from this provision that are
contained in the current regulation, and
has accordingly in the Final Rule
reverted to the language of the current
regulation. Section 655.104(i)(3)
discusses an employee’s failure to work
in the context of calculating whether the
period of guaranteed employment has
been met. The Final Rule reinserts the
phrase currently in the regulations at
§ 655.102(b)(6)(iii) permitting an
employer to count ‘‘all hours of work
actually performed (including voluntary
work over 8 hours in a workday or the
worker’s Sabbath or Federal Holidays).’’
The Final Rule also reinserts as
§ 655.104(i)(4) the statement found in
the current regulation at
§ 655.102(b)(6)(iv) that an employer is
not liable for payment of the threequarters guarantee to an H–2A worker
whom the CO certifies has been
displaced because of the employer’s
compliance with its obligation under
these rules, where applicable, to accept
referrals of U.S. workers after its date of
need.
(j) Section 655.104(j) Records
The NPRM proposed continuing the
‘‘keeping of adequate and accurate
records’’ with respect to the payment of
workers, making only minor
modifications to the current regulation.
The Department received several
comments specific to the provisions of
this section.
A commenter requested that the
Department eliminate the requirement
for employers to provide information to
the worker through the worker’s
representative upon reasonable notice.
The Department does not believe this
requirement should be eliminated
because it is the Department’s goal to
encourage the availability of
information to workers. Another
commenter suggested refinements to the
provision, including suggesting that a
‘‘worker’s representative’’ be defined
and documented in some manner so as
to prevent the theft of information under
the guise of disclosure to worker’s
representatives, and also to require
disclosure of records within five days
instead of upon ‘‘reasonable’’ notice.
The Department agrees that it did not
clarify in sufficient detail how a
designated worker’s representative
should be identified so as to prevent
unauthorized disclosure of records, and
it accordingly has added language to the
Final Rule stating that appropriate
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documentation of a designation of
representative status must be provided
to the employer.
Instead of changing the term
‘‘reasonable’’ notice in the Final Rule to
refer to a specific number of days,
however, the Department has instead
decided to adopt in § 655.104(j)(2) of the
Final Rule the standard for production
of records that is currently found at 29
CFR 516.7 and that the WHD uses under
the FLSA. The Secretary can already
request most H–2A records kept
pursuant to this rule under the FLSA,
and having one standard will help to
avoid confusion in the regulated
community.
(k) Section 655.104(k) Hours and
Earnings Statements
The Department did not receive any
comments on this section. However, the
Department made non-substantive
punctuation changes to the provision in
the Final Rule to reflect plain language
standards.
(l) Section 655.104(l) Rates of Pay
In the NPRM, the Department
proposed to require employers to pay
the highest of the adverse effect wage
rate, the prevailing wage rate, or the
Federal, State, or local minimum wage.
The Final Rule retains this requirement,
with some minor non-substantive
clarifications to the text of the
provision; comments specific to the
issue of actual rates that will be required
and the timing of their application are
dealt with in the discussion of
§ 655.108.
Because this provision discusses the
use of piece rates, several commenters
took the opportunity to suggest changes
to how piece rates are treated within the
H–2A program. Worker advocates
argued for reinstitution of the pre-1986
rules regarding piece rate adjustments.
Some employers argued that the
Department should not attempt to
regulate piece rates at all. As the NPRM
did not propose changes to the now
long-standing procedures for the
regulation of piece rates, the Department
did not adopt any of these suggested
changes in the Final Rule.
The NPRM proposed a modest change
to the regulation governing productivity
standards. Under existing regulations,
an employer who pays on a piece rate
basis and utilizes a productivity
standard as a condition of job retention
must utilize the productivity standard
in place in 1977 or the first year the
employer entered the H–2A system with
certain exceptions and qualifications.
The NPRM proposed to simplify this
provision by requiring that any
productivity standard be no more than
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that normally required by other
employers in the area.
No commenter explicitly opposed the
change in the methodology by which
acceptable productivity standards are
determined, but several employers
asked for additional flexibility to be
allowed to use a productivity standard
even if the majority of employers in the
area do not utilize one. We believe the
‘‘normal’’ standard, which the
Department will retain in the Final
Rule, will provide adequate flexibility
for employers while ensuring that the
wages and working conditions of U.S.
workers are not adversely affected by
the use of productivity rates not normal
in the area of intended employment.
Clarifying language has been added to
the provision supplying the
Department’s interpretation of the term
‘‘normal’’ to mean ‘‘not unusual.’’ The
Department has long applied this
meaning of the term ‘‘normal’’ In the H–
2A context. See, e.g., ETA Handbook
No. 398 at II–7 (‘‘The terms ‘normal’ and
‘common’, although difficult to
quantify, for H–2A certification
purposes mean situations which may be
less than prevailing, but which clearly
are not unusual or rare.’’); id. at I–40
(noting that the Department will
carefully examine job qualifications,
which are required by statute to be
‘‘normal’’ and ‘‘accepted,’’ if the
qualifications are ‘‘unusual’’). It is also
within the range of generally accepted
meanings of the term. See, e.g., Black’s
Law Dictionary 1086 (8th ed. 2004)
(‘‘The term describes not just forces that
are constantly and habitually operating
but also forces that operate periodically
or with some degree of frequency. In
this sense, its common antonyms are
unusual and extraordinary.’’); Webster’s
Unabridged Dictionary 1321 (2d ed.
2001) (supplying ‘‘not abnormal’’ as one
of several definitions). Thus, ‘‘normal’’
does not require that a majority of
employers in the area use the same
productivity standard. If there are no
other workers in the area of intended
employment that are performing the
same work activity, the Department will
look to workers outside the area of
intended employment to assess the
normality of an employer’s proposed
productivity standard.
With respect to other provisions in
the NPRM, some commenters argued
that the Department is required by
statute to use a ‘‘prevailing’’ standard
with respect to all practices permitted
by the regulations. These commenters
argued that the use of anything less than
a ‘‘prevailing practice’’ standard
necessarily adversely affects U.S.
workers. The Department disagrees. The
Department notes that with respect to
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many types of practices, it may not even
be possible to determine what the
‘‘prevailing’’ practice is. For example,
there may be a wide range of
productivity standards used by
employers in a given area, none of
which is used by 50 percent of
employers or with respect to 50 percent
of workers. Furthermore, many practices
are not readily susceptible to averaging:
For example, with respect to practices
regarding the frequency with which
workers are paid, some employers may
pay workers at the end of each week,
others at the end of every two weeks,
and others twice a month. If one third
of employers used each method, which
practice would be ‘‘prevailing’’?
The Department has examined each
type of employment practice and each
type of working condition that is
addressed by this rule to determine
what parameters or limits are necessary
to ensure that U.S. workers will not be
adversely affected. With respect to
productivity standards, the Department
has determined that a range of practices
are acceptable, and that it is unlikely
that U.S. workers will be adversely
affected if H–2A employers use a
productivity standard that is not
unusual for non-H–2A employers to
apply to their U.S. workers. The
Department will not, however, certify
applications containing unusual
productivity standards that are clearly
prejudicial to U.S. workers.
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(m) Section 655.104(m)
Pay
Frequency of
The Department proposed in the
NPRM to continue the requirement of
the current regulation that the employer
must state in the job offer the rate of
frequency that the worker is to be paid,
based upon prevailing practice in the
area but in no event less frequently than
twice a month. The Department
received one comment on this provision
noting that weekly or daily earnings are
‘‘always’’ the prevailing practice in
agriculture, never bi-weekly, and that
the Department should accordingly
require weekly payment. After
considering this comment, the
Department has determined that it
would be difficult, and not at all costeffective, to use surveys to determine
the frequency with which employers in
a given area typically pay their
employees. The Department has
therefore decided to retain the
minimum requirement that employees
must be paid at least twice monthly, but
has dropped the reference to the use of
prevailing practices. The Department
notes that this modest change affects
only the frequency with which workers
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are paid, and not the amount to which
they are entitled.
(n) Section 655.104(n)
of Employment
Abandonment
The NPRM included a provision
stating that the employer is not required
to pay the transportation and
subsistence expenses of employees who
abandon employment, provided the
employer notifies the Department or
DHS within 2 workdays of
abandonment. One association of farm
employers argued that this requirement
was unreasonable in that the typical
practice is termination 3 days beyond
the abandonment or ‘‘no show’’ of the
worker. An employer opined that this
requirement should create an obligation
on the part of the Department to help
employers locate and pursue remedies
against employees who voluntarily
abandon employment without returning
to their home country.
The Department acknowledges the
need for clarification in the provision to
ensure that the requirement begins to
run only when the abandonment or
abscondment is discovered. The
Department has therefore added
language to the provision clarifying that
the employer must notify DOL and DHS
no later than 2 workdays ‘‘after such
abandonment or abscondment occurs.’’
The Department has added further
clarification to ensure that employers
must meet the identical standards for
notification to DOL as to DHS, so that
a worker is deemed to have absconded
when the worker has not reported for
work for a period of 5 consecutive work
days without the agreement of the
employer. The Department has extended
this standard to a worker’s failure to
report at the beginning of a work
contract. This is intended to clarify for
the employer that the same standard of
reporting applies for both agencies. The
Department declines to include
provisions prescribing new employer
remedies against workers who abandon
the job, but notes that abandonment of
a job may result in a worker being
ineligible to return to the H–2A
program.
(o) Section 655.104(o)
Impossibility
Contract
The current and proposed regulations
contain a provision that allows an
employer to ask permission from the
Department to terminate an H–2A
contract if there is an extraordinary,
unforeseen, catastrophic event or ‘‘Act
of God’’ such as a flood or hurricane (or
other severe weather event) that makes
it impossible for the business to
continue.
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One commenter noted that the
proposed regulation eliminates a current
requirement that ‘‘the employer will
make efforts to transfer the worker to
other comparable employment
acceptable to the worker,’’ and stated
that U.S. workers, in particular, would
benefit from such an effort. The
Department declines to adopt this
suggestion, as it believes the workers
themselves will be in a better position
to find alternative job opportunities
than an employer whose business
enterprise has been substantially
impacted by an Act of God. In response
to this comment, the Department has,
however, added language to the Final
Rule specifying that the H–2A worker
may choose whether the employer
terminating the H–2A contract should
pay to transport them ‘‘to the place from
which the worker (disregarding
intervening employment) came to work
for the employer, or transport the
worker to the worker’s next certified H–
2A employer (but only if the worker can
provide documentation supporting such
employment).’’ The limitation providing
that a worker who requests
transportation to the next employer
must provide documentation of that
employment will help to ensure that H–
2A workers who do not have subsequent
employment inside the United States
return to the country from which they
came to the United States rather than
remaining in the United States illegally.
To conform to similar changes made
elsewhere in the rule, the Final Rule
clarifies that ‘‘for an H–2A worker
coming from outside of the U.S., the
place from which the worker
(disregarding intervening employment)
came to work for the employer is the
appropriate U.S. consulate or port of
entry.’’
Other changes to the language of the
proposed rule are non-substantive and
have been made for purposes of
clarifying the provision or to conform to
changes made elsewhere in the Final
Rule.
(p) Section 655.104(p) Deductions
The Department, in the NPRM,
proposed requiring employers to make
assurances in their application that they
will make all deductions from the
workers’ paychecks that are required by
law. A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations asserted that the
Department was skirting its
responsibility under Arriaga by
allowing ‘‘reasonable’’ deductions to be
taken from a worker’s paycheck without
any mention of the FLSA. This
commenter believes that the Department
inappropriately removed clarifying
language in the current regulation that
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‘‘an employer subject to the Fair Labor
Standards Act (FLSA) may not make
deductions which will result in
payments to workers of less than the
federal minimum wage permitted by the
FLSA.’’ This commenter opined that
workers under the H–2A program are
entitled to full coverage under the
FLSA, and that the Department should
not make regulatory changes which
suggest otherwise. By eliminating this
language from the rule, this commenter
believes the Department would
effectively undermine the rights of farm
workers to be paid the minimum wage
free and clear of costs imposed on them
for inbound transportation and visa
costs, as established by case law.
The Department does not agree with
this commenter’s characterization of the
applicability of the FLSA to H–2A
workers, including regarding inbound
transportation. Nevertheless, we have
returned the deleted language to the
Final Rule to clarify that employers
must of course comply with all statutory
requirements applicable to them.
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(q) Section 655.104(q) Copy of Work
Contract
The NPRM contained the provision
found in the current regulation
specifying that a copy of the work
contract must be provided to the worker
no later than the date the work
commences. One group of farmworker
advocacy organizations pointed out that
this proposed regulation does not
require that the work contract be given
to the employee in the employee’s
native language and believed that these
regulations as proposed are contrary to
the requirements in MSPA for domestic
workers. The Department has decided to
make no substantive changes to this
provision. Employers seeking to hire H–
2A workers, as with all employers
seeking to recruit agricultural workers
under the Wagner/Peyser system, must
file a Form ETA 790 with the SWA. This
Form provides the necessary disclosures
for MSPA purposes. The form itself is
bilingual. In addition, section 10(a) of
the Form specifically requires that the
summary of the material job
specifications be completed by the
employer in both English and Spanish.
The changes made to the language of the
provision in the Final Rule are nonsubstantive and were made to provide
better clarity.
Section 655.105 Assurances and
Obligations of H–2A Employers
The Department proposed instituting
an application requiring employers to
attest to their adherence to the
obligations of the H–2A program. The
Department received many comments
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expressing approval of the new
attestation-based process, and others
opposed to such a change. Still other
commenters expressed general approval
of the new attestation-based approach
but suggested changes to the attestations
and the process of submitting such
attestations.
The Department received two
comments regarding the substantive
obligations imposed on employers
through the attestations. One
commenter requested that the
Department add another attestation that
employers will not confiscate workers’
passports. Another commenter
requested that the Department impose
substantial penalties on employers who
lure H–2A workers away from contract
jobs before the termination of their
contracts. This commenter believes that
such a practice victimizes both the
employer, who loses laborers, and the
employee, who loses status under U.S.
law when they prematurely terminate a
contract.
The Department is not aware that the
confiscation of passports is a
widespread practice among agricultural
employers hiring H–2A workers.
However, where evidence of such
practice is found, it would likely
indicate the presence of other practices
prohibited by the H–2A regulations,
such as the withholding of pay and
other program entitlements. In such
situations, the Department possesses
mechanisms under this Final Rule to
investigate and take appropriate action
against such unscrupulous employers,
both through program actions including
revocation and debarment and through
direct enforcement with civil fines and
debarment.
On the subject of changes of
employment, the proposed companion
regulation to the Department’s NPRM,
issued by USCIS at 73 FR 8230, Feb. 13,
2008, underscored that H–2A workers
are free to move between H–2A certified
jobs, and proposed to provide even
greater mobility toward that end. The
ability of workers to move to new H–2A
employment when the current H–2A
contract is completed is not something
the Department wishes to discourage. A
worker who abandons a job before its
conclusion must be reported to DOL and
DHS, and, depending on the reason for
the abandonment, such abandonment
may result in a violation of H–2A status
and the consequent inability to
commence employment with another
employer. Such abandonment may also
adversely affect a worker’s future
eligibility to participate in the H–2A
program.
One commenter requested that we
allow substitution of H–2A workers at
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the port of entry without having to file
a new petition. An Application for
Temporary Employment Certification is
filed without the names of the foreign
workers. Substitution of workers is
permitted by the DHS companion rule.
(a) Section 655.105(a)
The attestation obligation set forth in
§ 655.105(a) in the NPRM requires the
employer to assure the Department that
the job opportunity is open to any U.S.
worker and that the employer
conducted (or will conduct) the
required recruitment, and was still
unsuccessful in locating qualified U.S.
applicants in sufficient numbers to fill
its need. This assurance was criticized
by a farm bureau because it believes that
it is impossible for employers to state
they ‘‘will conduct’’ recruitment as
required in the regulations and at the
same time attest that they were
unsuccessful in finding any U.S.
workers. The Department has clarified
this language in the Final Rule to enable
employers to attest that the employer
‘‘has been’’ unsuccessful in locating
U.S. workers sufficient to fill the stated
need.
One group of advocacy organizations
believes the Department should retain
the language from the current
§ 655.103(c), which states: ‘‘Rejections
and terminations of U.S. workers. No
U.S. worker will be rejected for or
terminated from employment for other
than a lawful job-related reason, and
notification of all rejections or
terminations shall be made to the
SWA.’’ (Emphasis supplied.) This
commenter requests that the provision
against termination should be added to
the assurance found in the new
§ 655.105(a), specifically where it states:
‘‘Any U.S. workers who applied for the
job were rejected for only lawful, jobrelated reasons.’’
The Department declines to add
language regarding terminations at this
location in the regulations. The
provision at issue is an attestation by an
employer regarding the hiring of U.S.
workers, not their termination. The
termination of U.S. workers for
inappropriate reasons is already covered
under the regulations by the prohibition
in § 655.105(j), discussed below.
The Department added several
clarifications and conforming changes to
the text of the proposed provisions.
First, the Department added language
clarifying that the employer must attest
that it will keep the job opportunity
open to qualified U.S. workers ‘‘through
the recruitment period,’’ which is
defined at § 655.102(f)(3). Second, the
Department added language clarifying
that the employer must attest that it has
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hired and will hire all U.S. workers who
apply for the job and are not rejected for
lawful, job-related reasons. Third, and
relatedly, the Department added
language stating that an employer must
attest that ‘‘it will retain records of all
rejections as required by § 655.119.’’
Other changes to the language of the
provision were minor and nonsubstantive, and made for purposes of
providing additional clarity.
(b) Section 655.105(b)
The Department proposed in the
NPRM that employers be required to
offer terms and conditions that are
‘‘normal to workers similarly
employed’’ and ‘‘which are not less
favorable than those offered to the H–2A
workers.’’ One commenter believed that
this standard is not sufficiently
protective of the wages and working
conditions of U.S. farmworkers to meet
the statutory precondition that the
employment of foreign workers will not
adversely affect the wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers. According
to this commenter, a practice applying
to a small percentage of workers may
still be considered ‘‘normal.’’ This
commenter opined that this criterion
violates the statute, because requiring
anything less than the prevailing
practices of non-H–2A employers with
respect to job terms will necessarily
harm U.S. workers, either by putting
downward pressure on wages and
conditions and/or by facilitating job
offers that are meant to deter U.S.
workers from applying and accepting
work.
For reasons that have already been
discussed above, the Department
disagrees. Where the Department has
identified particular terms or working
conditions that have an important
impact on U.S. workers—such as wages
or the obligation to provide tools—it has
inserted provisions addressing them
directly. Not every term or condition
attaching to a job, however, threatens to
negatively impact the wages and
working conditions of U.S. workers
simply because it is not a ‘‘prevailing’’
condition. An employer may, for
example, be the only employer in the
area that grows a particular crop, or that
requires the use of a particular tool.
Such requirements generally do not
threaten to adversely affect U.S. workers
and are not improper for employers to
impose. Moreover, as noted above, it is
often very difficult, if not impossible, to
determine what the ‘‘prevailing
practice’’ is with respect to certain types
of job terms and working conditions.
Other specific provisions in the
regulations safeguard against job
qualifications, terms, and working
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conditions that are deliberately
designed by employers to discourage
U.S. workers from applying for job
openings.
Because the Department has indicated
in the Final Rule the specific standard
(i.e., ‘‘common,’’ ‘‘normal,’’
‘‘prevailing’’) that applies to each type
of covered job term and working
condition, the Department has deleted
language from the proposed rule that
might have been understood to apply a
catch-all requirement to all job terms
and working conditions that they be
‘‘normal to workers similarly employed
in the area of intended employment.’’
Retaining this language would have
resulted, in some instances, in
application of different standards to the
same job requirements, potentially
creating substantial confusion. The
deleted language might also have been
misconstrued as applying to job terms
and working conditions that are not
elsewhere addressed in the Final Rule.
The Department never intended for the
deleted language to apply to such
peripheral job requirements; those job
terms and working conditions that the
Department considers to be central to
H–2A work and to preventing an
adverse effect on U.S. workers—such as
wages, housing, transportation, tools,
and productivity requirements—have
each been specifically addressed
elsewhere in the Final Rule. The Final
Rule retains the requirement that
employers must offer job terms and
working conditions that ‘‘are not less
than the minimum terms and conditions
required by this subpart.’’ This language
ensures that employers must attest to
their adherence to the standard
specified in the Final Rule for each
covered job term and working
condition.
(c) Section 655.105(c)
The Department proposed in the
NPRM to continue to require that the
employer submitting an application
attest that the job opportunity being
offered to H–2A workers is not vacant
because the former occupants are on
strike or locked out in the course of a
labor dispute involving a work
stoppage. The language of the proposed
provision has been modified in the
Final Rule by reverting to the language
in the current regulation at § 655.103(a),
which provides that the employer must
assure the Department that ‘‘[t]he
specific job opportunity for which the
employer is requesting H–2A
certification is not vacant because the
former occupant is on strike or being
locked out in the course of a labor
dispute.’’ The Department is reverting to
the current regulatory language to
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clarify that the Department will evaluate
whether job opportunities are vacant
because of a strike, lockout, or work
stoppage on an individual case-by-case
basis. As the Department’s current ETA
Handbook No. 398 explains at page II–
23, the Department must ensure that
‘‘the specific positions vacant because of
the dispute will not be included in any
otherwise positive H–2A certification
determination or redetermination.’’
The purpose of the strike/lock-out
provision is to ensure that striking U.S.
workers are not replaced with
temporary foreign workers, thereby
adversely affecting such workers.
However, if an agricultural employer
needs twenty workers, and only ten of
the positions are vacant because
workers are on strike, the employer
should not be prohibited from hiring H–
2A workers to fill the ten job openings
that are not strike-related. Hiring foreign
workers to fill positions of U.S. workers
that are on strike is likely to adversely
affect the U.S. workers, but hiring H–2A
workers to fill positions that are not
vacant because of a strike would not.
The language of this provision in the
Final Rule is also more consistent with
the Department’s statutory authority to
withhold a labor certification where
granting the certification would
adversely affect the wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers.
Comments regarding the NPRM’s
labor dispute provisions, which overlap
with the contents of § 655.109(b)(4)(i) of
the NPRM, are addressed in the
discussion of that section below.
(d) Section 655.105(d)
The NPRM included a provision that
required the employer to attest it would
continue to cooperate with the SWA by
accepting referrals of all eligible and
qualified U.S. workers who apply (or on
whose behalf an application is made) for
the job opportunity until the date the H–
2A workers departed or three days prior
to the date of need, whichever was later.
The language of the provision in the
Final Rule has been modified to render
it consistent with § 655.102(f)(3), which
specifies that employers must continue
to accept referrals until the ‘‘end of the
recruitment period’’ as defined in that
provision.
The only comment that the
Department received on this section is
discussed in greater detail under the
Department’s discussion of the 50
percent rule in § 655.102(b), above.
(e) Section 655.105(e)
No comments were received on
§ 655.105(e)(1) regarding the attestation
promising to comply with all labor laws.
Comments received on § 655.105(e)(2)
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pertaining to the housing attestation are
addressed in the discussion of
§§ 655.102(e) and 655.104(d). Comments
received on § 655.105(e)(3) pertaining to
the workers’ compensation attestation
are addressed in the discussion of
§ 655.104(e). Finally, comments
received with respect to § 655.105(e)(4)
about the transportation attestation are
addressed in the discussion of
§ 655.104(h) and the comments received
in connection with § 655.105(e)(4)
regarding worker protections are
addressed in the discussion of the
section on revocation at § 655.117.
Several minor non-substantive
modifications have been made to the
text of the provision for purposes of
clarity and to conform to changes made
elsewhere in the Rule.
(f) Section 655.105(f)
Several comments were received on
§ 655.105(f), which as published in the
NPRM required employers to notify the
Department and DHS within 48 hours if
an H–2A worker leaves the employer’s
employ prior to the end date stipulated
on the labor certification. The
commenters thought that 48 hours was
not enough time to accomplish this
especially in light of DHS’ requirement
that proof of notification be kept for up
to one year. The commenters thought it
was unfair to require the employer to
comply with this requirement and incur
the added expense of sending the notice
by certified mail. One commenter went
on to say that such notice is not needed
in all cases. The commenter cited the
example of an employee transferring to
another employer with approval to do
so by the Department and DHS and asks
why the employer should still be
required to provide notification in such
cases. According to this commenter,
notification should only be required if
the H–2A worker absconds from the
work site.
The notification is necessary in all
circumstances because the early
separation of a worker impacts not only
the rights and responsibilities of the
employer and worker but also
implicates DOL’s and DHS’s
enforcement responsibilities. For
instance, an employer would no longer
be responsible for providing or paying
for the subsequent transportation and
subsistence expenses or the ‘‘threefourths guarantee’’ for a worker who has
separated prior to the end date
stipulated on the labor certification,
either through voluntary abandonment
or termination for cause. There is no
requirement that the notification be
made by certified mail, however. A file
copy of a letter sent by regular U.S.
mail, with notation of the posting date,
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will suffice. In addition, the Department
revised the notification requirement in
the Final Rule to reflect that a report
must be made no later than 2 workdays
after the employee absconds, which,
consistent with DHS, has been defined
as 5 consecutive days of not reporting
for work. The text of this provision has
been modified accordingly.
The Department also received
comments on this section relating to
notification when H–2A workers leave
their home country for the first place of
intended employment. The Department
believes those comments pertain to
requirements in the DHS NPRM
published February 13, 2008 rather than
the Department’s NPRM of the same
date.
(g) Section 655.105(g) Offered Wage
Assurances
Comments received pertaining to the
offered wage are addressed in the
response to comments on § 655.108. The
Department added language to the text
of this provision in the Final Rule to
clarify that, as a matter of enforcement
policy, the adverse effect wage rates that
are in effect at the time that recruitment
is initiated will remain valid for the
entire period of the associated work
contract. This enforcement policy will
honor the settled expectations of
workers and employers regarding their
respective earnings and costs under an
H–2A work contract and will avoid
surprises that might give rise to
disputes. It will also be an easy rule for
the Department to administer,
particularly when calculating payments
due under the three-quarters guarantee.
Because H–2A contracts never last more
than a year, locking in wage rates for the
duration of a contract in this manner
will not significantly prejudice workers
or employers in the event that wage
rates happen to rise or fall during the
middle of a work contract.
(h) Section 655.105(h) Wages Not
Based on Commission
Comments pertaining to the offered
wage are addressed in the response to
comments on § 655.108.
(i) Section 655.105(i)
The NPRM contained an assurance
requiring the employer to attest that it
was offering a full-time temporary
position whose qualifications are
consistent with the ‘‘normal and
accepted qualifications required by nonH–2A employers in the same or
comparable occupations or crops.’’ This
was a continuation of current
obligations.
The Department received several
comments relevant to this provision.
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One commenter opined that the
Department should scrutinize employer
applications that offer U.S. workers a
30-hour work week arguing that such a
requirement is not normal and is meant
to dissuade U.S. workers from applying
when in reality H–2A workers would
work 50–60 hours a week. The
commenter argues, under the new rule,
it will become impossible for the
Department to deny an application
because the standard for what is
‘‘normal’’ is so lax.
The word ‘‘normal’’ in § 655.105(i)
does not refer to the requirement that
the jobs be full-time, but rather to the
qualifications provision in that section.
Thirty hours a week is the minimum to
be considered full-time employment in
the H–2A program and the Department
has, as a clarification, provided that
definition of full-time in this section in
the Final Rule. Moreover, other
provisions in these regulations (see, e.g.,
§§ 655.103, 655.105(b)) prohibit giving
H–2A workers more favorable job terms
than were advertised to U.S. workers,
which include the number of hours of
employment.
Another commenter noted that
requirements that the job duties be
normal to the occupation and not
include a combination of duties not
normal to the occupation has led to
frequent disputes, particularly in
specialty areas of agriculture. This
commenter noted that there is a
distinction between restrictive
requirements that are clearly contrived
for the purpose of disqualifying
domestic workers and those directly
designed to producing specialized
products, utilizing unusual production
techniques or otherwise seeking to
distinguish their products in the
marketplace.
The Department agrees that the INA
was not meant to require employers to
adhere to timeworn formulas for
production in the H–2A or any other
employment-based category, and that
job duties for which there is a legitimate
business reason are permissible. The
requirement that job qualifications be
‘‘normal’’ and ‘‘accepted,’’ however, is
statutory and cannot be altered. Section
218(c)(3)(A) of the INA requires the
Department, when determining whether
an employer’s asserted job qualifications
are appropriate, to apply ‘‘the normal
and accepted qualifications required by
non-H–2A employers in the same or
comparable occupations and crops.’’ For
the reasons provided in the discussion
of § 655.104(b) of the Final Rule above,
the Department has deleted the phrase
‘‘in that they shall not require a
combination of duties not normal to the
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occupation’’ from the NPRM to conform
to the language of the statute.
In the Final Rule, the language of this
provision has been modified in one
additional respect to conform to the
language of § 655.104(b). The provision
now states that job qualifications must
not ‘‘substantially deviate from the
normal and accepted qualifications
required by employers that do not use
H–2A workers in the same or
comparable occupations or crops.’’
(j) Section 655.105(j) Layoffs
The Department in its NPRM added a
new provision prohibiting employers
from hiring H–2A workers if they laid
off workers within a stated time frame,
unless such laid-off workers were
offered and rejected the H–2A positions.
Two commenters saw the new provision
on layoffs as unnecessary and
unworkable. One commenter saw this as
contrary to the section on unforeseeable
events and also illogical because many
employers request a contract period of
ten months. This would mean that
employers would be unable to lay off
workers at the end of one season,
because the new season begins within
60 days and the proposed 75-day
requirement will not have lapsed.
Another commenter suggested a change
to the language in this section to include
a caveat that such layoffs shall be
permitted where the employer also
attests that it will offer or has offered the
opportunity to the laid-off U.S.
worker(s) beginning on the date of need,
and said U.S. worker(s) either refused
the job opportunity or were rejected for
the job opportunity for lawful, jobrelated reasons.
The Department agrees, in general,
with the changes proposed by the
commenters. We have accordingly
modified the language of the provision
in the Final Rule to limit the effect of
the provision to 60 days on either side
of an employer’s date of need. This
modification is also consistent with the
revised timetables for recruitment in the
Final Rule. This 120-day protective
period will provide U.S. workers
important protections during the period
of time that H–2A workers are being
recruited and through the beginning of
the work season, which is the period of
time that U.S. workers are most
vulnerable to layoffs related to the
hiring of H–2A workers, while avoiding
most of the problems cited by the
commenters. We also agree that a laid
off worker must be qualified for the
opportunity and that U.S. workers may
only be rejected for lawful, job-related
reasons, a limitation that preserves an
employer’s right to reject those workers
it knows to be unreliable.
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(k) Sections 655.105(k) and (l)
Retaliation and Discharge
One commenter reasoned that the
Department has weakened its own
enforcement ability by eliminating the
word ‘‘discharge’’ from the list of
prohibited retaliatory acts against a
worker who files a complaint or testifies
against the employer, consults with an
attorney, or asserts any rights on behalf
of himself/herself or other workers.
The Department believes it has, in
fact, strengthened its enforcement
ability by addressing discharge
separately in § 655.105(l). By making
this a separate assurance, the employer
acknowledges even more obviously the
prohibition against discharge as
retaliation.
One group of farmworker advocacy
organizations commented that the
NPRM’s proposed language requiring
employers to attest that they will not
discharge any person ‘‘for the sole
reason’’ that they engaged in protected
activity under § 655.105(k) would
substantially weaken the anti-retaliation
language in the current regulations. The
Department agrees with this commenter
that a ‘‘sole reason’’ standard would
impose an inappropriately high burden
on retaliation claimants. A retaliation
claimant should only be required to
prove that protected activity was a
contributing factor to the discharge.
Thus, the Department has modified the
language of § 655.105(l) to require
employers to attest that they will not
discharge any person ‘‘because of’’
protected activity under § 655.105(k).
Section 655.104(k)(4) provides that an
employer may not retaliate against an
employee who has consulted with an
employee of a legal assistance program.
This provision does not, however,
provide employees license to aid or abet
trespassing on an employer’s property,
including by persons offering advocacy
or legal assistance. No matter how
laudable the intent of those offering
advocacy or legal services, an employee
does not have the legal right to grant
others access to the private property of
an employer without the employer’s
permission. A farm owner is entitled to
discipline employees who actively aid
and abet those who engage in illegal
activity such as trespassing. Absent any
evidence of a workers’ actively aiding or
abetting such activity, however, an
employer’s adverse action against an
employee in response to that employee
meeting with a representative of an
advocacy or legal services organization,
particularly on the worker’s own time
and not on the employer’s property,
would be viewed as retaliation.
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Several minor non-substantive
modifications were made to the text of
the provision for purposes of clarity and
style.
(l) Section 655.105(m) Timeliness of
Fee Payment
The Department received one
comment on this section and has
addressed it in the comments on
§ 655.118 on debarment, below.
(m) Section 655.105(n) Notification of
Departure Requirements
The Department did not receive any
comments on this provision. For
purposes of simplicity, and to avoid any
potential conflict with DHS’s
regulations, the phrase ‘‘another
employer and that employer has already
filed and received a certified
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification and has filed that
certification in support of a petition to
employ that worker with DHS’’ has been
deleted from the Final Rule and
replaced with the terms ‘‘another
subsequent employer.’’ This change is
non-substantive; subsequent employers
still cannot legally employ H–2A
workers without an approved labor
certification.
(n) Section 655.105(o) and New Section
655.105(p) Prohibition on CostShifting
The Department included in the
NPRM a provision prohibiting
employers from shifting costs for
activities related to obtaining labor
certification to the worker and further
requiring the employer to contractually
forbid its agents from accepting money
from the H–2A worker for hiring him or
her. The Department received several
comments in relation to this provision.
A State Workforce Agency expressed
concern that this prohibition will create
another disincentive for U.S. employers
to use the program because it gives the
impression that workers will be able to
request reimbursement from the
employer for any monies paid to a
recruiter. The Department notes in
response that the H–2A rule does not
require the employer to reimburse the
H–2A worker for any recruitmentrelated fees he or she may pay. Rather,
with an exception discussed below, the
rule requires the employer to
contractually forbid any foreign
recruiters it hires from charging the H–
2A worker any fees in order to be hired
or considered for employment. This
may mean that employers are required
to pay foreign recruiters more than they
do today for the services that they
render, but the Department considers
this a necessary step toward preventing
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the exploitation of foreign workers, with
its concomitant adverse effect on U.S.
workers.
One group of farmworker advocacy
organizations believes this rule does not
go far enough to protect workers from
exploitation by recruiters. The
commenter specifically suggested that
DOL should require employers to attest
that they are ‘‘directly paying the entire
recruiting/processing fee charged to any
foreign labor contractor whom they
engage to perform international
recruitment of H–2A workers.’’
Employers are permitted to pay fees to
recruiters for their recruiting services,
and indeed the Department expects that
they will have to do so, as it is unlikely
that recruiters will work for free. The
Department sees little value, however,
in an over-complicated and overprescriptive rule allowing foreign
recruiters to charge H–2A workers
recruiting fees, but then requiring the
employer to pay the fee directly.
Moreover, this rule represents the
Department’s first effort to regulate in
this area under the H–2A program and
we decline to go further, at this time.
We will consider further actions if
experience dictates that they are
necessary, if specific actions are
identified that would be effective, and if
those actions are within the
Department’s enforcement authority,
taking into account limits on the
Department’s territorial jurisdiction.
Several farmers commented that they
need agents to find H–2A workers
because they are unable to travel to
different countries to find employees,
interview them, and help them process
all the necessary paperwork to obtain
their visas. Employer commenters
believe that an H–2A worker receives a
substantial benefit from the job,
including more money than he or she is
able to earn in his or her home country.
Therefore, workers should also bear
some of the financial responsibility for
the opportunity in the form of paying
for the services that enable that worker
to find his or her way through the
bureaucratic maze both in the worker’s
country and the U.S. Consulate.
According to these commenters, many
of these workers would never be able to
apply for H–2A visas without help
because they do not have passports from
their own countries and they may not
have the required computer and internet
access for applying to the U.S.
Consulate for the visa.
While the Department does not
disagree that this provision will result
in an additional expense for employers,
the Department is adamant that
recruitment of the foreign worker is an
expense to be borne by the employer
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and not by the foreign worker. Examples
of exploitation of foreign workers, who
in some instances have been required to
give recruiters thousands of dollars to
secure a job, have been widely reported.
The Department is concerned that
workers who have heavily indebted
themselves to secure a place in the H–
2A program may be subject to
exploitation in ways that would
adversely affect the wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers by creating
conditions resembling those akin to
indentured servitude, driving down
wages and working conditions for all
workers, foreign and domestic. We
believe that requiring employers to
incur the costs of recruitment is
reasonable, even when taking place in a
foreign country. Employers may easily
band together for purposes of
recruitment to defray costs. To ensure
that employers do not attempt to use
surrogates to attempt to extract
recruitment fees from H–2A workers,
the Final Rule has been modified to
specify that employers must attest that
they and their ‘‘agents’’ have not sought
or received payment of any kind for any
activity related to obtaining labor
certification, including payment of the
employer’s attorneys’ fees, application
fees, or recruitment costs.
The Department notes, however, that
it is only prohibiting employers and
their recruiter agents from shifting to
workers the cost of recruiting for open
job opportunities. This rule does not
prevent a person or entity (which could
be a ‘‘facilitator’’ under the DHS Final
Rule) from charging workers reasonable
fees for rendering assistance in applying
for or securing services related to
passports, visas, or transportation, so
long as such fees are not made a
condition of access to the job
opportunity by the recruiter, employer,
or facilitator. The Department will,
however, monitor such activities to the
extent possible to ensure that any such
charges are not ‘‘de facto’’ recruitment
fees charged for access to the H–2A
program. In addition, government
processing fees and document
preparation fees related to securing a
passport and visa to prepare for travel
to the United States are the
responsibility of the worker and the
employer is not required to pay those
fees. We note that the DHS Final H–2A
Rule also precludes the approval of an
H–2A petition, and provides for
possible revocation of an already
approved H–2A petition, if the
employer knows or has reason to know
that the worker has paid, or has agreed
to pay fees to a recruiter or facilitator as
a condition of gaining access to the H–
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2A program. Many employer advocates
noted that there is no definition of
‘‘recruiter’’ and it is unclear whether
‘‘facilitators’’ who help the H–2A
workers apply for visas are included in
this prohibition. This is a concern to
employers because DHS, in its
companion H–2A proposed regulation,
requires disclosure of payments to
‘‘facilitators,’’ whether by the alien or
the employer. The Department, on the
other hand, forbids employers and their
agents from receiving remuneration
from the H–2A worker for access to job
opportunities and further requires the
employer to contractually forbid its
agents from accepting money from the
H–2A worker for hiring him or her. To
allay any confusion, we note that our
own proposed regulation was intended
to prohibit foreign labor contractors or
recruiters, with whom an employer in
the U.S. contracts, from soliciting or
requiring payments from prospective H–
2A workers to secure job opportunities
in the U.S. The Department believes that
this is consistent with the DHS position
of disclosure, which is presumably
intended to deter such payments. The
Department has not defined ‘‘recruiter’’
as we believe this term is well
understood by the regulated
community. Many commenters believe
that the new rule prohibits the use of
foreign recruiters. It does not. It requires
employers to contractually forbid
foreign recruiters from receiving
payments directly or indirectly from the
foreign worker. Employers who would
be unable to find workers without
recruiters are not prohibited from hiring
such recruiters. When they do, they
must make it abundantly clear that the
recruiter and its agents are not to receive
remuneration from the alien recruited in
exchange for access to a job opportunity.
As noted above, reasonable payments
from workers in exchange for rendering
assistance in applying for or securing
services related to passports, visas, or
transportation is not prohibited by this
rule.
Some commenters opined that the
Department does not have the authority
to regulate cost-shifting abroad. The
Department recognizes that its power to
enforce regulations across international
borders is constrained. However, it can
and should do as much as possible in
the U.S. to protect workers from
unscrupulous recruiters. Consequently,
the Department is requiring that the
employer make, as a condition of
applying for labor certification, and
therefore, as a condition to lawful H–2A
employment within the U.S., the
commitment that the employer is
contractually forbidding any foreign
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labor contractor or recruiter whom the
employer engages in international
recruitment of H–2A workers to seek or
receive payments from prospective
employees in exchange for access to job
opportunities. As stated above, we will
examine program experience in this area
and will consider further actions as
experience dictates.
One commenter suggested that we
certify recruiting agencies to ensure
against exploitation of workers whereas
two other commenters thought we
should make employers attest that the
fee employees paid to foreign recruiters
was reasonable or did not go above a
reasonable market-based ceiling set by
the Department. The Department simply
does not have the infrastructure or
expertise to assess on a country-bycountry basis what a reasonable fee
would be. The prophylactic rule
adopted by the Department guards
against worker exploitation in a manner
that is enforceable. If a U.S. employer
cannot find foreign workers without the
help of a recruiter, then the U.S.
employer must bear the cost of such
recruitment efforts.
One commenter requested that we
provide clarification on several terms
used in this section. The first is
‘‘received payment * * * as an
incentive or inducement to file * * *.’’
The second is ‘‘* * * from the
employee or any other party, except
when work to be performed by the H–
2A worker * * * will benefit or accrue
to the person or entity making the
payment, based on that person’s or
entity’s established business
relationship with the employer.’’ For
reasons discussed below, we have
removed this language from the Final
Rule to provide greater clarity to the
provision’s effect.
Some commenters expressed concern
that the rule passed on too many costs
in recruitment to the employer. One
commenter estimated that the
recruitment cost to each employer
would be $1,000 per H–2A worker. We
believe these estimates were not
supported by data and note that
employers can collaborate with respect
to recruitment to defray costs.
A farmworker advocate argued that
new labor contractors are often
undercapitalized and can barely meet
their payroll obligations. The
commenter claimed that labor
contractors’ primary source of income is
from the foreign recruiters who give
them payments from the recruitment
fees paid by the aliens. It is precisely
this type of activity that the employer
assurances are meant to prevent, for all
of the reasons previously mentioned.
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In addition, and based upon the
comments received, the Department has
revised the provision on cost-shifting to
provide for greater clarity. As
mentioned above, the Department has
added language to the Final Rule
clarifying that the provision only
applies to payments by employees. This
rendered the language providing an
exemption for certain payments to
employers by third-parties unnecessary,
and it has accordingly been deleted to
avoid confusion. We have also
eliminated the qualifying language
stating that the provision applied to
payments made as an ‘‘incentive and
inducement to filing,’’ again for
purposes of simplification and clarity.
By simplifying the provision to prohibit
employers from seeking or receiving
payment for any activity related to the
recruitment of H–2A workers, the
Department hopes to achieve consistent
and enforceable compliance.
In the Final Rule the Department has
separated the provision on cost-shifting
into two sections, again to achieve
clarity regarding the use of foreign
contractors. The Rule’s new § 655.105(p)
now contains the language that requires
the employer to contractually forbid any
foreign labor contractor whom they
engage from seeking or receiving
payments from prospective employees
in exchange for access to job
opportunities. In this manner the
Department hopes to achieve clear and
consistent compliance with the
prohibitions contained in the Rule. To
make the provision on cost-shifting by
recruiters consistent with DHS’s Final
Rule, we have added clarifying language
stating that the prohibition does not
apply where ‘‘provided for in DHS
regulations at 8 CFR 214.2(h)(5)(xi)(A).’’
This language clarifies that the
prohibition does not apply to worker
expenses such as the cost of
transportation and passport, visa, and
inspection fees, except where such
shifting of expenses to the worker is
expressly forbidden by law.
Paragraph (p) from the NPRM has
now been redesignated as paragraph (q).
The Department did not receive any
comments specifically addressing this
provision. Several minor nonsubstantive modifications have been
made to the text of the provision for
purposes of clarity and to conform to
changes made elsewhere in the Rule.
We have deleted what was paragraph (q)
in the NPRM, an assurance on housing
vouchers, because, for the reasons given
in the discussion of § 655.104(d), we
have decided not to implement housing
vouchers.
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Section 655.106 Assurances and
Obligations of Farm Labor Contractors
(a) General Comments
As discussed earlier, the definition of
Farm Labor Contractor in the Proposed
Rule has been rewritten and is for
purposes of H–2A now an H–2A Labor
Contractor (H–2ALC). The Farm Labor
Contractor definition in the NPRM was
borrowed from MSPA and the
Department has determined that
definition causes confusion when
applied to the H–2A program. A
fundamental distinction between these
two terms is the requirement that an H–
2A Labor Contractor must employ the
workers. This distinction addresses the
concerns of commenters who
mistakenly believed that agents and
attorneys would have to register as Farm
Labor Contractors (FLC) as a
requirement of the H–2A program. In
order for a person or entity under H–2A
to meet the definition of an H–2ALC,
that person or entity would have to
employ the workers who are subject to
Section 218 of the INA.
Other commenters believed that the
definition of farm labor contractor also
includes the activities of the foreign
recruiters and obligates the employers to
take on liabilities for the acts of the
foreign recruiters because the definition
of FLC in the NPRM was taken directly
from the MSPA. The definition of an H–
2ALC is no longer taken directly from
MSPA.
While the Department cannot reach
the conduct of foreign recruiters abroad,
it can regulate the conduct of U.S.
employers participating in the foreign
labor certification process who do
business with these recruiters. The
Department cannot by regulation
impose strict liability on employers for
labor contractors’ activities abroad, but
the Department, as a condition for an
employer to obtain approval of a
temporary labor certification
application, can require the employer to
contractually forbid foreign recruiters
that an employer uses as its agent from
seeking or receiving payments from
prospective employees, as discussed in
the discussion of § 655.105(o) and (p),
addressing the prohibition on cost
shifting.
There was considerable comment
about the lack of a provision in the
NPRM addressing ‘‘override fees,’’
which is essentially the commission
paid by employers to labor contractors
for their services. One commenter
elaborated on this point by explaining
that employers in an area where labor
contractors with U.S. workers are well
established could bypass the labor
contractor by hiring H–2A workers
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directly and thus not have to pay an
override fee.
Labor contractors operate in the free
market system, both in hiring workers
and in providing contract labor services,
and do not require any special
government provisions to ensure they
are paid for the services they provide.
Whether an employer chooses to utilize
a farm labor contractor or hire workers
directly is a decision to be made by the
employer based on what best suits his
business needs. Labor contractors
typically enter into contracts with fixed
site employers in advance of the season.
The Department does not seek to
regulate private transactions between
employers and labor contractors with
regard to the appropriate price of
contract services. Employers are
required to advertise before they can
apply for H–2A workers, and both H–
2ALCs and the U.S. workers employed
by the H–2ALCs will have an
opportunity to take the advertised jobs
at the wage rates and subject to the
terms and working conditions required
by the Department. The Department is
confident that the required wage rates,
job terms, and working conditions are
sufficient to prevent any adverse effect
on U.S. workers.
One group of farmworker advocacy
organizations complained that the
Department has eliminated all
requirements that employers contact
and recruit through established FLCs
(now H–2ALCs). This commenter
believes that the elimination of this
requirement allows growers to bypass
H–2ALCs in favor of filing H–2A
applications. The Department disagrees.
As previously mentioned, employers are
required to spread information about job
opportunities in a variety of ways, and
there is nothing that would prevent an
H–2ALC from responding to such
advertisements by offering its services.
Many commenters advocated the
removal of labor contractors from the H–
2A program. The use of labor
contractors to supply workers, however,
is a reality in the agricultural industry,
and reflects the substantial need for a
flexible labor supply in a sector
characterized by many different crops
requiring different work at different
times, all of which are subject to
seasons, weather, and market
conditions. To forbid labor contractors
from utilizing the H–2A program would
only encourage them to operate outside
the system and potentially use
undocumented workers to fill their
ranks. Labor contractors desiring to hire
H–2A workers must apply for a labor
certification, recruit for U.S. workers,
and attest to the terms and conditions of
H–2A employment, just like any other
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employer desiring to hire H–2A
workers, and must also list the sites
where work will occur.
One group of farmworker advocacy
organizations commented that H–
2ALCs, under the new rule, are not
required to have a physical presence in
the U.S. This commenter points out that
even under the current system, which
does require physical locations in the
U.S., there is still room for deception by
H–2ALCs. The commenter misreads the
rule. The definition of an H–2ALC in
the Final Rule requires H–2ALCs to
meet the definition of an ‘‘employer,’’
and the definition of employer requires
a place of business in the United States.
(b) Description of H–2ALC obligations
The Department’s review of
comments regarding the obligations of
labor contractors under the proposed
rule persuaded the Department that
these obligations were poorly
understood. To provide a clearer
description of those obligations, and to
avoid confusion on the part of
employers, SWAs, workers, and worker
advocates alike, the Final Rule has
collected, consolidated, and refined the
NPRM’s description of H–2ALC prefiling recruiting obligations. The Final
Rule therefore splits proposed § 655.106
into two separate parts. Section
655.106(a) of the Final Rule
consolidates, refines, and explains H–
2ALCs’ recruitment obligations under
the H–2A program. Section 655.106(b)
of the Final Rule contains all of the
provisions proposed in the NPRM that
impose additional obligations on H–
2ALCs that do not apply to other types
of H–2A employers.
Although the language of § 655.106(a)
of the Final Rule is new, the substantive
obligations it imposes on H–2ALCs are
derived from the basic requirements that
apply to other H–2A employers under
the NPRM. The fact that H–2ALCs do
not stay at one fixed location but travel
from one worksite to another over the
course of a season, and the fact that they
frequently rely on the fixed site
employers with whom they contract to
provide housing and transportation to
their workers, makes it operationally
problematic to shoehorn H–2ALCs into
the exact same recruitment framework
that applies to fixed site employers.
New § 655.106(a) refines for H–2ALCs
the core recruitment requirements that
apply to all other H–2A employers,
including requirements that job orders
be submitted to SWAs, that referrals of
qualified U.S. workers be accepted
during the recruitment period, that
positive recruitment be conducted in
advance of H–2A workers performing
work in a given area of intended
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employment, that workers from the
previous season be contacted and
offered employment before H–2A
workers can be hired, and that housing
inspections be conducted in a timely
manner.
New § 655.106(a)(1) acknowledges
that, because of the itinerant nature of
H–2ALCs, their job orders ‘‘may contain
work locations in multiple areas of
intended employment.’’ As with other
employers with multiple work
locations, H–2ALCs may submit job
orders ‘‘to any one of the SWAs having
jurisdiction over the anticipated work
areas.’’ The SWA receiving the job order
is responsible for circulating the job
order to ‘‘all States listed in the
application as anticipated worksites, as
well as those States, if any, designated
by the Secretary as traditional or
expected labor supply States for each
area in which the employer’s work is to
be performed.’’ The provision further
clarifies how long SWAs receiving
multiple-area job orders should keep the
job orders posted, and specifies that
they ‘‘may make referrals for job
opportunities in any area of intended
employment that is still in an active
recruitment period.’’
New § 655.106(a)(2) clarifies that H–
2ALCs with multiple work locations in
multiple areas of intended employment
are required to conduct separate
positive recruitment, following all of the
normal rules specified in § 655.102(g)–
(i), but are not required to conduct
separate positive recruitment for each
work location within a single area of
intended employment. Instead, positive
recruitment within each area of
intended employment is required to
‘‘list the name and location of each
fixed-site agricultural business to which
the H–2A Labor Contractor expects to
provide H–2A workers, the expected
beginning and end dates when the H–
2A Labor Contractor will be providing
workers to each fixed site, and a
description of the crops and activities
the workers are expected to perform at
such fixed site.’’ Positive recruitment for
each area of intended employment,
including positive recruitment in any
designated labor supply states
associated with each area of intended
employment, must, in accordance with
the standard rule under these
regulations, be conducted no more than
75 and no fewer than 60 days before the
listed arrival date applicable to that area
of intended employment.
New § 655.106(a)(3) specifies that H–
2ALC recruitment, including both
positive recruitment and job orders, may
require that workers applying for jobs in
any given area of intended employment
‘‘complete the remainder of the H–
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2ALC’s itinerary.’’ H–2ALCs are by
nature itinerant, and the work that they
offer is thus itinerant as well. Workers
applying for labor contractor jobs cannot
expect to selectively choose which work
locations they are willing to work at,
unless the H–2ALC permits them to do
so. Certainly, U.S. workers applying to
work for farm labor contractors that are
not H–2ALCs have no ability to
selectively choose which portion of a
job offer they want to accept and which
they will reject.
Without this rule, H–2ALCs would at
times be placed in impossibly difficult
hiring situations. For example, an H–
2ALC might enter into contracts to serve
work locations in three different areas of
intended employment, requiring twenty
workers in each area. If the H–2ALC is
unable to recruit any U.S. workers in the
first and third areas of intended
employment, but finds ten U.S. workers
in the second area of intended
employment who are willing to
complete its itinerary, then the H–2ALC
should be allowed to hire ten H–2A
workers for the duration of its itinerary,
and ten H–2A workers for the dates of
need applicable to the first area of
intended employment (or, if these ten
H–2A workers were initially hired with
the expectation that they would
complete the itinerary, the H–2ALC
would be permitted to release them at
the time its subsequent positive
recruitment for the second area of
intended employment resulted in the
hiring of ten additional U.S. workers),
ensuring that the H–2ALC would at all
times have the twenty workers needed
to fulfill its contracts. If, however, the
ten U.S. worker applicants for jobs in
the second area of intended
employment were not willing to
complete the H–2ALC’s itinerary, and if
these regulations nevertheless required
the H–2ALC to hire those workers, the
H–2ALC would be forced to choose
between releasing ten of its H–2A
workers at the time it hired the ten U.S.
workers since only twenty workers were
needed in the second area of intended
employment. As a result, the H–2ALC
would be left with only ten workers
total to fulfill its contracts when it got
to the third area of intended
employment, or, to avoid this
consequence, would have to keep all
thirty workers on its payrolls during its
work in the second area of intended
employment, thereby incurring the
significant additional cost of paying ten
unnecessary workers. The Department
declines to force H–2ALCs to make that
unnatural choice, which would place
them at a competitive disadvantage vis`
a-vis farm labor contractors that hire all
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U.S. workers and that are thus free to
require prospective workers to complete
their remaining itinerary.
The Department considered, as an
alternative, requiring H–2ALCs to file a
separate application for work to be
performed in each separate area of
intended employment, but rejected the
idea for several reasons. First, it is far
more administratively convenient for
both the Department and the employer
if all of the employer’s seasonal work for
the year with the same initial date of
need is included in a single application.
Filing multiple applications in such a
situation is needlessly duplicative,
wasting valuable time and resources. In
theory, an H–2ALC could be conceived
of as having a separate date of need for
each new work site or for each new area
of intended employment, but the reality
of labor contract work is that the
responsibilities of workers to the labor
contractor employer, as well as their
associated job duties, continue from
work location to work location and do
not re-start with each new work site.
Second, the ‘‘single application’’
method will maximize recruitment of
U.S. workers through posted job orders,
since the SWAs for all the areas of
intended employment will refer workers
for jobs opportunities in all of the other
areas of intended employment. Third
and finally, the ‘‘single application’’
method will better manage the
expectations of incoming H–2A
workers, who will know at the outset
whether the H–2ALC expects to employ
them for the entire season, or rather
only for a more limited duration.
H–2ALCs are free to file separate
applications for separate areas of
intended employment where it makes
sense for them to do so. Indeed, they
may be required to file separate
applications where, for example, they
need extra workers with a different date
of need to report for work in areas of
intended employment that they will
reach later in the season. For purposes
of administrative convenience, however,
and to comport with the realities of the
nature of the underlying job positions,
the Department will permit single
applications to be filed by H–2ALCs
covering extended itineraries.
New § 655.106(a)(4) provides that H–
2ALCs that hire U.S. workers part-way
through the season, whether through
referrals or some other form of
recruitment, may discharge a like
number of H–2A workers and, in
accordance with § 655.104(i)(4), are
released from the three-quarters
guarantee with respect to those workers.
New § 655.106(a)(5) explains the rules
that apply to an H–2ALC’s amendment
of its application under § 655.107(d)(3).
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Because H–2ALCs are itinerant and
because the timing of agricultural work
is difficult to predict with precision, H–
2ALCs may often need to amend their
applications mid-season to include
additional work locations or additional
areas of intended employment.
Amendments will be readily permitted,
but special responsibilities attach to
such amendments for H–2ALCs. Where
an amendment adds a new area of
intended employment, or where an
amendment adds a new work site in an
already-listed area of employment and
the job duties at the new work site(s) are
substantially different from those
already listed, additional recruitment
will be required. Because amendments
of H–2ALC applications may often need
to be made at the last minute to take
into account changing weather
conditions, the required additional
recruitment may be completed on an
expedited schedule. Housing
inspections of any new housing
arrangements that have not yet been
inspected must also be secured in a
timely fashion.
H–2ALCs are encouraged to attempt
to avoid needing to make last-minute
amendments to their applications by
listing all reasonably probable work
locations in their original application
and job order. In doing so, H–2ALCs are
reminded that the ‘‘reasonably
probable’’ standard should be closely
adhered to—purely speculative
employment should not be listed on an
application. While U.S. workers benefit
from seeing in an advertisement or job
order a list of all the locations that the
H–2ALC is reasonably likely to service,
information that is intentionally
misleading detracts from the ability of
U.S workers to make intelligent
decisions about whether to apply. The
Department assumes that H–2ALCs will
be deterred from listing purely
speculative work sites on their
applications by the three-quarters
guarantee and by the requirement that
H–2ALCs secure written statements
from fixed-site employers regarding
housing and transportation if the H–
2ALC will not be providing the required
housing and transportation itself.
New § 655.106(a)(6) reiterates the
obligation of SWAs to complete
required housing inspections ‘‘no later
than 30 days prior to the
commencement of employment in each
area of intended employment in the
itinerary of an H–2ALC.’’
New § 655.106(a)(7) provides that H–
2ALCs must contact all U.S. workers
that worked for the H–2ALC during the
previous season, and must advise each
such worker ‘‘that a separate job
opportunity exists for each area of
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intended employment that is covered by
the application.’’ A worker who applies
for a job opportunity in an area of
intended employment may be required
to complete the remainder of the
itinerary.
The additional obligations that the
Department proposed in the NPRM to
impose on H–2ALC employers have
been consolidated in new § 655.106(b).
Each provision is discussed separately
below.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
(c) Proposed Sections 655.106(a) and
(b), New Sections 655.106(b)(1) and (2)
Provide MSPA Farm Labor Contractor
Certificate of Registration Number and
Identify Authorized Activities
One commenter opined that MSPA is
not explicitly included in the rule even
though it is mentioned throughout. This
commenter believes that legal services
groups that file lawsuits under these
regulations will be able to include
claims based on MSPA as well. This
commenter believes there are enough
protections in the H–2A rule without
including MSPA.
While references to certain specific
provisions of MSPA have been included
in the H–2A regulations, such language
is not intended to apply MSPA to H–2A
workers or employers. The provisions of
H–2A and MSPA operate independently
from one another and the inclusion of
terms used in MSPA does not provide
a legal basis upon which to hold H–2A
employers to MSPA standards. Nothing
in this rule expands the scope of MSPA
or increases liabilities under it.
Some clarifying, non-substantive
modifications have been made to the
language of these provisions in the Final
Rule, and a statutory citation to MSPA
has been added.
(d) Proposed Section 655.106(c), New
Section 655.106(b)(3) Disclosure of All
Locations
One agricultural employer association
asserted that it is not reasonable to
require H–2ALCs to disclose all
customers, clients, dates, and services,
and that providing evidence that the
customers and clients of H–2ALCs are
established business operations should
be sufficient because the proposed
requirement would otherwise subject
the labor contractor to disclosure of its
clientele should an FOIA request be
made, and also because a labor
contractor should not have to know all
of the locations so far in advance and
should have the flexibility to change
plans. The disclosure requirement is
contained in the current regulations and
has been for many years. The
Department requires such information
not for the purpose of forcing a labor
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contractor to disclose its clientele, but to
ensure that the labor contractor has real
employment opportunities available for
the prospective worker. A good-faith
compilation of the roster of clients and
dates of arrangements with each is
integral to ensure there is work available
requiring the use of H–2A workers. It is
also essential to ensure that recruiting is
properly performed and that U.S.
workers are given access to all job
opportunities. With respect to the
commenter’s concerns about disclosure,
if the list of clientele is properly
considered confidential business
information under FOIA, it would be
exempt from disclosure.
One commenter suggested that
wording should be added to allow labor
contractors to add or change out growers
during the season by informing the
Department. These comments have been
addressed in the discussion of
§ 655.106(a)(5), pertaining to the
amendment of H–2ALC applications,
above.
(e) Proposed Section 655.106(d), New
Section 655.106(b)(4) Surety Bonds
The Department required in its NPRM
that FLCs (now H–2ALCs) secure a
surety bond as proof of their ability to
discharge their financial obligations
under the H–2A program. We received
some comments opposing the surety
bond requirement, and others insisting
that the requirement did not go far
enough.
One commenter suggested that the
Department has no statutory authority to
require H–2ALCs to be bonded. This
commenter believes that the Department
has plenty of methods available to it to
weed out the abusive H–2ALCs and
does not need the provision for bonding.
The bonding requirement for labor
contractors, who may be transient and
undercapitalized, provides a basis to
assure compliance with an attestationbased program. The language in the INA
in Section 218(g)(2) which authorizes
the Secretary to take such action as may
be necessary to assure employer
compliance with the terms and
conditions of the Act provides the
authority for the bonding requirement.
Another commenter believes that the
surety bond required is woefully
inadequate to guarantee H–2ALC
compliance with program requirements,
and that it only applies to those cases
that come before the Administrator of
the Wage and Hour Division (herein
referred to as Administrator/WHD) and
not to civil actions filed in state or
Federal court. Another commenter
believes that all H–2A employers should
be required to post a bond.
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The Department believes that the
procurement of a surety bond will show
that an H–2ALC is serious about doing
business legitimately, and that a surety
bond gives the Department leverage over
the employer so that if the employer
fails in performing its obligations, the
bond will be available for the
government to recover unpaid wages.
The surety bond is simply a device to
ensure the Department has reasonable
assurance that the labor contractor will
adhere to its program obligations; the
labor contractor’s ability to retain its
interest in the bond depends entirely
upon its adherence to performance
obligations. The commenter is correct
that the surety bond applies only to
those cases that come before the
Administrator/WHD. We have no
authority to require it for actions beyond
the Department’s jurisdiction.
One agricultural employer association
states that the bonding requirement is
unrealistic because underwriters will
not provide the bonds to anyone but the
largest labor contractors. This in effect
will eliminate smaller labor contractors
from the program. This commenter
proposes that this requirement be
eliminated or in the alternative that the
discretion of the Administrator/WHD to
increase the bond requirements should
be limited to the use of reasonable and
objective criteria.
There is no evidence that only large
labor contractors will be able to obtain
surety bonds. The bond is a necessary
compliance mechanism to ensure
compliance with program obligations,
namely the assurance of payment of the
wages of H–2A workers covered by
Section 218 of the INA. The Department
can adjust bonds as necessary through
notice and comment rulemaking to
balance the requirement against the
financial constraints faced by smaller
employers.
(f) Proposed Section 655.106(e), New
Section 655.106(b)(5) Positive
Recruitment in Each Fixed-Site Location
of Services
In § 655.106(e) of the NPRM, the
Department proposed to impose
additional recruitment obligations on
FLCs (now H–2ALCs). One commenter,
a large agricultural employer
association, believes that the positive
recruitment requirements should be the
same as they are for non-H–2ALCs who
have several fixed-site locations. The
Department believes that the
recruitment standards for H–2ALCs in
the Final Rule spring from the same
principles that apply to fixed-site
employers, but that some modification
was necessary because of the level of
mobility of H–2ALCs. To ensure that
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U.S. workers are provided notice of all
available job opportunities, H–2ALCs
are expected to recruit in all areas in
which employment will take place,
rather than just the area where the work
will begin or the greatest concentration
of work will take place. The modified
recruitment obligations of H–2ALCs
under the Final Rule are examined at
greater length in the discussion of new
§ 655.106(a) above.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
(g) Proposed Section 106(f), New
Section 106(b)(6) Housing and
Transportation
The NPRM required a labor contractor
to attest that it has obtained written
assurances from fixed-site providers of
housing and transportation that such
housing and transportation complies
with the applicable standards. One
agricultural employer association
observed that housing and
transportation provided by H–2ALCs
should be required to meet the same
standards as the housing provided by
any other H–2A employer. The
Department agrees that H–2ALCs are to
be held to the same standards, but
disagrees that an H–2ALC can simply
attest, without more, that housing it has
not secured itself meets all of the
applicable standards. Because many H–
2ALC s rely upon the activities of others
in meeting their own obligations, the
Department requires the contractor to
obtain written assurances so that the
contractor can, in turn, fully attest to the
conditions required to employ H–2A
workers. The Department also deleted
the reference to H–2A workers in this
section to conform to § 655.104(d) and
to clarify the issue raised by
commenters on § 655.104(d) regarding
the need to have housing meet local,
State, and Federal standards and
guidelines for all agricultural workers,
not just H–2A workers. Other minor,
non-substantive modifications have
been made to the language of this
provision to conform to other provisions
of the Final Rule.
Section 655.107 Processing of
Applications
The Department promulgated in its
proposed rule the general parameters for
the submission and processing of
applications. Section 655.107 of the
NPRM laid out the process by which the
Department intends to review
applications and included provision for
the modification of deficient
applications as well as the amendment
of pending and approved applications.
Several commenters expressed concern
with this section, specifically in the area
of deficient applications. These specific
areas of concern are addressed below.
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As a general matter, one employer
suggested that § 655.107 should include
a provision that the Department will
have an adequately staffed information
service to answer employer questions
and help employers comply with the
process. The Department appreciates the
need for such services, particularly
among first-time program users.
However, existing program resources are
limited and the funding of such a
specialized information service does not
appear possible at this time. The
Department is committed to conducting
briefings for users of the program to
acquaint them with the terms and
processes of the regulation prior to its
implementation. The Department is also
examining other ways to make program
information and instructions available
to users on an ongoing basis,
particularly through its Web site.
(a) Proposed Sections 655.107(a)(1) and
(a)(2) Review Criteria
The Department, in describing the
review process for each application,
stated in the NPRM that each
application ‘‘will be substantively
reviewed for compliance with the
criteria for certification’’ and further
defined criteria for certification to
‘‘include, but not be limited to, the
nature of the employer’s need for the
agricultural services or labor to be
performed is temporary; all assurances
and obligations outlined in § 655.105 in
this part; compliance with the
timeliness requirements as outlined in
§ 655.102 of this part; and a lack of
errors in completing the application
prior to submission, which would make
the application otherwise noncertifiable.’’ A major trade association of
agricultural employers believed this
language contained ambiguous phrases,
particularly ‘‘include but not be limited
to’’ and ‘‘errors * * * which would
make the application otherwise noncertifiable’’ and, as a result, the phrase
‘‘criteria for certification’’ was largely
undefined. A farmworker/community
advocacy organization commented the
language incorporates no actual
determination of whether the
application complies with the statutory
requirements for labor certification
unlike the current regulations, which
require a determination at the outset as
to whether an application is ‘‘acceptable
for consideration’’ based on compliance
with the adverse effect and timeliness
criteria. This organization maintains
that the lack of substantive review in
processing attestation-based
applications violates the statute. The
Department has previously addressed
that argument in the discussion of
§ 655.101, which has now been
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rewritten to address many of these
concerns. To avoid the possibility that
vague and ambiguous terminology in
the provision could cause confusion,
however, proposed § 655.107(a)(1) and
(a)(2) have been combined in the Final
Rule, and the applicable criteria for
certification have been listed through
cross-references. Furthermore, to avoid
confusion regarding the timing
requirements set forth in the NPRM,
§ 655.107(a)(2) of the Final Rule
specifies that when the Department
issues a notice or a request requiring a
response by an employer, it will use
means normally assuring next-day
delivery, which may include e-mail and
fax. It further specifies that an
employer’s response to such a notice or
request will be considered to be filed
with the Department on the date that it
is sent to the Department, which may be
established, for example, by a postmark.
The trade association also pointed out
that, although the language related to
the nature of the employer’s need
included ‘‘temporary,’’ it did not also
include ‘‘seasonal.’’ In addition, the
association suggested the phrase
‘‘assurances and obligations related to
the recruitment of U.S. workers’’ in
proposed § 655.107(a)(3) [new
§ 655.107(b)] be clarified and
recommended that if the language is
intended to be construed broadly, the
Department should include all of the
required assurances and obligations to
make this clear.
The Department, as mentioned above,
agrees this section of the NPRM was
confusing and has accordingly clarified
the regulatory text. The new § 655.107
references the general criteria for
certification that ensures the application
will be evaluated for whether the
employer has ‘‘established the need for
the agricultural services or labor to be
performed on a temporary or seasonal
basis; made all the assurances and met
all the obligations required by § 655.105,
and/or, if an H–2ALC by § 655.106;
complied with the timeliness
requirements in § 655.102; and
complied with the recruitment
obligations required by § 655.102 and
§ 655.103.’’ By referencing back to these
sections rather than enumerating the
assurances and obligations in this
provision, the Department both provides
a clear frame of reference for the
evaluation of obligations and also puts
employers on notice of the review
process.
New language has been inserted in
§ 655.107(a) in the Final Rule stating
that ‘‘[a]pplications requesting that zero
job opportunities be certified for H–2A
employment because the employer has
been able to recruit a sufficient number
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of U.S. workers must comply with other
requirements for H–2A applications and
must be supported by a recruitment
report, in which case the application
will be denied.’’ The reasons for the
insertion of this new language are
explained below in the discussion of
§ 655.110(e) of the Final Rule.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
(b) Proposed Section 655.107(a)(3), New
Section 655.107(b) Notice of
Deficiencies
Several minor, non-substantive
modifications were made to the
language of the proposed provision for
purposes of clarity and to conform it to
changes made elsewhere in the Final
Rule. One significant clarification was
also added at § 655.107(b)(2)(iv) of the
Final Rule to specifically address the
handling of applications initially
rejected for failure to comply with the
Final Rule’s recruitment obligations.
Some employer and trade association
commenters noted that the structure of
the processing procedures in the NPRM
would have required an employer
whose application was rejected for
failing to recruit properly to begin the
entire pre-filing recruitment sequence
over again. As a result, approval of the
re-filed application would have been
substantially delayed by the minimum
period specified that positive
recruitment must be conducted in
advance of the date of need (75 days in
the NPRM, 60 days in the Final Rule).
Recruitment is an essential part of the
H–2A program, and is necessary for the
Department to be able to certify that no
qualified U.S. workers are able, willing,
and available for the job opportunity,
and that hiring H–2A workers would
not adversely affect the wages and
working conditions of U.S. workers
similarly employed. Although the
positive recruitment requirements will
not be waived, the Department will
allow re-recruitment to be conducted on
an expedited schedule so that
employers can secure H–2A workers in
a timely fashion where no U.S. workers
are available. Even with an expedited
schedule, however, failure to properly
recruit will inevitably delay approval of
an application to at least some extent,
and the Department encourages
employers to be mindful of all of the
recruitment requirements specified in
the Final Rule.
(c) Proposed Section 655.107(a)(5), New
Section 655.107(c) Modifications
The proposed regulations retain the
process for issuance of a Notice of
Deficiency by the CO and the
submission of a modified application by
the employer. However, under the
current regulations, applications are
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received, modified if required, and
accepted prior to the employer’s
recruitment efforts. Under the proposed
rule, recruitment will be conducted
prior to submission of the application.
A major trade association requested
clarification on the effect a modification
will have on the validity of the
recruitment effort and recommended the
regulations state that if an application is
ultimately accepted, even after
modification, any required
modifications to the application will not
invalidate any recruitment conducted
based on the application as originally
submitted. A professional association
recommended that if an initial
application contains a deficiency related
to recruitment, the CO could require
remedial recruitment efforts to be
completed prior to the final
determination and the remedial
recruitment efforts and the date of need
extended to accommodate the required
recruitment efforts. This association
believed such a process would be better
than the issuance of a denial, which
would require the employer to begin the
process, including the pre-filing
recruitment, over again and, therefore,
be unable to complete the process in
time to meet the employer’s actual date
of need. As discussed above, the
Department has clarified the effect of
deficient recruitment in
§ 655.107(b)(2)(iv) of the Final Rule.
This revised procedure will allow
modified applications to move forward
after the application originally
submitted is found to have deficient
recruitment.
The NPRM proposed to revise the
current timeframe for an employer to
submit a modification to the application
from 5 calendar days to 5 business days,
and this change was supported by a
major trade association. However, the
association commented that 5 business
days still is not sufficient time for an
employer to decide whether to modify
the application or submit a request for
an expedited administrative judicial
review. The association requested the
timeframe for requesting an expedited
review should be extended to 7 business
days. The Department has decided to
retain the requirement for submission of
either a modification or a request for
administrative review within 5 business
days, as proposed, which will allow the
Department to meet the timeframes for
review that are established by statute.
The Department believes that due to the
time-sensitive nature of the H–2A
program, the majority of employers also
prefer a speedy timeline that ensures
disputes and deficiencies are resolved
as quickly as possible.
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The Department also deleted the word
‘‘amendment’’ from the regulatory text
in this section to prevent confusion.
Modifications and amendments are, in
fact, different actions under this Rule
and amendments are described in
§ 655.107(d).
(d) Proposed Section 655.107(a)(6), New
Section 655.107(d) Amendments
The Department did not propose to
change the requirements from the
current regulation for amendments to an
application seeking additional workers.
An association of growers/producers
requested that the requirement in
proposed § 655.107(a)(6)(i) limiting the
increase in the number of workers to not
more than 20 percent (or 50 percent for
employers of fewer than 10 workers) be
changed to allow employers of fewer
than 10 workers to increase the number
of workers in their initial application by
up to 10 workers. A State government
agency noted its agreement with
retaining the current limitations.
The Department has decided to retain
the provisions from the NPRM regarding
the number of workers that may be
requested through amendments. Our
experience indicates these limits are
necessary to discourage employers from
requesting a lower number of workers
than actually needed and subsequently
submitting an amendment to increase
the number. Moreover, the exception for
employers of 10 or fewer H–2A workers
has not been changed, as interest in
such a change was not widespread.
In the NPRM the Department
included new provisions relating to
amendments to reflect the shift to an
attestation-based process. A group of
farmworker advocacy organizations
commented that they believed the new
language is weaker than the language in
the current regulations. The
organization objected to the deletion of
language making explicit that labor
certifications are subject to the
conditions and assurances made during
the application process and
recommended this language be
included. The Department did not deem
this change necessary, as it is already
clear from the text and structure of the
Final Rule. The organization also
recommended the language prohibiting
changes to the benefits, wages, and
working conditions as contained in the
current regulation should be included in
the new rule. The Department believes
the language in the Final Rule
specifying that in deciding whether to
accept an amendment, the CO must
‘‘take into account the effect(s) of a
decision to approve on the adequacy of
the underlying test of the domestic labor
market for the job opportunity’’ fulfills
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this function. An amendment to effect a
non-trivial increase in the offered
wages, for example, would likely render
the job more attractive to U.S. workers,
and such an amendment would not be
approved without new recruitment
being conducted. However, the Final
Rule clarifies that amendments should
be approved by the CO ‘‘if the CO
determines the proposed amendment(s)
are justified by a business reason and
will not prevent the CO from making the
labor certification determination
required under § 655.109.’’
Finally, the organization believed that
the provision in proposed
§ 655.107(a)(6) (now § 655.107(d)(2)),
which allows minor changes in the
period of employment, and also requires
an assurance that U.S. workers will be
provided with housing and subsistence
costs under certain circumstances when
the season is delayed, does not go far
enough because it does not address
problems that H–2A workers might
encounter related to housing,
subsistence, lost work opportunities,
and an employer’s failure to meet its
obligation under the three-fourths rule.
The Department does not agree with this
characterization. Both the DOL and DHS
Final Rules allow for minor
modifications in the period of
employment that do not change any of
the employer’s responsibilities with
respect to its workers. All of an
employer’s obligations, attested to in the
original application, apply to any
amendment thereto.
A sentence was added to the Final
Rule clarifying that the CO will transmit
accepted amendments to SWAs, where
necessary, so that posted job orders can
be modified. A further sentence was
added clarifying that the Department
will review proposed amendments as
quickly as possible, ‘‘taking into account
revised dates of need for work locations
associated with the amendment.’’
(e) Proposed Section 655.107(a)(7), New
Section 655.107(e) Appeal Procedures
Some minor, non-substantive changes
were made to the language of this
provision in the Final Rule for purposes
of clarity and consistency. The language
has also been modified to specify that
‘‘the denial of a requested amendment
under paragraph (d) of this section’’ and
‘‘a notice of denial issued under
§ 655.109(e)’’ do not constitute final
agency action, and may be appealed
pursuant to the procedures set forth in
§ 655.115.
Section 655.108—Offered Wage Rate
A number of commenters questioned
the continued need for an adverse effect
wage rate (AEWR). An association of
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growers commented that ‘‘there is no
valid basis for setting an adverse effect
wage rate, separate and distinct from the
prevailing wage for the occupation in
the area of intended employment, and
requiring the payment of such a wage if
it is higher than the prevailing wage.’’
An association of growers commented
that ‘‘DOL’s discussion in the preamble
to the proposed regulation makes the
case against an AEWR.’’ Another
grower’s association doubts the
Department’s assertion ‘‘in the preamble
that the wages and working conditions
of agricultural workers are depressed by
the presence of a high proportion of
illegal aliens.’’ This organization further
asserts that field and livestock workers’
average wages have increased at a faster
rate than those for non-farm workers.
Other comments focused on an apparent
inconsistency between the H–2A
program and other temporary worker
programs, none of which requires an
AEWR in addition to a prevailing wage.
Congress did not mandate the creation
of an adverse effect wage rate for the H–
2A program. Rather, Congress provided
in sec. 218(a)(1)(B) of the INA that
before an employer is permitted to hire
an H–2A worker, the Secretary of Labor
must certify that the hiring of the H–2A
worker ‘‘will not adversely affect the
wages and working conditions of
workers in the United States similarly
employed.’’ This language is identical to
the general labor certification language
in sec. 212(a)(5)(A)(i) of the INA, which
provides that ‘‘[a]ny alien who seeks to
enter the United States for the purpose
of performing skilled or unskilled labor
is inadmissible, unless the Secretary of
Labor has determined’’ that hiring that
alien ‘‘will not adversely affect the
wages and working conditions of
workers in the United States similarly
employed.’’
For most of its temporary and
permanent foreign worker programs, the
Department applies the assumption that
U.S. workers in the same occupation
will be adequately protected from
having their wages adversely affected by
the hiring of foreign workers so long as
the workers are paid prevailing wage
rates. Congress itself has applied this
assumption by statute with respect to
the granting of labor certifications under
the H–1B program. See Sections
212(n)(1)(A) and 212(p) of the INA. For
historical reasons, however, the
Department established special ‘‘adverse
effect’’ wage rates for the H–2A
program. The Department
comprehensively recounted the history
of adverse effect wage rates in its last
major rulemaking on the H–2A program
in 1989. 54 FR 28037, 28039–28041
(July 5, 1989).
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Adverse effect wage rates were
established for the first time in 1961
pursuant to an agreement with Mexico,
which provided that the wages offered
under the Bracero program could be no
less than an adverse effect wage rate
determined by the Secretary of Labor.
The H–2 program, which is the
predecessor to the H–2A program, was
initially created in 1952. H–2 workers
were initially required to be paid only
prevailing wage rates. Adverse effect
wage rates were extended to the H–2
program for the first time, however, in
1963, as the Bracero program was being
phased out. Two circumstances
motivated the creation of these wage
rates. First, the federal minimum wage
had not yet been extended to
agricultural workers. Second, concerns
were raised that large numbers of
foreign workers, many of whom were
undocumented, had depressed wage
rates in the agricultural sector. 54 FR
28041.
Between 1963 and 1989, the
Department applied a variety of
methodologies to determine how
adverse effect wage rates should be set.
It is clear that the Department has
always been motivated in setting
adverse effect wage rates to counteract
the potential impact on the wages of
U.S. workers of the large numbers of
foreign workers, particularly
undocumented workers, in the
agricultural sector. Id. The Department’s
comprehensive 1989 study of adverse
effect wage rates came to several
important conclusions, however. First,
none of the methodologies employed by
the Department ‘‘ever has purported to
add an enhancement’’ to wage rates
calculated by the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA). 54
FR 28040. Second, although some
adverse effect wage rates did exceed the
wage rates set by the USDA, that was
‘‘an unintended result of the application
of the various methodologies used in the
1960s’’ and ‘‘cannot in any way be
viewed as a measurement of the
quantum of adverse effect.’’ Id. Indeed,
the Department concluded that some of
its past methodologies for calculating
adverse effect wage rates ‘‘led to AEWRs
which were higher than Statewide
agricultural earning in some states and
lower in others,’’ a result that the
Department labeled ‘‘erratic.’’ 54 FR
28041.
The Department stated in 1989 that
the adverse effect wage rate ‘‘is a
‘method of avoiding wage deflation.’ ’’
54 FR 28045, citing Williams v. Usery,
531 F.2d 305, 306 (5th Cir. 1976). Thus,
the Department performed a
comprehensive study of the thenexisting literature on agricultural wages
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to determine whether wage depression
in fact existed in the agricultural sector,
and if so, what its likely sources were.
The Department concluded that ‘‘there
is a tendency for illegal alien workers to
adversely affect wage rates.’’ 54 FR
28041. The Department relied in part on
a General Accounting Office report
finding that ‘‘illegal aliens do, in some
cases, exert downward pressure on
wages and working conditions with
low-wage low-skilled jobs in certain
labor markets.’’ 54 FR 28042, quoting
General Accounting Office, Illegal
Aliens: Influence of Illegal Workers on
Wages and Working Conditions of Legal
Workers (GAO/PEMD–88–13BR) (March
1988). The Department also relied on a
study published by the National
Commission for Employment Policy,
which found that ‘‘[u]ndocumented
workers do displace some native-born
U.S. workers and do lower wages and
working conditions in some occupations
and geographical areas.’’ 54 FR 28042,
quoting National Commission for
Employment Policy, Illegal Immigrants
and Refugees—Their Economic
Adaptation and Impact on Local U.S.
Labor Markets: A Review of the
Literature (October 1986). The
Department also relied on a study
conducted by Dr. Phillip L. Martin,
Professor of Agricultural Economics,
University of California at Davis, who
concluded that ‘‘[t]he removal of illegal
alien workers should raise farm wages.’’
54 FR 28043, quoting Dr. Phillip L.
Martin, IRCA and the U.S. Farm Labor
Market (February 1988).
There were, however, countervailing
findings indicating that any adverse
effects on agricultural wages caused by
illegal alien workers at that time were
‘‘minor and localized.’’ 54 FR 28041.
The Department noted that ‘‘the only
wage depression shown in agricultural
employment in the GAO report
appeared in two limited, localized
studies of San Diego County, California,
pole tomatoes and Ventura County,
California, citrus,’’ and that ‘‘GAO itself
noted that these studies were probably
atypical.’’ 54 FR 28042. The National
Council for Employment Policy study
found that ‘‘[t]he evidence regarding the
labor market impact of undocumented
entrants is mixed and somewhat
inconclusive.’’ Id., quoting Illegal
Immigrants and Refugees, supra. And
Dr. Martin noted that ‘‘the evidence of
these possible wage-depressing effects
of illegals is sparse.’’ 54 FR 28043,
quoting Martin, supra.
The Department thus drew three
significant conclusions in the 1989
rulemaking. First, ‘‘DOL views the data
and literature as inconclusive on the
issue of adverse effect or wage
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depression from the presence of illegal
alien workers on the USDA data series.’’
54 FR 28043. Second, ‘‘[t]o the extent
that there is some anecdotal evidence of
wage depression from these sources, the
evidence also suggests that the adverse
effects are highly localized and
concentrated in specific areas and crop
activities.’’ Id. Third, an ‘‘explicit
enhancement’’ to agricultural wages can
only be justified ‘‘if the extent of the
depression can be measured.’’ Id.
In 1989, the Department decided that,
taking all of these considerations into
account, ‘‘setting the AEWR at the level
of average agricultural wages, as
determined by the USDA survey, is the
correct approach.’’ 54 FR 28043. The
Department noted that the ‘‘new
methodology ties AEWRs directly to the
average wage, as opposed to the old
methodology which resulted in AEWRS
substantially higher than agricultural
earnings in many States, and lower for
some States.’’ 54 FR 28038. The
Department found that the use of an
average wage rate as the adverse effect
wage rate was particularly appropriate
because ‘‘AEWRs, if set too high, might
be a disincentive to the use of H–2A and
U.S. workers, and could undermine
efforts to eradicate the employment of
illegal aliens.’’ 54 FR 28044.
Having determined to use average
agricultural wage rates to set the H–2A
program’s adverse effect wage rates, the
Department chose the USDA survey to
measure average agricultural wage rates
for two main reasons. First, the
Department found that at that time the
USDA survey of farm and livestock
workers ‘‘presents the best available
data on hourly wages in the agricultural
sector.’’ 54 FR 28041. The Department
noted in this regard that ‘‘all crops and
activities now covered by the H–2A
program will be included in the survey
data and the peak work periods also will
be covered.’’ Id. Second, although the
Department had found that evidence
concerning wage depression in the
agricultural sector caused by
undocumented workers was
inconclusive, ‘‘[t]o the extent the wage
depression does exist on a concentrated
local basis, the average agricultural
wage does not appear to be significantly
affected by wage depression. Further,
none of the studies reviewed by DOL
here quantifies or measured any wage
depression that might exist in the USDA
series.’’ 54 FR 28043. Thus, although
‘‘the evidence is not conclusive on the
existence of past adverse effect,’’ any
adverse effect ‘‘which might have
occurred may not be reflected in the
USDA data series.’’ Id.
The Department’s decisions to use
average agricultural wage rates to set the
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H–2A program’s wage rates, and to use
the USDA survey to measure average
agricultural wage rates, were challenged
but were upheld by the DC Circuit. AFLCIO v. Dole, 923 F.2d 182 (DC Cir.
1991). The Court noted that there is no
‘‘statutory requirement to adjust for past
wage depression,’’ and that in
determining appropriate wage rates
there is a ‘‘range of reasonable
methodological choices open to the
Department.’’ Id. at 187. The Court
further noted that the Department had
expressed that one of its objectives in
adopting the new wage methodology
was to avoid impeding ‘‘IRCA’s goal of
replacing illegal aliens with
documented foreign workers.’’ Id. at
186. Where ‘‘the data is inconclusive,’’
the Department merely needs to
‘‘identify the considerations it found
persuasive in making its decision’’ as to
what methodology to apply. Id. at 187.
(a) Retaining the Adverse Effect Wage
Rate
Many commenters who opposed
retaining the adverse effect wage rate
seemed to believe that the AEWR is
intended to be an enhanced wage rate,
and that its existence must be
predicated on the existence of wage
depression in the agricultural sector.
Both of those views were squarely
rejected by the Department in the 1989
rulemaking, when the Department
expressly declined to adopt any form of
enhancement to the average agricultural
hourly wage rate, and when it retained
the adverse effect wage rate despite its
finding that evidence of generalized
wage depression in the agricultural
sector was inconclusive.
The Department is retaining the
concept of the adverse effect wage rate,
despite the fact that is adopting a
methodology that will actually set
AEWRs at prevailing wage rates, for
three reasons. First, by definition, the
adverse effect wage rate is the wage rate
at which the wages of U.S. workers will
not be adversely affected. The
Department is firmly committed to the
principle that the wage rates required by
the H–2A program should ensure that
the wages of U.S. workers will not be
adversely affected by the hiring of H–2A
workers, and therefore declines to
jettison the ‘‘adverse effect wage rate’’
concept. Second, as is explained further
below, the Department was guided in its
choice of methodologies for determining
prevailing wage rates, and in its
ultimate selection of the Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS) Occupational
Employment Statistics (OES) survey, by
its commitment to selecting the
methodology that will best prevent an
adverse effect on the wages of U.S.
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workers. Thus, the adverse effect
concept will continue to exert an
important influence on the wage rates
actually supplied by the H–2A program.
Finally, § 655.108(a) of the Final Rule
requires employers to pay ‘‘the highest
of the AEWR in effect at the time
recruitment for a position is begun, the
prevailing hourly wage or piece rate, or
the Federal or State minimum wage.’’
The ‘‘prevailing hourly wage rate’’
referred to in this provision is defined
to mean ‘‘the hourly wage determined
by the SWA to be prevailing in the area
in accordance with State-based wage
surveys.’’ A similar formulation is used
under the current rule. Retaining the
phrase ‘‘adverse effect wage rate’’ to
describe the wage level that is
determined by the Department to be
prevailing in accordance with Federal
wage surveys will retain this traditional
State/Federal distinction and avoid the
confusion that might result from calling
two different wage levels both the
‘‘prevailing’’ wage rate.
(b) Evidence of Wage Depression at the
National Level
In 1989, the Department concluded
that evidence of wage depression in the
agricultural sector was inconclusive. 54
FR 28043. The Department noted that
some studies had identified wage
depression in specific agricultural labor
markets, but labeled that evidence
‘‘anecdotal.’’ Id. The Department further
noted that even this anecdotal evidence
of wage depression was ‘‘highly
localized and concentrated in specific
areas and crop activities.’’ Id.
Evidence developed during the last 20
years has not added any additional
clarity on the issue of wage depression.
Some experts continue to claim that
undocumented workers cause wage
depression. See, e.g., Michael J.
Wishnie, Prohibiting the Employment of
Unauthorized Immigrants: The
Experiment Fails, 2007 U.Chic.Leg. For.
193, 215 (2007) (‘‘[T]his has almost
certainly contributed to the depression
of wages and working conditions for
U.S. workers.’’). One comment
submitted by a group of farmworker
advocacy organizations acknowledged
that the impact of undocumented
workers on wages at a broad national
level ‘‘is under dispute,’’ but asserted
that wage depression is clearly evident
in the agricultural sector. This
commenter did not provide any wage
data supporting this assertion, however.
Rather, the commenter relied on data
indicating that undocumented workers
are more prevalent in the agricultural
sector than they are in most other
sectors of the labor force. In fact, none
of the comments that were submitted to
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the Department and none of the studies
that the Department reviewed in
response to those comments provided a
methodology that would allow for the
quantification of any agricultural wage
depression that might exist.
On the other hand, many experts
assert that evidence indicating that
undocumented workers cause wage
depression remains mixed. For example,
Jeffrey S. Passel of the Pew Hispanic
Center recently stated that ‘‘I don’t
know if there’s anything in the data that
clearly points one way or the other. At
one level, it’s a lot of people: 11.5
million to 12 million. But it’s about one
in 20 workers, so it’s not a huge share
of the labor market.’’ The Immigration
Debate: Its Impact on Wages, Workers,
and Employers, in Knowledge@Wharton
at p. 4 (May 17, 2006). Bernard
Anderson, who served as Assistant
Secretary for the Employment Standards
Administration during the Clinton
Administration, has opined that with
respect to the question of ‘‘what impact
there is on wages, economic status and
employment for American workers
* * * you get a clear divide in the
economic literature. The evidence
produced by economists who have
studied this question is mixed.’’ Id. See
also several studies on the effects of
immigration generally: Robert D.
Emerson, Agricultural Labor Markets
and Immigration at p. 57 (Choices, 1st
Quarter 2007) (‘‘While some economists
suggest that increased immigration has
reduced wage rates for native-born,
unskilled workers * * * most have
found negative wage effects of increased
immigration extremely difficult to
demonstrate once all appropriate
adjustments are made.’’); Pia Orrenius,
The Impact of Immigration,
Commentary, The Wall Street Journal
(April 25, 2006) (‘‘[M]ost studies find
immigrants have little effect on average
wages.’’); Gianmarco I.P. Ottaviao and
Giovannit Peri, Rethinking the Gains
from Immigration: Theory and Evidence
from the U.S. at 28 (August 2005) (‘‘It
turns out empirically and theoretically
that immigration, as we have known it
during the nineties, had a sizeable
beneficial effect on wages of U.S born
workers.’’). Several grower and
employer groups commented that they
do not believe there is reliable evidence
of wage depression in the agricultural
sector. They did not, however, provide
any data or analysis of existing studies
to support this assertion.
The assertion of one group of
farmworker advocacy organizations that
the unusually high concentration of
undocumented workers in the
agricultural sector must necessarily
result in a particularly depressive effect
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on the wages in that sector does not
appear to be borne out by the facts. A
study analyzing changes in the median
weekly earnings for selected
occupations between 1988 and 1999
found that median weekly earnings for
‘‘farm occupations, except managerial’’
had increased 21 percent between 1988
and 1993, and 20 percent between 1994
and 1999, while median earnings for
‘‘farm workers’’ increased 22 percent
between 1988 and 1993, and 20 percent
between 1994 and 1999. This compared
favorably to increases in the median
weekly earnings for all workers, which
increased 20 percent between 1988 and
1993, and 18 percent between 1994 and
1999, as well as to workers in many
other specific low-wage occupational
categories (cooks: 17 percent and 19
percent; butchers: 13 percent and 22
percent; laundry and dry cleaning
operators: 17 percent and 16 percent;
sewing machine operators, 17 percent
and 19 percent). See Philip Martin,
Guest Workers: New Solution, New
Problem? at Table A3–4 (Pew Hispanic
Center Study, March 21, 2002).
Although the Department assumes that
it is true that undocumented workers
are more prevalent in the agricultural
sector than they are in many other
sectors, the available data does not
support the notion that they have had a
disproportionately depressive impact on
wages in the agricultural sector.
In sum, after considering the
comments received on the subject of
wage depression, and after reviewing
relevant literature in an attempt to
identify empirical support for the
assertions made in those comments, the
Department reaffirms its conclusion in
the 1989 rulemaking that evidence of
wage depression in the agricultural
sector is inconclusive.
(c) Evidence of Wage Depression at the
Local Level
In the 1989 rulemaking, the
Department found that ‘‘[t]o the extent
that there is some anecdotal evidence of
wage depression * * *, the evidence
also suggests that the adverse effects are
highly localized and concentrated in
specific areas and crop activities.’’ The
Department did not find that there was
in fact wage depression in local markets,
specific areas, or specific crop activities,
but rather noted that the anecdotal
evidence of wage depression that
existed at that time was confined to
those settings. The relevant facts
concerning concentrations of illegal
workers in specific local markets and
crop activities have changed
substantially in the intervening 20
years, however.
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A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations commented that ‘‘[t]imes
have changed since 1987.’’ This group
stated that undocumented workers in
the agricultural sector are now ‘‘spread
throughout the nation.’’ This group
noted that ‘‘undocumented workers now
dominate in the agricultural sector’’ and
‘‘constitute a majority of the
farmworkers in the United States.’’ This
group argued that the factual change in
the prevalence of undocumented
workers in the agricultural sector is so
significant that ‘‘DOL may not legally
ignore [it].’’ It further provided an
impressive compilation of statistics
from a variety of studies showing that
undocumented workers are now
pervasive in the agricultural sector,
rather than a sparse or localized
phenomenon. Specifically, the studies
cited found that ‘‘[i]n California, where
35 percent of the nation’s farmworkers
are employed, 57 percent of
farmworkers were undocumented as of
2003–05,’’ that in Florida, ‘‘50 percent
of farmworkers were unauthorized
immigrants [in 2004] and the percentage
was increasing,’’ that ‘‘[m]ore than 60
percent of agricultural workers in
Washington are believed to be
undocumented,’’ that ‘‘in New York
State approximately 70 percent of
farmworkers are undocumented,’’ and
that ‘‘45 percent of the Mountain
region’s farmworkers report they were
working illegally in the U.S.’’
A variety of experts have similarly
concluded that the presence of
undocumented workers in the United
States is now a widespread
phenomenon rather than a localized
one. A 2005 study by the Pew Hispanic
Center found that ‘‘since the mid-1990s,
the most rapid growth in the immigrant
population in general and the
unauthorized population in particular
has taken place in new settlement areas
where the foreign-born had previously
been a relatively small presence.’’
Jeffrey S. Passel, Unauthorized
Migrants: Numbers and Characteristics
at p. 11 (Pew Hispanic Center, June 14,
2005). ‘‘The geographic diversification
of the unauthorized population since
1990 is very evident * * * .’’ Id. at p.
13. A 2006 study by the Department of
Homeland Security reached a similar
conclusion. See Michael Hoefer, Nancy
Rytina, and Christopher Campbell,
Estimates of the Unauthorized
Immigrant Population Residing in the
United States: January 2006 at p. 4
(Office of Immigration Statistics, August
2007) (‘‘Growing geographic dispersion
of the unauthorized immigrant
population is reflected by an increase in
the share of the population living in all
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other states.’’). In many respects the
growing dispersion of unauthorized
workers is unsurprising, as the number
of unauthorized workers in the United
States has dramatically increased from
an estimated 2.5 million in the late
1980s to an estimated 12 million or
more today. See Passel, Unauthorized
Migrants: Numbers and Characteristics
at p. 10, supra; Hoefer et al. at p. 1,
supra.
Recent literature also suggests that,
even if there are some areas in the
agricultural sector in which particularly
high concentrations of illegal
immigrants remain, such concentrations
may not adversely affect U.S. workers.
Jeffrey S. Passel of the Pew Hispanic
Center has noted that high
concentrations of illegal workers in
particular markets are generally
correlated with lower local
unemployment rates for native workers:
The presence of illegals is not associated
with higher unemployment among natives
and it seems to me you would have to see
that kind of thing for there to be true
displacement in any sense. Geographically, it
tends to be the reverse: Places with large
numbers of illegals tend to have lower
unemployment than places without illegals.
The Immigration Debate: Its Impact on
Wages, Workers, and Employers, in
Knowledge@Wharton at pp. 4–5 (May
17, 2006). And David Card concluded in
a study analyzing the effects of
immigration generally (rather the effects
of unauthorized immigration in
particular) on U.S. workers that
‘‘[a]lthough immigration has a strong
effect on relative supplies of different
skill groups, local labor market
outcomes of low skilled [U.S.] natives
are not much affected by the relative
supply shocks.’’ David Card, Is the New
Immigration Really So Bad?, National
Bureau of Economic Research (August
2005).
The Department concludes that there
is no conclusive evidence one way or
the other regarding the existence of
wage depression in localized
agricultural labor markets. There is
strong evidence that there has been a
seismic shift in the demographics of the
agricultural labor market in the United
States since the Department’s last
rulemaking in 1989, and that
undocumented workers have in the
intervening years come to dominate that
market throughout the United States. In
light of the pervasive presence of
undocumented workers in the
agricultural sector today, it is
substantially less likely than it was in
1989 that wage depression could
uniquely be found in highly localized
agricultural labor markets and specific
crop activities. Moreover, even if
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pockets of unusually high
concentrations of illegal workers
continue to exist in some places in the
agricultural sector, the evidence
concerning the effect high
concentrations of illegal workers have
on the wages of U.S. workers itself
remains equivocal.
(d) Inability To Measure Wage
Depression
None of the commenters and none of
the literature reviewed by the
Department suggested a reliable
methodology for measuring any wage
depression that may exist in the
agricultural sector. Indeed, one group of
farmworker advocacy organizations
submitted an analysis prepared by a
PhD economist from the University of
California, Berkeley, that concluded that
‘‘[g]iven the extremely large share of
illegal immigrants working in
agriculture, it is unknowable, absent
them, how many U.S. workers would be
willing to and at what price work in the
agricultural sector.’’ As the Department
explained in 1989, ‘‘an explicit
enhancement could only be justified if
alien agricultural employment has
depressed average agricultural earnings,
and if the extent of the depression can
be measured at the aggregate level.’’ 54
FR 28043. With no conclusive evidence
showing that wage depression exists in
the agricultural sector, and with no
reliable methodology to measure any
wage depression that does exist, the
Department declines to adopt an
adverse effect wage rate that is
deliberately set above market rates.
(e) The Impact of Undocumented
Workers vs. Guest Workers on U.S.
Worker Wages
To the extent that wage depression
may exist in the agricultural sector, the
evidence does not indicate that it has
been caused by the H–2A program.
Rather, all of the information available
to the Department strongly indicates
that the presence of large numbers of
illegal, undocumented workers in the
agricultural sector poses a much greater
potential threat to the wages of U.S.
workers than guest workers do.
The Department has reviewed anew
the studies that it relied on in 1989
when it issued the last rule governing
the adverse effect wage rate. Virtually
all of those studies focused on the effect
that undocumented alien workers have
on the wages of U.S. workers. See, e.g.,
National Commission for Employment
Policy, supra (‘‘Undocumented workers
do displace some native-born U.S.
workers and do lower wages and
working conditions in some occupations
and geographical areas.’’); Martin, IRCA
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and the U.S. Farm Labor Market, supra
( ‘‘[t]he removal of illegal alien workers
should raise farm wages.’’). Indeed, the
GAO study that was relied upon by the
Department examined the impact of
undocumented workers not just on the
wages of U.S. citizen workers, but on all
legal workers in the United States with
low-wage, low-skilled jobs, including
guest workers. See Illegal Aliens:
Influence of Illegal Workers on Wages
and Working Conditions of Legal
Workers (GAO/PEMD–88–13BR) (March
1988) (‘‘illegal aliens do, in some cases,
exert downward pressure on wages and
working conditions with low-wage lowskilled jobs in certain labor markets.’’).
Other sources also support the notion
that any threat that foreign workers may
pose to the wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers is primarily
caused by direct competition from a
large undocumented workforce within
the United States. Illegal aliens may be
willing to work for illegally low wages
that are paid off the books, and may be
reluctant to report an employer’s
violations of the labor and employment
laws. A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations submitted an analysis
prepared by a PhD economist from the
University of California, Berkeley,
which stated that:
There are other reasons that employers in
the U.S. hire undocumented workers over
U.S. workers. Undocumented workers—
afraid of deportation—are perceived to be
less demanding in terms of non-pecuniary
benefits and are less likely to form unions or
make demands from employers, as well as
accept pay below legal standards.
Senators from both political parties
remarked upon this phenomenon during
the recent immigration debates in
Congress.5 As Senator Kennedy stated
in May 2007,
[W]e have, unfortunately, employers
who—are prepared to exploit the current
condition of undocumented workers in this
country—potentially, close to 12 [and] 1⁄2
million are undocumented. Because they are
undocumented, employers can have them in
these kinds of conditions. If they don’t like
it, they tell them they will be reported to the
immigration service and be deported. That is
what is happening today.6
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The U.S. Supreme Court has also noted
the threat that undocumented workers
pose to the wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers. See SureTan v. NLRB, 467 U.S. 883, 892 (1984)
(‘‘acceptance by illegal aliens of jobs on
substandard terms as to wages and
5 See
e.g., 152 Cong. Rec. S9773 (2006) (statement
of Senator Dianne Feinstein); 153 Cong. Rec. S441–
S442 (2007) (statement of Senator Larry Craig); and
153 Cong. Rec. S6590 (2007) (statement of Senator
Edward Kennedy).
6 153 Cong. Rec. S6590 (2007).
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working conditions can seriously
depress wage scales and working
conditions of citizens and legally
admitted aliens * * *’’).
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations suggested that guest
worker programs may also threaten the
wages and working conditions of U.S.
workers. These organizations primarily
cited studies finding that between 1950
and 1964, the period of time during
which the Bracero Program was
operating, real wages for agricultural
workers remained flat. Even if these
studies are correct about the impact of
the Bracero Program, however, the
Department does not consider the
Bracero Program to be representative of
the impact of guest worker programs
generally. The Bracero Program was
notorious for rampant employer abuses
and lack of government enforcement.
See, e.g., Alma M. Garcia, The Mexican
Americans at pp. 30–33 (2002). If
employers are regularly able to get away
with violating program requirements
and paying sub-standard wages, such
rogue activity may of course have a
depressive effect on overall wage rates.
H–2A program enforcement, however, is
more rigorous than Bracero Program
enforcement was, and is substantially
aided by watchdog farmworker
advocacy organizations that help to
ensure that workers hired through the
H–2A program are paid properly.
The commenter cited only one other
supposed example of wage depression
caused by the H–2A program: The
Florida sugar cane industry. The
commenter noted that the sugar cane
harvest in Florida was mechanized in
the early 1990s, and that the industry
therefore no longer uses substantial
numbers of H–2A workers. The
commenter asserted, however, that in
the late 1980s and early 1990s, while H–
2A workers were still being used, their
presence depressed the wages of U.S.
workers. As support for this
proposition, the commenter cited
statistics indicating that sugar cane
producers that hired only U.S. workers
paid their employees substantially more
per hour than producers that hired H–
2A workers. The Department does not
consider this to be evidence of wage
depression; if anything, the wage gap
between U.S. workers and H–2A
workers shows that the AEWR paid to
H–2A sugar cane workers did not
function as the maximum hourly rate
that U.S. workers in the area could
make. Rather, U.S. workers were able to
secure jobs that paid substantially
higher wages than H–2A workers.
Economically speaking, that result is not
at all surprising; employers generally
should be willing to pay U.S. workers
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higher wages than the required wage
rate for H–2A workers, since H–2A
workers impose a number of additional
costs on employers, including housing,
transportation, and application fees, that
make them relatively more expensive to
employers than U.S. workers.
Whatever effect guest workers may
have on the wages of U.S. workers,
however, there appears to be virtually
unanimous agreement among the
experts and commenters that
undocumented workers have a greater
impact and pose a greater threat. Indeed,
the very same group of farmworker
advocacy organizations that argued that
guest worker programs have a
depressive effect on wages submitted a
PhD economist’s analysis concluding
that ‘‘the H–2A program and the AEWR
are severely undermined by the
employment of hundreds of thousands
of undocumented immigrant workers.’’
The economist further opined that
‘‘[f]irst and foremost, it is in the best
interest of U.S. domestic and H–2A
workers to mitigate the effects that such
a large share of illegal workers has on
wages and employment conditions in
the agricultural industry.’’ See also
Peter Cappelli, The Immigration Debate:
Its Impact on Wages, Workers, and
Employers, in Knowledge@Wharton at
p. 3 (May 17, 2006) (‘‘While it is true
that low-skill workers who enter the
United States legally also exert
downward pressure on wages, there is a
significant difference between them and
their undocumented counterparts.’’). Of
course, guest worker programs could, in
the abstract, pose a significant threat to
the wages of U.S. workers, if, for
example, the required wage rate was set
substantially below the prevailing
market rates, or if enforcement of the
required wage rates was so lax that
substantially below-market wages were
regularly paid. There is no indication,
however, that those conditions currently
exist in the H–2A program, nor does the
Department have any intention of
allowing them to occur under the Final
Rule.
Thus, the Department concludes that
while evidence of wage depression in
the agricultural sector remains
inconclusive, it is quite clear that the
most likely source of any wage
depression that does exist is the
hundreds of thousands of
undocumented workers in the
agricultural labor market.
(f) The Department’s Decision To Use
More Precise Adverse Effect Wage Rates
Although evidence of actual wage
depression in the agricultural sector is
equivocal, the Department believes it is
appropriate to select a wage-
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determination methodology that will
help to prophylactically guard against
wage depression. As the Department
noted in the NPRM, one of the most
significant actions it can take to protect
the wages and working conditions of
U.S. workers is to render the H–2A
program sufficiently functional that
agricultural employers will hire H–2A
workers, with all their accompanying
legal protections, rather than hiring
undocumented workers. The
Department has concluded that this can
best be achieved by setting adverse
effect wage rates that (1) are not below
the prevailing wages being earned by
U.S. workers and (2) are not so far above
local market rates that they encourage
employers to hire undocumented
workers instead. Achieving these
objectives requires setting AEWRs that
appropriately reflect market realities
and labor costs.
There are currently not nearly enough
U.S. workers in the agricultural sector to
perform all of the agricultural work that
needs to be performed. When
agricultural employers cannot find U.S.
workers, they must of necessity turn to
some other labor source. The H–2A
program was created by Congress to be
the alternate source of choice for
agricultural labor. The program is
clearly failing to fill the role envisioned
for it, however, as approximately ten
times more undocumented workers than
H–2A workers are employed in the
agricultural sector today. Agricultural
employers may or may not realize that
specific individuals they are hiring are
in the United States illegally, but
undocumented workers have clearly
become the agricultural sector’s
alternate labor market of choice. The
Department believes that the current
methodology for determining adverse
effect wage rates, which is not keyed to
actual local labor market conditions,
may be partly responsible for the
program’s failure.
It is obvious that an AEWR that is set
too low is likely to harm U.S. workers.
It is no secret that foreign workers may
be willing to work for wages that are
lower, and often substantially lower,
than wages that are typically paid to
U.S. workers. Allowing foreign workers
to work at substandard wages would
likely harm U.S. agricultural workers by
causing them to be displaced or by
forcing them to accept lower wages to
secure jobs. As will be discussed later,
there is reason to believe that in some
geographic areas and for some
occupations, current AEWRs are set
artificially low, resulting in an adverse
effect on U.S. workers similarly
employed. See Gerald Mayer,
Temporary Farm Labor: The H–2A
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Program and the U.S. Department of
Labor’s Proposed Changes in the
Adverse Effect Wage Rate (‘‘CRS
Report’’) at 8 (CRS Report for Congress,
November 6, 2008) (‘‘Currently, the
AEWR applies equally to all crop
workers, livestock workers, and farm
equipment operators in a region or state.
However, within a region or state,
[market] wages for the same occupation
may vary because of differences in the
cost of living or in the relative supply
of or demand for workers.’’).
Conversely, an AEWR that is
artificially set too high can also result in
harm to U.S. workers. If the AEWR is set
so high that it does not reflect actual
local labor market conditions, many
agricultural employers may be priced
out of participating in the H–2A
program. When employers cannot find
U.S. workers, and also cannot afford H–
2A workers because they are required to
pay them above-market wage rates,
some will inevitably end up hiring
undocumented workers instead.
The resulting influx of undocumented
foreign workers into the agricultural
sector threatens to erode the earnings
and employment opportunities of U.S.
workers in agricultural occupations.
U.S. workers may have a difficult time
fairly competing against undocumented
workers, who may accept work at
below-market wages, are viewed by
employers as less troublesome and less
likely to assert their rights, and are
cheaper to employ than H–2A workers
because they do not require the
additional payment of H–2A program
costs such as transportation and
housing. Although the threat of legal
sanctions and attendant risks of work
disruption will constrain some
employers from knowingly employing
undocumented workers,7 the greater the
gap between the true market rate for
farm labor and the total cost to
employers of H–2A workers, including
artificially inflated wage rates plus all
other attendant H–2A program costs, the
greater the likelihood that employers
will forego using the H–2A program and
will instead risk hiring undocumented
foreign labor. The undocumented
foreign workers whose hiring is
incentivized when AEWRs are
artificially set too high lack the legally
enforced protections and benefits that
7 Some commenters noted that the Department’s
discussion of this point in the NPRM preamble
appeared to suggest that the Department believed
agricultural employers intentionally set out to hire
illegal workers. The Department did not intend to
suggest such motives. As noted above, many illegal
workers in the U.S. possess documentation
indicating they are legally authorized to work and
all employers (not just those in agriculture) are
required by current law to accept at face value
documentation that appears valid.
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the H–2A program provides, further
threatening to degrade U.S. workers’
working conditions.
The Department was concerned about
precisely this phenomenon in the 1989
rulemaking. The Department presciently
observed that ‘‘AEWRs, if set too high,
might be a disincentive to the use of H–
2A and U.S. workers, and could
undermine efforts to eradicate the
employment of illegal aliens.’’ 54 FR
28044. The Department’s choice of the
USDA average agricultural wage to set
AEWRs at the time was predicated on
the assumption ‘‘that IRCA will achieve
its states purpose of removing illegal
aliens from the labor force. * * *
Agricultural employers who have
employed illegal alien workers in the
past then must fill their labor needs
with U.S. workers * * * or with H–2A
workers.’’ Id. IRCA did not, of course,
succeed in eradicating the employment
of illegal aliens in the agricultural
sector, a fact that the Department must
now take into account in determining
what wage-setting methodology is most
appropriate.
As noted above, there is demand for
hundreds of thousands of agricultural
workers beyond what the domestic labor
market is able to supply. If any wage
depression does currently exist in the
agricultural sector, the presence of a
large number of undocumented workers
is the most likely cause. Replacing the
hundreds of thousands of
undocumented agricultural workers
currently employed in the U.S. either
with U.S. workers or with H–2A
program workers who are paid a legally
required wage would substantially help
to protect U.S. workers from adverse
effects caused by the undocumented
work force. For this reason, the
Department believes that it should
select a methodology for setting adverse
effect wage rates that is as precise and
refined as possible.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations commented that rather
than adopt a wage-setting methodology
that may reduce required wage rates in
some areas, the government should get
rid of undocumented workers by more
vigorously enforcing the immigration
laws. Primary enforcement
responsibility in these areas is entrusted
to DHS and the Department of Justice.
The Department notes, however, that
during the last several years the federal
government has in fact embarked upon
unprecedented efforts to enforce the
immigration laws, both at the border
and in the interior. In fact, this
rulemaking effort is part of a
comprehensive 26-point immigration
reform plan that was announced by the
present Administration in August 2007.
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See Fact Sheet: Improving Border
Security and Immigration Within
Existing Law, https://
www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/
2007/08/20070810.html (August 10,
2007). This rulemaking is designed to
work in tandem with those enforcement
efforts. The Department does not believe
that it is necessary to choose between a
functional H–2A program and effective
immigration enforcement; we can and
should have both, as having both will
maximize protections for U.S. workers.
The same commenter argued that if
agricultural employers substantially
hiked their wage rates, U.S. workers
would re-enter the agricultural labor
market to secure the higher wages, thus
substantially reducing the need to resort
to foreign labor in the agricultural
sector. Although the Department
assumes that substantially higher
agricultural wages would indeed induce
some reentry by U.S. workers into the
agricultural labor market, the
commenter did not provide any data
suggesting what level of wage increases
would be required to make such a reentry phenomenon substantial, or
whether agricultural employers could
remain competitive if required to pay
those wages. As the Department noted
in 1989, there is an upper ceiling to how
much U.S. agricultural employers can
even theoretically afford to pay in labor
costs, as they must ultimately compete
not only with other U.S. producers, but
also ‘‘with foreign imports.’’ 54 FR
28044. The Department believes that it
is also relevant that U.S. workers have
steadily left the agricultural sector over
the last two decades, despite the fact
that agricultural wages have increased
during that time, suggesting that factors
other than wages may be causing many
U.S. workers to view agricultural jobs as
undesirable.
Finally, the same commenter argued
that the Department’s rationale
effectively calls for a continuous
lowering of agricultural wage rates,
because in this commenter’s view (1)
the Department’s real objective is to
lower wage rates and (2) the only way
to actually replace undocumented
workers with H–2A workers is to set
adverse effect wage rates at the level of
wages that undocumented workers are
willing to accept. As an initial matter,
the commenter misunderstands the
Department’s objective. The Department
seeks to ensure that AEWRs are
precisely tailored to the conditions of
specific agricultural occupations in
specific labor markets. Although it is
true that the Department’s preamble
analysis in both the NPRM and the Final
Rule explains in detail how artificially
high AEWRs can hurt U.S. workers, that
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does not reflect any belief on the part of
the Department that all AEWRs are
currently artificially high and that they
therefore should all be lowered. In fact,
the Department’s preamble analysis also
explains how AEWRs that are set too
low hurt U.S. workers. The Department
seeks to avoid both effects by adopting
a more precise methodology. Because
the USDA survey that is currently used
is an average wage rate that is set across
broad, typically multi-state regions, the
actual wages of individual labor markets
within the USDA regions are necessarily
in some instances above, and in some
instances below, the USDA average. In
fact, the statistics provided by this
commenter show that even according to
the commenter’s calculations, the
average BLS OES wage for crop workers
is higher than the average USDA wage
for field workers in several States,
including three of the ten biggest H–2A
using States (Louisiana, New York, and
Virginia). A recent report of the
Congressional Research found that even
OES Level I wages are higher than the
current AEWR for some occupations in
some geographic areas. CRS Report at
13–17.
The Department also rejects the
notion that the only way to replace
undocumented workers with U.S.
workers and H–2A workers is to lower
AEWRs to the levels that undocumented
workers are willing to accept. That
might be true if agricultural employers
viewed U.S. workers, H–2A workers,
and undocumented workers as
completely fungible, but they do not.
Many employer and grower association
commenters emphatically stated that
they want to comply with the law, and
that in fact they would generally prefer
to hire U.S. workers over H–2A workers
or undocumented workers if U.S.
workers were available. Moreover,
agricultural employers who even
unknowingly hire undocumented
workers risk losing their labor force part
way through the season due to an
immigration raid, and those who
knowingly hire undocumented workers
risk criminal penalties. These risks are
particularly pronounced today because
of the government’s recent highly
publicized increased worksite
immigration enforcement efforts. For all
of these reasons, agricultural employers
are generally willing to pay
substantially more to hire a U.S. worker
or an H–2A worker than they are to hire
an undocumented worker. This
observation is borne out by actual data
showing that undocumented workers
typically make less than U.S. workers
and H–2A workers do.
After reviewing the comments
received, the Department continues to
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believe that precise tailoring of H–2A
wages to local labor market conditions
is the most critical factor in preventing
an adverse effect on the wages of U.S.
workers. For example, a single national
AEWR applicable to all agricultural jobs
in all geographic locations would prove
to be below market rates in some areas
and above market rates in other areas. If
the AEWR in any given area does not
reflect market wages, it will either harm
U.S. workers directly by artificially
lowering wages, or it will harm U.S.
workers indirectly by providing an
incentive for employers to hire
undocumented workers. AEWRs
covering large multi-state regions suffer
from similar flaws. In an agricultural
sector where prevailing labor conditions
make the need for precision in AEWR
determinations paramount, it is
essential that a methodology be adopted
that allows for as great a degree of
geographic refinement as possible.
Improving the geographic precision of
the AEWR is essential to ensuring that
the AEWR meets its statutory objective.
The Department is aware that its
rationale for establishing precise,
localized wage rates is quite different
than the rationale that motivated it in
1989 to establish aggregated, regional
wage rates.8 That decision was reached
under very different factual
circumstances, however. In 1989, the
Department found that there was no
conclusive evidence of generalized wage
depression in the agricultural sector, but
noted that there was some anecdotal
evidence suggesting that wages in
particular local labor markets might be
depressed. The Department chose at that
time to use USDA data to set AEWRs
largely because it believed that USDA’s
aggregation of wage data at broad
regional levels would immunize the
survey from the effects of any localized
wage depression that might exist. 54 FR
28043. As discussed above, however,
undocumented workers are
substantially more dispersed throughout
the agricultural sector today than they
were in 1989. Not only are
undocumented workers no longer
confined to particularized local labor
markets, but recent studies have also
called into question whether the
concentration of undocumented workers
in particular labor markets actually
causes localized wage depression.
In light of these developments, the
one key advantage the Department
believed in 1989 was afforded by the
USDA survey’s broadly aggregated
data—its ability to avoid localized wage
8 The Department’s underlying motivation—to
protect the wages and working conditions of U.S.
workers—remains the same.
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depression effects—has been
substantially diminished. On the other
hand, the fact that undocumented
workers have come to dominate the
agricultural labor force in the
intervening years has rendered the
`
imprecision of USDA wage data vis-avis local labor market conditions a
substantial drawback that may
sometimes actually encourage
employers to hire undocumented
workers. In fact, the Department
expressed concern in the 1989
rulemaking that precisely this
phenomenon might develop, stating that
‘‘AEWRs, if set too high, might be a
disincentive to the use of H–2A workers
and U.S. workers, and could undermine
efforts to eradicate the employment of
illegal aliens.’’ 54 FR 28044. Many
commenters argued that the large
numbers of undocumented workers in
the agricultural sector adversely affects
U.S. workers. After weighing all of these
considerations, the Department has
determined that under the present
factual circumstances, the advantages of
tailoring AEWRs to better reflect the
actual wages earned by specific
occupational categories in specific local
labor markets outweigh the potential
disadvantages.
(g) The Department’s Decision To Use
the Occupational Employment Statistics
Survey
Having determined that the
Department can best safeguard the
wages and working conditions of U.S.
workers from adverse effect by
encouraging employers to replace
undocumented workers with either U.S.
workers or H–2A workers, and having
further determined that tailoring
AEWRs to local labor market conditions
is the best way to foster this
replacement process, the Department
made two independent decisions. First,
the Department decided to use the BLS
OES survey to set AEWRs, rather than
the USDA Farm Labor Survey (FLS).
Second, the Department decided to
attain further precision in setting
AEWRs by breaking the OES wage rates
down into four different skill levels,
rather than using a single average OES
wage rate for each agricultural
occupation. While the Department
viewed the ability to break OES data
into four separate skill levels as an
advantage of that survey, its decision to
use the OES survey to set AEWRs was
not dependent on this feature.
The FLS and the OES survey are the
leading candidates among agricultural
wage surveys potentially available to the
Department to set AEWRs. Neither
survey is perfect. In fact, both surveys
have significant shortcomings. On
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balance, however, the Department has
concluded that in light of the current
prevalence of undocumented workers in
the agricultural labor market, AEWRs
derived from OES survey data will be
more reflective of actual market wages
than FLS data, and thus will best protect
the wages and working conditions of
U.S. workers from adverse effects.
The present methodology for settings
AEWRs, which was established by the
1989 final rule, calculates regional
AEWRs based on the previous year’s
annual combined average hourly wage
rate for field and livestock workers in
each of 15 multi-state regions and 3
stand-alone States, as compiled by the
USDA quarterly FLS Reports. The
aggregation of a widely diverse national
agricultural landscape into just 15
regions (and 3 stand-alone states) results
in extremely broad generalizations that
fail to account for specific market
conditions at the local level. Wage data
collected at each individual State and
even substate level would be more
appropriate for purposes of computing
an accurate, sub-regional AEWR that
reflects local market conditions. Indeed,
market-based wage survey data at the
State or substate level is the standard for
calculating comparison wages in other
temporary worker programs
administered by the Department,
including the H–2B program that is the
non-agricultural counterpart of H–2A
and the H–1B specialty occupation
worker program.9
The Department’s reliance on USDA
FLS data creates several problems for
functional program administration. The
USDA quarterly FLS does not provide
refined wage data by occupations or
geographic locale. Additionally, the
USDA FLS does not account at all for
different skill levels required by
agriculture occupations. Moreover, the
wage levels reported in the USDA FLS
are skewed by the inclusion of wages
that are paid to many agricultural
occupations that are not typically filled
by H–2A workers, such as inspectors,
animal breeding technicians, and
trained animal handlers.
The accuracy of AEWRs based on the
USDA FLS is further diminished
because the FLS is not based on
reported hourly wage rates. Instead,
USDA’s FLS asks employers to report
total gross wages and total hours worked
for all hired workers for the two
reference weeks of the survey. Based on
this limited information, the survey
constructs annual average wages for the
9 Calculation of the applicable wage by a SWA
using the OES survey is, in fact, a ‘‘safe harbor’’
providing presumption of correctness in the H–1B
labor condition application. 20 CFR
655.731(a)(2)(ii)(A)(3).
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broad general categories of field workers
and livestock workers. The AEWR is
then calculated by combining the
average of the annual wage for field
workers and the average annual wage
for livestock workers into one annual
wage rate covering both of those general
occupational categories. The survey
thus determines the hourly AEWR based
not on reported hourly wages, but rather
on the basis of the numerator (total gross
wages for the combined occupations)
and denominator (total hours for the
combined occupations) derived from the
information supplied by employers.
Moreover, the USDA FLS is
administered and funded through
USDA, giving the Department no direct
control over its design and
implementation. USDA could terminate
the survey at any time and leave the
Department without the basic data,
problematic as it is, used to calculate
the AEWR. In fact, USDA announced
that it would suspend the survey in
February 2007 due to budget
constraints. Ultimately, USDA resumed
the survey in May 2007. The possibility
that USDA may suspend the survey at
some point in the future adds a measure
of instability and uncertainty for AEWR
determinations in future years. USDA’s
control over the survey also prevents the
Department from making improvements
to it that could help to correct its
shortcomings and set more marketreflective AEWRs.
In 1989, the Department determined
that the USDA survey was the best
available ‘‘barometer’’ for measuring
farm wages on a nationwide basis. In the
succeeding years, however, the
Department has gained vast knowledge
and experience in applying wage data
that simply did not exist in 1989. The
OES wage survey is among the largest
on-going statistical survey programs of
the Federal Government. The OES
program surveys approximately 200,000
establishments every 6 months, and
over 3 years collects the full sample of
1.2 million establishments. The OES
program collects occupational
employment and wage data in every
State in the U.S. and the data are
published annually. The OES wage data
is already utilized by the Department for
determining comparison wages in other
temporary worker programs and has
proven to be an accurate, statistically
valid, and successful wage reference. In
1989, when the Department established
the current AEWR methodology, the
OES program was not well developed
and thus was not an effective alternative
for the USDA Labor Survey. In the
intervening nearly 20 years the OES
program has in several respects
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surpassed the USDA Labor Survey as a
source for agricultural wage data.
Farm labor comprises a number of
occupations and skills, and both the
demand for and supply of farm workers
with a particular skill or experience
level varies significantly across
geographic areas. The farm labor market
is not a monolithic entity, but rather is
a matrix of markets across a spectrum of
occupations, skill or experience levels,
and local areas. Effectively protecting
U.S. workers from unfair competition by
undocumented workers by setting an
AEWR that is neither too high nor too
low requires that the AEWR be
specifically tailored to the local labor
markets, and must take into account
such factors as specific occupation, skill
or experience, and geographic location.
The Department thus strongly values the
geographic and occupational precision
of the OES estimates as well as the
ability to establish four wage-level
benchmarks commonly associated with
the concepts of experience, skill,
responsibility, and difficulty within a
given occupation. These features are
unique to the OES survey, and it is in
part for this reason that the survey is
also used in other foreign worker
programs administered by the
Department, including the H–1B and H–
2B programs.
The Department acknowledges that
OES agricultural wage data is far from
perfect. Perhaps most significantly, as
several opposed commenters pointed
out, ‘‘BLS OES data do not include
wages paid by farms.’’ Rather, ‘‘[t]he
OES focuses on establishments that
support farm production, rather than
engage in farm production, and many of
these establishments are farm labor
contractors.’’ These commenters argued
that ‘‘[t]he employees of such non-farm
establishments constitute a minority of
the overall agricultural labor supply and
are not representative of the farm labor
supply.’’ They argued that this effect is
exacerbated by the fact that ‘‘BLS OES
results are obtained by using the results
of a separate BLS survey, the National
Compensation Survey (NCS),’’ which
‘‘does not survey any agricultural
establishments.’’
The Department is confident in the
quality of the agricultural workers wage
estimates calculated using the OES
survey, even with its lack of direct
coverage of agricultural establishments.
As noted by one major farm association,
‘‘the OES’s agricultural wage
information is based on data collected
from farm labor suppliers, individuals
who specialize in finding, pricing, and
placing agricultural workers with local
farm employers.’’ Indeed, workers
provided by farm labor suppliers are for
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most agriculture employers the closest
substitute for H–2A workers; both
represent an alternate labor source to
which an agricultural employer can turn
if it is unable to locate a sufficient
numbers of U.S. workers through its
own direct recruiting efforts.
Moreover, as one group of farmworker
advocacy organizations noted, the
USDA FLS shows that ‘‘[a]gricultural
service employees on farms and ranches
made up * * * about 30 percent of
hired workers.’’ Such workers appear to
be spread across virtually all
geographical areas and crop activities,
and 30 percent is certainly a statistically
valid sample size. Nonetheless, the
Department recognizes that it is
reasonable to consider the survey’s
nonfarm scope to be a shortcoming, and
the Department will work with BLS to
expand the coverage of the OES to
include agricultural establishments, in
keeping with recommendations from
various commenters, including such
disparate entities as growers’
associations and state workforce
agencies. One significant advantage of
the BLS OES is that because it is within
the control of the Department, it can be
refined and improved over time with
the specific needs of the H–2A program
in mind.
One opposed commenter argued that
the high concentration of FLCs in the
OES survey data will necessarily lead to
depressed AEWRs, because FLCs
employ disproportionately high
concentrations of undocumented
workers and typically pay their
employees low wages. If this assertion
was true, one would expect that average
OES wage rates for crop workers would
always be below, and in many cases
substantially below, the average FLS
wage rates. The data presented by this
commenter, however, show that this is
not the case. According to that data, the
average OES crop worker wage rates in
many States (although not in a majority
of States) are actually higher than
average FLS field worker wage rates,
including Idaho (12.16 percent higher),
Louisiana (13.3 percent higher), New
York (6.73 percent higher), Washington
(5.78 percent), and Virginia (5.45
percent higher). Louisiana, New York,
and Virginia are all in the top ten States
among H–2A users. Unsurprisingly,
because OES data is more refined than
FLS data, it produces wage rates that are
higher than FLS wage rates in some
places, and lower than FLS wage rates
in other places. For example, a recent
CRS Report found that FLS data ‘‘may
overestimate the wages of crop workers
and underestimate the wages of
livestock workers and farm equipment
operators.’’ CRS Report at 16. Because
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the OES survey disaggregates this wage
data, it would be expected that moving
from the FLS to the OES survey for the
calculation of AEWRs would result in
crop worker wage rates going down in
some places, and livestock and farm
equipment operator wages going up in
some places. In fact, this is precisely the
effect that the CRS Report concluded
was likely to occur. Id. at 15–17.
The data simply does not support the
picture painted by the commenter of an
OES survey producing wage rates that
are uniformly low and severely
depressed. Although the Department
assumes that it is true that the wages
paid to unauthorized workers are
reflected in some OES data, see CRS
Report at 18 (‘‘In labor markets with a
large concentration of unauthorized
farmworkers, wage data from the OES
survey may, to some extent, reflect the
wages paid to unauthorized workers.’’),
that is undoubtedly true of FLS data as
well. The PhD economist’s analysis
submitted by one commenter, for
example, found that ‘‘[a] second
limitation regarding the FLS is that
undocumented workers are no doubt in
the survey and their wage is used in the
calculation of AEWRs.’’ This does not
provide a sound basis for choosing
between the two surveys.
Some commenters questioned the
statistical reliability of OES wage
estimates for detailed geographic areas,
noting that more detailed areas have
reduced samples and high relative
standard errors. The Department’s
Foreign Labor Certification Data Center
takes data quality into account when
updating its Online Wage Library and
adjusts the geographic areas used to
derive wage estimates as needed to
ensure data reliability. A ‘‘GeoLevel’’
variable indicates the kind of
adjustment, if any, that has been made:
If the data used to calculate the wage
estimate came from the actual metropolitan
statistical area (MSA) or balance of state
(BOS) area the GeoLevel code will equal ‘‘1.’’
If there were no releasable estimates for the
desired area then the wages are for the area
indicated plus its contiguous areas. This is
signified by a GeoLevel ‘‘2.’’
If there were no releasable estimates for the
area, or for the area plus contiguous areas the
wage is calculated from statewide data,
indicated by a GeoLevel equaling ‘‘3.’’
Finally, if there is no releasable estimate
for the state, the national average is used.
This is indicated by GeoLevel ‘‘4.’’
The application of these statistically
sound methodologies takes into account
the fact that wage data in some local
labor markets is limited, and provides
the best wage rate approximations
available. No wage survey is perfect.
The OES accounts for those places
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where data is limited by borrowing
aggregate data to produce the best local
wage rate approximation possible. The
OES surely is not always precisely
correct as to the going wage rates for
every occupation in every geographic
locale, but its statistically sound
methodology will on the whole produce
wage rates that are far more refined and
accurate than the broad, region-based
FLS.
One commenter considered the
Department’s criticism of the multi-state
nature of the USDA surveys to be
misplaced: ‘‘[w]hile agricultural labor
markets for seasonal, labor-intensive
crops have a local component, an
interstate character to these markets
emerges in the presence of migratory
workers that move from State-to-State
and crop-to-crop.’’ The commenter went
on to note that ‘‘Broad regional wage
standards are appropriate in this
context, where more localized rates
might unfairly disadvantage workers
employed in areas with only a small
number of potential employers, who can
collude to keep wages low.’’ Even if the
commenter’s view about an interstate
market for wages of migratory workers
were correct, however, the current
structure of the AEWR offers no support
for the argument that the USDA survey
should be retained. The FLS’s regional
divisions bear virtually no resemblance
to any traditional interstate agricultural
markets or traditional migratory work
patterns or flows. Wage estimates from
the OES are well suited to capture
substate wage differences such that the
Department may tailor H–2A
certification decisions and required
wage rates to reflect local labor market
conditions.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations criticized the Department
for failing to provide a better
explanation of how AEWRs will be
calculated using OES data. The
calculation of OES wage rates is no great
mystery, as OES wage rates are currently
used for both the H–1B and H–2B
programs. A recent CRS report explains
how wage rates are determined using
FLS and OES survey data. See CRS
Report at 3–10. The underlying
statistical methodologies for
determining OES wage rates are, of
course, quite complex. Nevertheless, the
Department will attempt to distill the
process for determining wage rates
using both the FLS and the OES survey
here:
The FLS surveys between 11,000 and
13,000 farms and ranches each quarter
on multiple subjects, including the
number of hired farm workers, the gross
wages paid to workers, and their total
hours worked. Only farms and ranches
with value of sales of $1,000 or more are
within the scope of the survey. ‘‘Hired
farm workers’’ are defined as ‘‘anyone,
other than an agricultural service
worker, who was paid for at least one
hour of agricultural work on a farm or
ranch.’’ The survey seeks data on four
types of hired workers: field workers,
livestock workers, supervisors, and
other workers.
USDA, through the National
Association of State Departments of
Agriculture, uses four collection
methods for the FLS: mail, CATI
(computer-assisted telephone
interviews), personal visits (for larger
operations), and online (only about 2
percent of respondents). The FLS
sample is distributed across the entire
country; however, the geographic detail
covers just 15 multi-state regions and 3
stand alone states and thus is much
more limited than the OES survey. The
table below lists the sample size by
region.
QUARTERLY FARM LABOR SAMPLE
SIZE, BY REGION, 2008–09 1 (OCTOBER, JANUARY, AND APRIL) 2
Region
Sample
Northeast I ....................................
Northeast II ...................................
Appalachian I ................................
Appalachian II ...............................
Southeast ......................................
Florida ...........................................
Lake ..............................................
Corn Belt I ....................................
Corn Belt II ...................................
Delta .............................................
Northern Plains .............................
Southern Plains ............................
Mountain I .....................................
Mountain II ....................................
Mountain III ...................................
Pacific ...........................................
California .......................................
Hawaii ...........................................
U.S. ...............................................
570
498
546
654
588
604
846
840
672
534
846
960
354
309
263
526
1,329
404
11,343
1 Includes Ag Services for CA and FL
2 July sample is approximately 13,000
at
U.S. level.
Source: National Agricultural Statistics Service, USDA.
USDA calculates and publishes
average wage rates for four categories of
workers each quarter. Wage rates are not
Interval
Under $7.50 ...............................................................
$7.50 to $9.49 ...........................................................
$9.50 to $11.99 .........................................................
calculated and published for
supervisors or other workers, but just for
field workers, livestock workers, field
and livestock workers combined, and
total hired workers. Within the FLS, the
‘‘wage rates,’’ or average hourly wage,
by category are defined as the ratio of
gross wages to total hours worked. To
the extent workers receive overtime or
other types of incentive pay, the average
wage rate would exceed the workers
actual wage rate. Because the ratio of
gross pay to hours worked may be
greater than a workers’ actual wage rate,
other statistics agencies, such as BLS,
refer to the ratio as ‘‘average hourly
earnings,’’ and not as hourly wages or
wage rate.
The FLS-derived wage rate estimate
for the four categories is published
quarterly, and annual averages are
published as well. With wage
information on just two agricultural
occupation categories, the FLS has very
little occupational detail relative to
OES. The FLS also calculates average
wage rates in two other categories by
combining the average wages of other
types of workers. The Department uses
the regional annual average for the
category ‘‘field and livestock workers
combined’’ as the annual AEWR for
each state within a given geographic
region.
In contrast, the OES survey directly
collects a wage rate (within given
intervals) by occupations defined by the
Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) occupational classification
system, the Standard Occupational
Classification (SOC) system code.
Specifically, ‘‘wages for the OES survey
are straight-time, gross pay, exclusive of
premium pay. Base rate, cost-of-living
allowances, guaranteed pay, hazardousduty pay, incentive pay including
commissions and production bonuses,
tips, and on-call pay are included.
Excluded is back pay, jury duty pay,
overtime pay, severance pay, shift
differentials, nonproduction bonuses,
employer cost for supplementary
benefits, and tuition reimbursements.’’
The OES survey collects occupational
employment and wage data by means of
a matrix in which employers report the
number of employees in an occupation
and in a given wage range. The wage
intervals used for the May 2007
estimates are as follows:
Hourly wages
Range A ..........................................
Range B ..........................................
Range C ..........................................
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Annual wages
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Under $15,600
$15,600 to $19,759
$19,760 to $24,959
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Interval
Range
Range
Range
Range
Range
Range
Range
Range
Range
Hourly wages
D ..........................................
E ..........................................
F ..........................................
G ..........................................
H ..........................................
I ............................................
J ...........................................
K ..........................................
L ...........................................
$12.00
$15.25
$19.25
$24.50
$31.00
$39.25
$49.75
$63.25
$80.00
to $15.24
to $19.24
to $24.49
to $30.99
to $39.24
to $49.74
to $63.24
to $79.99
and over
The mean hourly wage rate for all
workers in any given wage interval
cannot be computed using grouped data
collected by the OES survey. Instead,
the mean hourly wage rate for each of
the 12 intervals is calculated using data
from BLS’s National Compensation
Survey (NCS). Although smaller than
the OES survey in terms of sample size,
the NCS program, unlike OES, collects
individual wage data.
Once the mean hourly wage rates for
the 12 intervals are determined, the
mean hourly wage rate for a given
occupation is calculated. It is defined
as:
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Total weighted wages that all workers in
the occupation earn in an hour/ total
weighted survey employment of the
occupation.
Because the OES wage data are collected
in intervals (grouped), it does not
capture the exact wage of each worker.
Therefore, some components of the
wage variance are approximated using
factors developed from NCS data. A
Taylor Series Linearization technique is
used to develop a variance estimator
appropriate for OES mean wage
estimates. The primary component of
the mean wage variance, which
accounts for the variability of the
observed OES sample data, is estimated
using the standard estimator of variance
for a ratio estimate. Within each wage
interval, there are also three types of
variance estimated from the NCS. They
represent the variability of the wage
value imputed to each worker; the
variability of wages across
establishments; and the variability of
wages within establishments. In short,
the estimates of OES relative standard
errors for wages take into account the
sampling error associated with OES
components of the wage estimator and
also error associated with the NCS
components of the estimator that are
used for the mean wages for each
interval.
The Department hopes this
explanation helps.
Some commenters critiqued the OES
survey as not being as timely as the FLS.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations claims that ‘‘OES is out of
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Annual wages
.......................................................
.......................................................
.......................................................
.......................................................
.......................................................
.......................................................
.......................................................
.......................................................
........................................................
$24,960 to $31,719
$31,720 to $40,039
$40,040 to $50,959
$50,960 to $64,479
$64,480 to $81,639
$81,640 to $103,749
$103,480 to $131,559
$131,560 to $166,399
$166,400 and over
date and harms U.S. workers.’’ It is true
that the lag between the survey
reference period and data publication
can be greater for OES than for FLS. But
such lag simply reflects the greater
scope of the OES survey, which collects
detailed employment and wage data
from approximately 200,000
establishments every six months. The
rolling three-year sample used in OES
reduces year-to-year volatility in the
wage estimates, and as a result, it is
highly unlikely that the one-year period
between the reference period and data
publication would result in
substantively different wage estimates if
the lag were reduced.
One commenter considered it
problematic that the OES reference
months are May and November, which
they said ‘‘may not be the best approach
if one is interested in farm workers.’’
This commenter’s presumption appears
to be that farm workers on payrolls in
some other unspecified months may
have higher wages than those during the
OES reference months. The Department
did not identify any evidence, however,
to support this hypothesis. The criticism
could be equally applied to the
reference months used in the USDA
FLS. Available data indicates that
virtually all workers are paid a constant
minimum hourly rate during their
tenure and are not paid different rates
in different months. Estimates from the
FLS do not show a clear cyclical pattern
in wage rates, suggesting that there is
little seasonal variation at an aggregate
level.
The Department has considered these
comments and re-examined the wage
surveys. Taking into account the pros
and cons of both surveys, the
Department concludes that the
advantages to the OES survey make it
the best data source available for
determining applicable wages in the H–
2A program. In fact, a recent CRS Report
found that the Department’s proposal to
use the OES survey to calculate AEWRs
would likely have precisely the effect
the Department intends it to. The report
concluded that ‘‘[u]nder the proposed
rule, the AEWR should more closely
reflect the wages of farmworkers in local
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labor markets.’’ CRS Report at 18.
Furthermore, in those local labor
markets where AEWRs are currently
above true market rates, and the Final
Rule’s new wage-setting methodology
therefore results in lower AEWRs, ‘‘the
rule should create an incentive for
employers to hire more H–2A, as
opposed to unauthorized, workers.’’ Id.
at 13. While the full impact of the new
wage-setting methodology cannot be
forecast with precision, id. at 18, the
Department on the whole believes that
these predicted changes will better
protect the wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers.
Therefore, the Final Rule adopts the
NPRM’s proposal to institute an
alternative methodology for determining
the AEWR that will more accurately
measure market-based wages by
occupation, skill level, and geographic
location. A more accurate and refined
AEWR methodology will produce an
AEWR that more closely approximates
actual market conditions, which will, in
turn, help protect the wages and
working conditions of U.S. workers.
Under the Final Rule, the Department
will utilize the BLS OES data instead of
USDA FLS data.
(h) The Department’s Decision To Set
Wages for Four Skill Levels
Independent of its decision to use the
OES survey to set AEWRs, the
Department has decided to take
advantage of the OES data feature that
allows wage levels for each
occupational category in each
geographic locale to be set at four skill
levels. The Department made this
decision for a variety of legal and policy
reasons.
First, the Department believes that it
is required by statute to supply wages at
the four separate skill levels. Section
212(p)(4) of the INA states that ‘‘[w]here
the Secretary of Labor uses, or makes
available to employers, a governmental
survey to determine the prevailing
wage, such survey shall provide at least
4 levels of wages commensurate with
experience, education, and the level of
supervision.’’ Although this provision
was enacted in the context of H–1B
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reform, it is the only paragraph in
Section 212(p) that does not reference
any specific immigration programs to
which it applies, and there is no
legislative history indicating that it was
meant to apply only to the H–1B
program. Although OES data is being
used in this particular instance to set
AEWRs, the provision on its face still
seems to apply, since the OES is ‘‘a
governmental survey to determine the
prevailing wage,’’ and since the
Department has decided to set AEWRs
at prevailing wage rates. Thus, the
Department believes that it is bound by
Section 212(p)(4) to offer four wage
levels.
Second, even if the Department were
not legally required by Section
212(p)(4), the provision does represent a
congressionally approved method for
setting prevailing wage rates. The
Department uses four wage levels both
in the H–1B program, which is limited
to skilled workers, and the H–2B
program, which primarily serves lowskilled jobs. The Department is thus
familiar with the administration of a
four-level wage system, and believes
that its use in these other programs has
proved successful.
Finally, the use of four wage levels
that are roughly tied to skills and
experience will add further precision to
the AEWRs, thus serving the
Department’s above-discussed
objectives. Although the four wage
levels are determined arithmetically
rather than by surveying the actual skill
levels of workers, the resulting wage
rates reflect the Department’s
experience that within occupational
categories, workers that are more skilled
and more experienced tend to earn
higher wages than those that are less
skilled and less experienced. This is
apparently Congress’s experience as
well, as it has expressly approved the
use of four wage levels when setting
prevailing wages.
The CRS Report on the Department’s
proposal, for example, found that the
Level I wage for agricultural equipment
operators is above the current AEWR in
many areas, and that the Level III and
Level IV wages for agricultural
equipment operators were generally
much higher. CRS Report at 17. The
Department believes that more highly
skilled and experienced agricultural
equipment operators generally are paid
higher wages than novice ones, and the
wage scale that will be used by the
Department thus seems fully
appropriate. Indeed, if the Department
failed to set higher adverse effect wage
rates jobs requiring greater skills and
experience, U.S. workers capable of
performing such jobs might find their
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‘‘true market’’ wages undercut by
employers’ ability to fill the jobs with
H–2A workers making merely average
wages.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations, as well as many other
commenters, argued that allowing
employers to pay wage rates that are
below the average for an occupational
category will necessarily adversely
affect U.S. workers. The purpose of the
four-tier wage system, however, is to
generate the best approximation
possible of the actual prevailing wage
rate for jobs requiring various levels of
experience or skill. When the required
wage rates are accurate, they do not
represent a below-average wage rate, but
rather represent the wage rate that is
prevailing for that particular kind of job.
Using a single average wage rate for all
jobs performed within a particular
occupational category ignores the fact
that certain jobs require higher levels of
experience and skill, and may adversely
affect U.S. workers who are capable of
performing such jobs. It is also worth
noting that Congress has directed that,
when determining prevailing wage
rates, the Department should ‘‘provide
at least 4 levels of wages commensurate
with experience, education, and the
level of supervision.’’ Although this
Final Rule is actually changing the
methodology for determining adverse
effect wage rates, the Department’s
determination to set AEWRs at locally
prevailing wage rates makes it fully
appropriate to borrow Congress’s
prescribed prevailing wage rate
methodology.
The same commenter objected that
the ‘‘proposed methodology for the
wage levels is purely an arithmetical
formula’’ and ‘‘does not relate to skills
or experience in agriculture.’’ It is true,
as the Department has already noted,
that the skills-based wage levels are not
determined by surveying the actual skill
level of workers, but rather by applying
an arithmetic formula. Congress has
explicitly endorsed the use of such an
arithmetic approach, however: ‘‘Where
an existing government survey has only
2 levels, 2 intermediate levels may be
created by dividing by 3, the difference
between the 2 levels offered, adding the
quotient thus obtained to the first level
and subtracting that quotient from the
last level.’’ INA sec. 212(p)(4). No
methodology for determining prevailing
wage rates will be perfect, but this
methodology is currently used in both
the H–1B and the H–2B programs.
Moreover, the recent CRS Report that
studied the Department’s proposal in
detail did not conclude that use of the
congressionally created arithmetic
formula is particularly problematic.
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The same commenter argued that the
use of four wage levels would be too
complicated for the Department to
administer. This comment ignores the
fact that the Department already
administers a four wage level system for
the H–1B and H–2B programs.
For purposes of clarity, and in
response to comments questioning the
application of a four-tiered wage system,
the Department has inserted text into
the Final Rule specifying how the four
H–2A wage levels will be applied. The
inserted language is substantially
similar to existing provisions
establishing the four skill levels for the
H–1B and H–2B programs, which most
commenters assumed would apply. The
four skill levels will afford the
Department and employers using the H–
2A program the same opportunity that
is available under other similar
programs administered by the
Department to more closely associate
the level of skill required for the job
opportunity. This skill level precision
complements the geographic and
occupational specificity of the OES
wage estimates. The Department
considers the lack of such precision to
be a shortcoming of the current AEWR.
There also appeared to be some
confusion among some of the
commenters who believe the NPRM
language allows an employer to choose
the level and the wage survey and
propose its ‘‘offered wage rate’’ to the
NPC for approval. That is not the case.
After reviewing the employer’s request
for a wage rate, including job
description and skill level, the
Department will compare the AEWR,
state and federal minimum wage, and
piece rate to determine the highest wage
applicable to the job opportunity
described in the employer’s request. The
Department will assign the appropriate
wage (the offered wage rate) to the
employer’s job opportunity and that
wage must be utilized in recruiting for
the position.
(i) Other Considerations Affecting the
Department’s Decision
Although the changes in wage rates
that will result from the Department’s
decision presumably will make local
AEWRs more reflective of actual local
labor market conditions, to counteract
the potential for wage reductions in
some areas, the Department has decided
to retain in the Final Rule the NPRM’s
proposal to use the future (effective July
24, 2009) FLSA minimum wage of $7.25
as the floor for any OES-derived AEWR.
This basic wage floor will provide a
fundamental protection to both foreign
temporary workers and U.S. workers
that will ensure that AEWRs cannot be
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lower than the new federal minimum
wage even though that wage will not be
legally required until 2009.
Moreover, even in those instances
where the use of OES data may result in
lower AEWRs for H–2A workers in the
short term as compared to the current
AEWR methodology, the Department is
confident that the wages and working
conditions of U.S. workers will be
protected because the total costs of
hiring H–2A workers are higher than the
hourly AEWR alone reflects, and
employers focus not only on wages
when making hiring decisions, but on a
workers’ total cost.10 The program
requirement that employers pay for H–
2A workers’ transportation and lodging,
as well as the administrative expense of
filing H–2A applications with several
different Government agencies, add
substantial additional costs to the
employment of H–2A workers. The
additional costs beyond wages
associated with utilization of foreign
labor under the H–2A program are an
important consideration that provides
significant protection for U.S.
workers.11 It is expected that U.S.
workers in similar occupations, with
similar skills and working in the same
locality, would likely be able to
command higher hourly wages than H–
2A workers and at least equivalent
benefits because the additional cost
considerations associated with
utilization of the H–2A program provide
an economic incentive for employers to
seek out and hire U.S. workers instead
of H–2A workers.12 And of course, U.S.
workers also have the protection of the
rule requiring agricultural employers to
first attempt to recruit U.S. workers
before they can employ H–2A
workers.13
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations commented that many
employers use piece rates abusively and
10 See
CRS Report at 18.
commenter pointed out that H–2A workers
are also relatively cheaper than U.S. workers in
some respects, because employers do not have to
pay Social Security or unemployment insurance
taxes for H–2A workers. On the whole, however,
the substantial costs to house and transport H–2A
workers, together with the not insignificant costs of
the application process, substantially exceeds these
savings, making H–2A workers on the whole more
expensive to employ than U.S. workers who are
being paid the same wage rates.
12 U.S. workers hired in response to recruitment
required by the H–2A program are entitled to at
least the same benefits received as those received
by H–2A workers.
13 A group of farm worker advocacy organizations
argued that the AEWR becomes the effective
maximum wage for U.S. workers. Available data
does not support this assertion, however. Indeed,
this same commenter stated that a Pennsylvania
tomato farmer paid his workers $16.59 an hour on
average, even though the 2008 AEWR in
Pennsylvania is only $9.70.
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11 One
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in a manner that undermines the AEWR.
Of course, as the commenter
acknowledges, piece rates cannot in and
of themselves lead to the payment of
sub-standard wages, since
§ 655.104(l)(2)(i) requires an employer
to supplement a piece-rate worker’s
effective hourly rate of pay to the level
of the applicable AEWR if the pay
would otherwise be less. This
commenter argued that many employers
avoid the obligation to supplement by
deliberately underreporting the number
of hours worked by piece-rate workers
during a pay period. Such fraud is
already clearly prohibited by the Final
Rule, however. The commenter also
argued that piece rates are abusive
because they ‘‘induce workers to higher
levels of productivity’’ by providing
‘‘the opportunity to earn more than the
worker would earn on an hourly rate.’’
The Department does not consider the
opportunity to earn average hourly
wages that are higher than the AEWR
through more industrious work to be
abusive; it is an opportunity to earn
higher pay, nothing more.14 If the
worker fails to earn enough under the
offered piece rate to meet the applicable
AEWR, the worker is not penalized for
it; to the contrary, as mentioned
previously, under such circumstances
the worker’s pay is required to be
supplemented to the level of the AEWR.
Of course, if the worker was in fact
penalized by the employer in some way
for failing to accomplish enough piece
rate work, the penalty would effectively
convert the piece rate into a
productivity standard. Such
productivity standards are policed
through § 655.104(l)(2)(ii) and (iii) of the
Final Rule, however, which require that
piece rates be no less than the piece
rates prevailing and that productivity
standards be normal, meaning that
productivity standards may not be
unusual for workers performing the
same activity in the area of intended
employment.
For the reasons discussed above with
respect to § 655.105(g) of the Final Rule,
the Department has inserted language in
this section specifying that employers
are required to adhere for the duration
of a work contract to the AEWR rate that
is in effect at the time recruitment for a
position is begun. Newly published
AEWRs shall not apply to ongoing
contracts, but only to new contracts the
recruitment for which is begun after the
publication of the new AEWR. The
14 The Department notes that the same
opportunity to earn average hourly rates of pay that
are above the AEWR must under the Final Rule be
offered to U.S. workers before it can be offered to
H–2A workers.
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Department has also added a new
§ 655.108(h) specifying that employers
are required to retain NPC wage
determinations for a period of three
years, which is consistent with the
general record keeping provisions of the
Final Rule. Other changes to the text of
this section in the Final Rule are nonsubstantive and were made for purposes
of clarity.
Section 655.109—Labor Certification
Determinations
(a) Section 655.109(b)—Timeframes for
Determination
The Department did not propose any
changes to the requirement that it issue
a determination on an application no
later than 30 calendar days before the
date of need. An individual employer
suggested that certifications should be
issued 60 to 90 days before the
employer’s date of need rather than the
30 days currently required. A State
government representative suggested the
CO should be required to issue the
determination by the earlier of 15 days
after receipt of a complete application or
30 days before the date of need to allow
USCIS and the State Department more
time to process a petition. A
professional association suggested no
more than 40 days and no less than 30
days before the date of need for issuance
of the final determination. An
association of growers/producers
recommended the timeframes should be
simplified and standardized to
encourage grower participation.
Specifically, it recommended the prefiling recruitment be conducted 90 days
prior to the date of need and approval
occur no later than 45 days prior to the
date of need.
The requirement that, if an
application is timely filed, complete and
approvable, or is modified to be
approvable within the statutory
timeframes, the Department issue a
certification no later than 30 days prior
to the date of need, is statutory and
cannot be changed by regulation. While
employers can file earlier in
anticipation of their date of need,
statutory limitations prevent the
Department from requiring employers to
file any more than 45 days before their
date of need. The Department believes
the adjustments made to recruitment
and filing timeframes adequately
address the issue of filing times.
Employers are encouraged to file as
early as possible and to take care that
their submitted applications are
complete to minimize potential delays.
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(b) Section 655.109(b)—Criteria for
Determination
The Department included a provision
in the NPRM to outline the criteria upon
which a determination is made. As
commenters noted, however, the criteria
stated in this provision were redundant
of other provisions in the regulation.
The Department has accordingly revised
this provision to eliminate unnecessary
duplication within the rule, which
could have caused confusion among
program applicants.
(1) Labor Disputes—§ 655.109(b)(4)(i)
Two associations of growers
commented on the certification criteria
in proposed § 655.109(b)(4)(i). These
commenters stated that labor disputes in
agricultural employment are not
covered by the National Labor Relations
Act and, therefore, there is no official
process for determining the existence of
a labor dispute. The proposed language
in § 655.109(b)(4)(i) of the NPRM was
intended to replicate the language in the
current regulations at § 655.103(a),
which examines whether the ‘‘specific’’
job opportunity for which the employer
is requesting H–2A certification is
vacant because ‘‘the former occupant’’ is
on strike or being locked out in the
course of a labor dispute. That provision
was carefully crafted to bar only
certification of the single job
opportunity vacated by each particular
worker who went on strike or was
locked out, and not all jobs requested to
be certified. However, proposed
§ 655.109(b)(4)(i) was in conflict with
proposed § 655.105(c). The Department
has removed the language in § 655.109
of the NPRM regarding labor disputes
because of the redundancy and overlap
with the labor dispute provision in
§ 655.105. As explained in the
discussion of § 655.105(c), the
Department has also reverted in
§ 655.105(c) to the language concerning
labor disputes that is found in the
current regulations. The Department
believes these changes adequately
address the comments on this provision.
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(2) Job Opportunity—§ 655.109(b)(4)(vi)
A professional association
commented that the job requirements,
combinations of duties, or other factors
that may make a specific application
unique should be acceptable if justified
by business necessity. This association
asserted that nothing in the INA
requires that a specific employer
perform any job in exactly the same way
as other employers perform the job. An
association of growers/producers agreed
and also pointed out that under the
proposed provisions a grower using
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technology not yet considered normal
practice could be denied H–2A workers
due to its job requirements and/or
combination of duties.
As is explained above in the
discussion of § 655.104(b), the
Department agrees that, as a general
matter, employers are in a far better
position than the Department to assess
what job duties workers at a particular
establishment in a particular area can
reasonably be required to perform. The
Department has therefore altered
§ 655.104(b) to conform more closely to
the language of the statute, and has
limited its application to job
qualifications. Where a listed job duty
serves as a de facto job qualification
because the listed duty requires skills or
experience that agricultural workers do
not typically possess, however, the
Department reserves the right under
§ 655.104(b) to treat the listed job duty
as a job qualification, and to apply the
‘‘normal’’ and ‘‘accepted’’ standard that
is set forth in the statute and
recapitulated in the regulations in
determining whether the qualification is
appropriate. Because § 655.104(b) of the
Final Rule contains the Final Rule’s
restrictions on job duties and job
qualifications, § 655.109(b)(4)(vi) of the
NPRM has been eliminated as
redundant.
(3) Extrinsic Evidence
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations suggested the regulation
should be clear that the CO can consider
extrinsic evidence in making a final
determination. The organization
believed the CO should be able to deny
certification to an employer who has
engaged in violations of employmentrelated laws whether or not there has
been a final finding to that effect and
whether or not the employer has
previously participated in the H–2A
program. The commenter also suggested
that if the CO has reason to doubt the
accuracy of any of the attestations or
assurances, the CO should have the
authority to request additional
information and the authority to deny
the certification. In the same vein, the
commenter recommended the
regulations should include a process by
which the CO will receive and consider
supplemental information from SWAs,
workers and others.
The Department does not agree that
adding explicit language to provide the
CO with authority to consider extrinsic
evidence is necessary. The Final Rule
allows for certification to be based
solely on the criteria outlined in
§ 655.107(a). Adding a process for the
provision of extrinsic evidence would
create an adversary process for the
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granting of a benefit, with COs at a loss
as to how to evaluate such evidence in
the context of the application and
unable to evaluate its authenticity,
particularly in light of the tight statutory
timeframes given to the Department to
adjudicate applications. Workers who
are affected by an agricultural clearance
order have a complete process in 20
CFR Part 658, subpart E (incorporated
by reference in § 655.116) through
which to submit and obtain resolution
of their complaints. Anyone having
information bearing upon an H–2A
employer may avail themselves of the
protections contained within these
regulations and all other mechanisms,
such as filing a complaint with WHD.
Following these procedures will ensure
that the Department receives the
information in a way in which it can be
most useful.
(c) Section 655.109(d)—Accepting
Referrals of U.S. Workers
A large association of agricultural
employers suggested that the proposed
regulations and the Final Determination
letter should clarify that the obligation
to continue to accept referrals of eligible
U.S. workers continues only until the
employer has accepted the number of
referrals of eligible U.S. workers equal
to the number job openings on the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification. The Department agrees
with this statement and has included
new language to that effect in
§ 655.109(d). The Department has also
modified the provision to conform to
the Final Rule’s new definition of the
‘‘end of the recruitment period’’ that is
set forth in § 655.102(f)(3).
(d) Section 655.109(e)—Denial Letters
A major trade association pointed out
the proposed regulation at § 655.109(e)
states that if the certification is denied
the Final Determination letter will state
‘‘the reasons the application is not
accepted for consideration.’’ The
association commented it was their
presumption this language was used
inadvertently but asked for clarification
if its use was intentional. The
Department’s use of the language ‘‘not
accepted for consideration’’ was, in fact,
inadvertent. Section 655.109(e) has now
been revised to read: ‘‘the reasons
certification is denied.’’ The Final Rule
also clarifies that the Department will
send determination letters to employers
‘‘by means normally assuring next-day
delivery,’’ which may include e-mail or
fax.
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(e) Sections 655.109(e), (f), and (g)—
Appeal Process for Denied and Partial
Certifications
The proposed regulation did not
explicitly reference appeal procedures
in either the Denied Certification
(§ 655.109(e)) or Partial Certification
(§ 655.109(f)) provisions. Although the
proposed ‘‘Administrative review and
de novo hearing’’ procedures (§ 655.115)
do reference a decision by the CO to
deny, a major trade association
commented that the regulation should
be clarified by specifying the appeal
procedures in § 655.109. The
Department appreciates this comment
and has inserted text in paragraphs
655.109(e), 655.109(f), and 655.109(g)
stating that the final determination letter
will provide the procedures for appeal
in either situation. Employers should be
aware that, if a partial certification is
received, only the period of need or the
availability of U.S. workers are at issue
and thus subject to appeal.
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(f) Partial Certifications—§ 655.109(f)
The proposed regulations contained a
provision at § 655.109(f) for partial
certifications. The provision stated that
‘‘the CO may, in his/her discretion, and
to ensure compliance with all regulatory
requirements, issue a partial
certification, reducing either the period
of need or the number of H–2A workers
being requested or both for certification,
based upon information the CO receives
in the course of processing the
temporary labor certification
application, an audit, or otherwise.’’
Although the current regulations at
§ 655.106(b)(1) do not contain the
phrase ‘‘partial certification,’’ they do
provide that the Administrator/OFLC
shall grant the temporary agricultural
labor certification request ‘‘for enough
H–2A workers to fill the employer’s job
opportunities for which U.S. workers
are not available.’’ A farmworker/
community advocacy organization
voiced its concern that the deletion of
the language in the current regulation
and the addition of language providing
for discretionary partial certifications
violates the statutory precondition for
certification that the employer not have
U.S. workers available to fill its job
opportunities. This organization
expressed the opinion that the new
language would allow employers to
import more foreign labor than they
actually needed.
The Department has retained the
provision regarding partial
certifications, with one modification.
The Department believes that the
language describing partial certifications
provides more clarity regarding the
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process of obtaining a certification
where the Department determines that
fewer workers than were originally
requested in the application are
required. A lack of available U.S.
workers is a necessary precondition to
filing an application. Allowing a partial
certification covers situations where the
employer recruited for a need of X
workers, finds sufficient workers to
meet only a part of its need, and thus
still needs X workers minus the number
of workers successfully recruited. An
employer who finds sufficient workers
to meet its entire need cannot, by statute
and this pre-filing recruitment model,
receive a certification. The Department
retains the authority to reduce the
number of positions requested in the
event the information contained in the
application demonstrates an availability
of workers who were eligible and
applied for the position. Since a partial
certification is issued by subtracting the
number of available workers from the
total number of workers requested, the
Department does not believe this
provision will allow employers to
import more workers than they actually
need. To make it clear that the
deduction of able, willing, qualified,
and available U.S. workers is nondiscretionary, the Department has added
language to the provision stating that
‘‘[t]he number of workers certified shall
be reduced by one for each referred U.S.
worker who is qualified, able, available,
and willing.’’
A major trade association commented
that the proposed provision has no
counterpart in the existing regulations
and that the Department articulates no
rationale for why such a provision is
necessary or how it will ensure
compliance. The association
recommended the provision be deleted
from the final regulations. The
association also expressed concern that
there was no due process for an
employer whose application was
arbitrarily changed. This association
believed the CO should issue a Notice
of Deficiency, require the submission of
a modification and offer an appeal
process.
As explained above, the ability to
issue a partial certification is necessary
where the Department receives an
application with respect to which
eligible and qualified U.S. workers have
been or are subsequently successfully
recruited prior to certification. A
modification process is one option the
Department considered to address such
a situation, but given the likely time
frame of filing by employers, a
modification would often not be
possible. In response to the comment
regarding an appeal process, the
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Department has added language
regarding appeal provisions to this
provision in the Final Rule.
(g) Proposed § 655.109(g), New
§ 655.109(h)—Fees for Certified
Applications
The Department proposed the
following new fee structure: an
application fee of $200 for each
employer receiving a temporary
agricultural labor certification plus $100
for each H–2A worker certified; an
application fee of $200 for each
employer-member of a joint employer
association receiving a certification plus
$100 for each H–2A worker certified for
that employer-member; and a processing
fee of $100 for any amendments
accepted for processing plus $100 for
each additional H–2A worker certified.
The proposal did not set a cap on the
amount of fees to be charged as
provided in the current regulations. The
Department received numerous
comments about the proposed fees.
Many of the commenters acknowledged
that an increase was warranted but
strongly objected to the amount of the
increase. Several commenters requested
a justification for the amount of the
increase and further detail regarding the
activities and related costs involved in
processing since the Department stated
in the preamble to the proposed rule
that it was updating the fees to align
with ‘‘the reasonable costs of
processing’’ H–2A applications, as
authorized by the INA. Also in this
context, commenters questioned why
the fees would increase to such an
extent since the Department was
proposing to improve and increase
access to the H–2A program. One
association of growers/producers
recommended that the Department
determine a more reasonable processing
fee and explore adding to those
revenues from another source rather
than seeking to recover processing costs
through processing fees. A State
government agency suggested that fees
should be used to fund program costs
incurred by the SWA instead of being
deposited in the Treasury. Another
commenter asserted that under the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the
application and processing of the
application for H–2A temporary workers
who are Mexican citizens must be free
of charge and, therefore, employers
seeking to employ such nonimmigrant
workers should not be charged
processing fees.
A number of associations of growers/
producers, a trade association, and
several individual employers
commented that the increased fees
would add to the cost of an already
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expensive program and, if the
application process is to become more
efficient as proposed, believed a fee
increase would be counterproductive.
Some commenters stated the increase in
fees, when coupled with other increased
costs, could drive farmers out of
business or dissuade many from
participating in the program at all.
Another association of growers/
producers suggested the fee structure
should take into consideration all of the
fees growers must pay and suggested a
fair compromise would be to reduce the
fees for farmers using H–2A workers,
ask workers to pay for costs incurred in
traveling to the U.S. port of entry closest
to the employer, and require the
employer to bear the costs from the
point of entry to the farm. A trade
association also commented that many
growers utilize workers for a short
period only and that they believed
under the proposed regulations a
grower’s cost for 10 H–2A workers
would increase to $10,000 in
application fees and the total cost could
rise to almost $20,000 before any
revenue would be gained through
harvesting of the crop.
Several commenters offered specific
suggestions for setting the fee amounts.
One association of growers/producers
suggested that any increase in fees
should be tied to the cost of inflation or
the consumer price index and not
related to the cost of processing. A
United States Senator and others stated
a doubling of the fees would be
acceptable. One individual employer/
farmer suggested the fees should remain
at current levels. A trade association
commented that fees should be based on
the number of employers certified rather
than the number of applications.
Many commenters specifically
requested the inclusion of a cap on the
amount of fees and commented that the
elimination of a cap might cause
participants to abandon the program.
Following consideration of all the
comments, the Department has decided
to retain the current fee structure rather
than that proposed in the NPRM. At this
time, the Department believes that it is
of utmost importance to increase
accessibility to the program and
recognizes that the proposed increase in
fees could have discouraged both
potential new users and current users of
the program. Accordingly, the
Department has reverted to the current
fee structure for both employers and for
associations. Moreover, the increased
fee would not have helped the program
operate more efficiently at this time
because the H–2A fees received by the
Department are, pursuant to statute,
deposited directly in the Treasury as
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miscellaneous receipts. Any change in
that requirement would require a
statutory change by Congress.
The Department may, in the future,
revisit the fee structure and propose
changes in the amount of the processing
fees. The Department appreciates the
many comments received requesting
additional information on the actual
costs involved in the processing of
applications and finds these requests to
be reasonable. Since the Department is
changing the program to an attestationbased process, it does not have
experience with the actual operation of
the program under the new process and,
therefore, agrees that it should not
revise fees until cost information using
the new model is available.
As noted above, the Department has
decided to retain the current fee
structure, which includes a limit on the
fee amount to be paid by one employer.
The Department agrees with the
commenters and believes a cap on fees
paid by an applicant is appropriate and
should be included in any future
proposal. The failure to include such a
cap in this proposal was an oversight.
The Department also received
comments on the proposed $100
processing fee for an amendment,
coupled with a fee of $100 for each
additional H–2A worker certified on the
amendment. A trade association noted
that amendments to applications can be
for many reasons, including increasing
the number of workers requested,
adjusting the date of need, and making
minor technical amendments to the
application. It commented further that
while it is reasonable to charge the
additional certification fee for an
amendment to increase the number of
workers in order to avoid creating a
disincentive for understating the
number of workers on the original
application, it is not reasonable to
charge a fee for other amendments,
including minor technical amendments.
The parenthetical phrase ‘‘(except
joint employer associations)’’ was
clarified in the Final Rule by replacing
it with ‘‘(except joint employer
associations, which shall not be
assessed a fee in addition to the fees
assessed to the members of the
association).’’
In keeping with the retention of the
current fee structure, no fee for
amendments is included in the final
regulation.
Section 655.110—Validity and Scope of
Temporary Labor Certifications
Several minor, non-substantive
changes were made to the language of
this provision for purposes of clarity
and to conform to other provisions of
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the Final Rule. All substantive changes
to the text of this provision are
addressed below.
(a) Scope of Validity—Associations—
§ 655.110(c)
The Department made no changes in
the proposed regulation regarding
certifications provided to associations
acting as joint employers. A
farmworker/community advocacy
organization suggested that the
Department should include language
currently in the H–2A Program
Handbook limiting such applications
(and certifications) to those involving
‘‘virtually identical job opportunities.’’
The Department declines to adopt this
suggestion. The governing statute
expressly provides at § 218(d)(1) of the
INA for the filing of H–2A applications
by associations of agricultural
producers, but does not provide a
‘‘virtually identical’’ limitation.
Individual employers are permitted
under the current regulations to offer job
opportunities with a variety of nonidentical job duties, and the Department
has seen no evidence that this has
adversely affected U.S. workers.
Section 655.104(b) of the Final Rule
limits the job qualifications that
employers may impose to those that are
normal and accepted qualifications
required by non H–2A employers in the
same or comparable occupations and
crops. Where a combination of job
duties or job opportunities serves as a
de facto job qualification because the
listed duties and opportunities require
skills or experience that agricultural
workers do not typically possess, the
Department reserves the right under
§ 655.104(b) to treat the listed job duties
or job opportunities as job
qualifications, and to apply the
‘‘normal’’ and ‘‘accepted’’ standard that
is set forth in the statute and
recapitulated in the regulations. The
Department believes that this framework
is most consistent with the statute and
will adequately protect U.S. workers
from adverse effects.
(b) Redetermination of Need—Section
655.110(e)
The proposed regulations omitted the
provision in current regulations
allowing employers to request an
expedited ‘‘redetermination of need’’ if
a labor certification is denied, or a
partial certification is granted, because
U.S. workers are available and,
subsequent to the denial or partial
certification, the U.S. workers identified
as available are no longer available. The
Department received several comments
objecting to the deletion of this
provision and requesting its inclusion in
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the final regulations. Two commenters
pointed out the requirement in Section
218(e) of the INA mandating a new
determination within 72 hours in cases
of unavailability. A trade association
also mentioned that Congress was
sufficiently concerned about the failure
of domestic workers to report that it
included a heavy obligation on the
Department to re-establish need. Others
commented that the need for a
redetermination procedure is even
greater since the pre-filing recruitment
efforts will put job commitments farther
in advance of the dates of need and
thereby increase the likelihood of U.S.
workers not reporting. A trade
association provided data from a farmer
to illustrate the need for a process for
redetermination and also described a
procedure they would like implemented
wherein U.S. workers referred by the
SWA would be asked to sign a form
indicating their intention to return for
work on the date of need and to work
for the duration of the contract. The goal
of this process would be to not have the
number of jobs certified be reduced by
the total number of referrals but rather
by the number of workers who signed
the form.
In response to the comments, the
Department has included a new section,
§ 655.110(e), addressing the procedures
for requesting a redetermination of
need. The Department appreciates the
suggestion for an additional requirement
for U.S. workers to sign a form stating
they will report to work but has
determined such a requirement does not
appear likely to alleviate the problem of
‘‘no-shows’’ among the U.S. worker
population the employers seek to
address. The Department, therefore, did
not add the requirement.
A trade association also posed a
question about handling a situation
where the employer obtains sufficient
commitments from qualified U.S.
workers for the job opportunity during
the pre-filing recruitment and is
precluded from filing an application but
subsequently learns that some of these
workers will not honor their
commitments. Since no application was
filed, technically, the employer in this
situation would not be able to request a
redetermination. The association
claimed the Congress clearly did not
intend to leave employers without an
adequate workforce and stated it is
incumbent upon the Department to
accommodate employers who are in this
situation.
While the Department agrees it is
unlikely Congress intended that
employers should be left without an
adequate workforce, the Department
cannot add a provision to allow an
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employer who does not submit an
application due to the availability of
able, willing and qualified U.S. workers
sufficient to meet their needs, but who
subsequently discovers that not all the
workers will be able to honor their
commitments, to request an expedited
redetermination. The Department lacks
such authority under the INA; Section
218(e)(2) of the INA only authorizes the
Secretary to make such expedited
determinations for a certification that
was denied in whole or in part because
of the availability of qualified workers.
However, The Department will permit
an employer to file an application
requesting that zero job opportunities be
certified for H–2A employment because
the employer has been able to recruit a
sufficient number of U.S. workers. Such
applications must comply with other
requirements for H–2A applications to
be considered complete and must be
supported by a recruitment report, in
which case the application will be
denied. Such a denial will provide no
immediate benefit to the employer, but
the employer will thereafter be
permitted under the statute and
regulations to request an emergency
reconsideration of the denial should the
U.S. workers fail to show up or later
abscond, leaving the employer with a
rejuvenated need for H–2A workers.
Language to this effect has been added
to § 655.107(a) of the Final Rule.
Section 655.111—Required Departure
The Department included language in
the NPRM explaining the relationship
between the labor certification’s validity
period and the foreign worker’s period
of stay in the U.S. and informing
employers of their obligation to notify
H–2A workers who begin employment
with them of the worker’s responsibility
to register their departure if and when
required by the DHS. A trade
association questioned the inclusion of
this section in the Department’s
regulations. This association
commented that it has no bearing on
either the issue of the availability of
U.S. workers, or whether the
employment of aliens will adversely
affect U.S. workers, the two issues
which are within the statutory purview
of the Department. A professional
association commented that the
Department’s language in the proposed
§ 655.111 did not allow for transit time
for workers after the expiration of the
labor certification and was, therefore, in
conflict with the USCIS requirements
which provide a specified period of
time after expiration of the labor
certification before departure from the
country is required.
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The Department believes the
provision is useful, as it strikes at the
heart of the relationship between the
Department’s findings and the entry of
workers to fulfill the terms of the labor
certification. This provision does not
usurp any role held under the statute by
another agency; it merely emphasizes
for the employer its obligation to notify
workers to return home at the end of
their authorized period of stay.
Moreover, the Department does have an
interest in ensuring that H–2A workers
return to their home country at the end
of their authorized work period, as they
would otherwise become
undocumented workers inside the
United States. As described in the
discussion of § 655.108, undocumented
workers compete with U.S. workers for
agricultural job openings without any of
the protections associated with the H–
2A program applying, and thus are
likely to have an adverse effect on the
wages and working conditions of U.S.
workers.
The Department does agree, however,
with the comment regarding the lack of
clarity in the language used in the
proposed rule. The Department notes
that DHS provisions (in current
regulations) require the worker be given
a period of 10 days of valid status
beyond the validity period of the labor
certification in which to depart, and has
extended that time to 30 days in their
recent companion H–2A rulemaking.
We have revised the regulation to
acknowledge this period granted by
DHS, to provide greater certainty for
both employer and worker.
Section 655.112—Audits and Referrals
In the NPRM, the Department
proposed the initiation of postcertification audits of applications to
ensure quality control, to review
compliance, and to identify abusers of
the program, among other goals. The
Department received several comments
on these audit provisions.
One commenter felt that there was no
policy or legal rationale given by the
Department for this new system that
includes audits. The Department
believes that a sufficient policy rationale
for the necessity of audits was provided
in the NPRM. Reviewing the
documentation attached to and
supporting the attestations made by an
employer in the context of an H–2A
application is an essential element of
the shift of the program to an
attestation-based certification system.
The Department, to protect the basic
integrity of the process of H–2A
certifications, must ensure the
applications are filed in accordance
with the basic obligations of the
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program. The Department has the
authority to enforce program
responsibilities with respect to those
who seek its benefits, and in particular
with respect to those who receive them.
The audit provides reassurance to the
employer, the Department, and the
affected employees that all program
obligations are understood and
followed.
Another commenter stated that 30
days to respond to the audit request was
not enough time during growing season.
The Department does not believe that
audit requests will be so burdensome
that they cannot be complied with
relatively quickly as long as the
employer has retained the required
documentation contemporaneously with
performing the required actions, such as
keeping the tear sheet of the advertising,
and retaining the final recruitment
report. To partially address this
commenter’s concern, however,
language has been added to the Final
Rule specifying that employers will be
provided at least 14 days to comply
with an audit request.
A SWA suggested that every
application be audited and some SWAs
suggested they should participate in
audits, and should be provided funds to
do so. The Department declines to
delegate the audit function to the SWAs.
Audits will be conducted by the
Department based on the presence or
absence of certain criteria, as well as on
a random basis to ensure program
integrity. Moreover, dispersing audit
activity among SWAs, would be at odds
with the re-engineering of the H–2A
process. SWAs will no longer possess
the underlying documentation
necessary to adequately evaluate the
audit factors that will be built into the
new program.
One commenter stated that ‘‘nonprogram’’ participants should not be
included in the audit process. The
Department believes participation by
others in the audit process would be
disruptive to program operations and
therefore declines to add such a
provision in the Final Rule.
A farm worker advocacy organization
expressed the belief that the proposed
increase in audits and penalties would
not adequately address concerns related
to worker protections and remarked the
penalties would come too late in the
process to benefit U.S. workers
searching for work.
The Department believes, on the
contrary, that the audit process will
address concerns about worker
protections. The Department will audit
applications based on selected criteria
as well as on a random basis. Worker
protections are at the root of the H–2A
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program and will provide many of the
criteria for audits. In addition, WHD’s
investigative authority is an additional
and comprehensive tool to address these
concerns and benefit U.S. workers. U.S.
workers, additionally, have at their
disposal a complaint system (found in
the Job Service Complaint system
regulations at 20 CFR 658 et seq.) to
address complaints arising from
agricultural job orders, such as an
improper failure to accept a referral. The
use of all such tools will help to ensure
employer compliance with the
requirements of the program.
Another commenter stated that the
penalties enumerated will do little to
deter abuses and that the Department
should consider the complementary tool
of civil money penalties for lesser
violations found in the audit process.
The Department cannot assess civil
monetary penalties without statutory
authority to do so.
One commenter stated that the
enumerated penalties are so severe that
farmers could go out of business and
that employers should therefore be
informed, in detail and in advance,
about the methods, criteria and scope on
which these audits and potential
sanctions will be based. In addition to
the explanation of the audit procedures
and sanctions already provided in the
Rule, the Department will develop
materials for employers to assist them in
understanding the various aspects of the
program, including audits. However, the
Department cannot reveal its audit
criteria, which must be kept
confidential to ensure program integrity.
One commenter suggested that the
Department conduct pre-audit
inspections of applications and issue a
notice of violations so that there is an
opportunity to correct mistakes without
penalty. The Department will be
reviewing applications prior to
certification (and thus prior to any
potential audit) as part of the approval
process, and intends to issue Notices of
Deficiency when such correctable
deficiencies are found. We cannot,
however, complete full audits in the 15
day statutory window the Department is
afforded to review and certify
applications.
Many commenters expressed
skepticism about enforcement, saying
the Department’s prior enforcement in
the H–2A arena has not been as vigorous
as they would like. One commenter also
doubted the ability of adjudicators to
discover fraud and did not believe that
sufficient resources existed to
accomplish this function.
This Rule introduces new
enforcement measures, such as
certification revocation, and new
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grounds for the Department to impose
sanctions to more effectively address
violations of the terms and conditions of
the labor certification. Accordingly, the
Department will have greater flexibility
than under the current regulation to
initiate and impose sanctions.
Additionally, the Department has
assigned dedicated resources for these
enforcement and compliance activities.
Several commenters opined that the
rule will not prevent international
recruitment system abuses. The
Department has little control over
international recruitment system abuses
unless U.S. employers or their agents
are involved. The new rule allows the
Department to sanction the U.S. parties
involved in abuses.
One commenter believed that the
Department should create a new
division within ETA to conduct audits
and report to the Secretary on the
efficacy of the H–2A program. A new
division is unnecessary as the audits
will be undertaken in connection with
OFLC program operations and, as noted
above, the Department has assigned
additional resources to perform the
audit function.
A farm bureau offered a rewrite of
§ 655.112, believing that audits should
only be conducted on the recruitment
portion of the application and
employers should be told specifically
what criteria could lead to an audit. We
thank the commenter for its detailed
analysis of the audit requirements, but
we do not agree with its premise that
audits should be limited to the
recruitment portion of the application.
The Department has been consistent in
its refusal to disclose its audit criteria in
its foreign labor programs; it cannot
disclose these without risking the very
integrity of the programs. The Final
Rule delineates more clearly which
documents employers are required to
retain during the document retention
period, and any of these documents may
be requested during an audit.
Other changes to the language of this
provision are minor and nonsubstantive, and were made for
purposes of clarity, to insert crossreferences, or to conform to changes
made elsewhere in the Final Rule. For
example, the reference to auditing of
denied applications has been deleted to
reflect the decision not to require
employers whose applications are
denied to retain records, explained in
the discussion of § 655.102(c). Similarly,
the statement that an employer’s
obligation to comply with the
Department’s audit process includes
‘‘providing documentation within the
specified time period’’ has been deleted
as superfluous, as the consequences of
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an employer’s failure to comply with
the audit process are now more
explicitly addressed in §§ 655.117 and
655.118.
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Section 655.113–H–2A Applications
Involving Fraud or Willful
Misrepresentation
The NPRM proposed a new § 655.113,
creating a process whereby a finding of
fraud or willful misrepresentation
would result in termination of
processing of current applications.
One commenter expressed concern
that proposed § 655.113 did not go far
enough to give the CO explicit authority
to deny an application because of
suspected fraud or factual inaccuracy.
The commenter suggested that the
regulation should set forth a process
that allows SWAs, workers, and others
to send in information and allow the CO
to consider such documentation. The
same commenter feared that without a
definition of ‘‘possible fraud or willful
misrepresentation’’ that the Department
will only use a criminal standard of
guilt and thereby allow many employers
who engage in lesser fraud to go
unsanctioned. The Department agrees
and will define such terms and evidence
to be used in policy guidance rather
than in the rule itself. The Department
declines to permit COs to deny
applications based solely on suspicion
of wrongdoing. Such an undefined
standard fails to put program users on
notice of what is expected of them. The
CO must articulate the specific criteria
the applicant failed to meet and which
resulted in the application being denied,
as explained in § 655.109(e).
Another commenter believed that it is
unfair to put the full burden on the
employer for employing undocumented
workers if the employer has limited
capacity to verify the legality of the
worker documents and whether or not
they are fraudulent.
The rule is not meant to and will not
punish the employer for complying with
the requirements in the I–9 form to
verify employment eligibility. There is
nothing in the Department’s regulation
that would impose liability on an
employer for unknowingly accepting
fraudulent documents that appear
authentic.
The Department has added language
to this provision in the Final Rule
clarifying that ‘‘[i]f a certification has
been granted, a finding under
[§ 655.113(b)] will be cause to revoke
the certification.’’ Paragraph (b) of the
NPRM has been deleted in the Final
Rule as unnecessary and redundant.
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Section 655.114—Setting Meal Charges;
Petition for Higher Meal Charges
In the NPRM, the Department
outlined the procedures for employers
to petition to charge more than the
established amount for meals and for
appealing the denial of such a petition.
In the Final Rule, the Department has
revised the section to more clearly
address both the establishment of the
annual allowable meal charge amount
and the procedures for petitioning for a
higher amount. One commenter noted
that the allowable amount published in
the NPRM was out-of-date. This
commenter is correct and the
Department has updated the amount in
the Final Rule. Another commenter
requested that the Department define
‘‘representative pay period’’ as used in
§ 655.114(b). The Department believes
that no further definition is necessary
since the term ‘‘representative’’ is
commonly defined to mean ‘‘typical.’’ In
addition, the header for this section has
been changed to indicate both topics
that are discussed.
In addition, this section has been
revised for clarity in the Final Rule. The
language about petitions for higher meal
charges has been removed from the first
sentence of paragraph (a). All material
about petition for higher meal charges is
found in paragraph (b). The effective
date provision concerning granted
petitions for higher meal charges has
been separated out and provided its
own paragraph in order to enable
employers to more easily understand
when the higher meal charge applies.
The material on the procedures for
appealing denied petitions has been
moved from proposed paragraph (a) to
a new paragraph (c). A new sentence
has also been added to the end of
paragraph (a) reminding employers that
all deductions for meal charges under
this provision must comply with the
FLSA’s recordkeeping requirements,
which will become relevant if the
deductions bring the employee’s hourly
wages below the federal minimum
wage.
Section 655.115—Administrative
Review and De Novo Hearing Before an
Administrative Law Judge
The NPRM contained a provision
setting out the procedure by which an
employer could request a review on the
record of a certification denial,
including a de novo hearing. The
Department received several comments
on this section.
One commenter requested that copies
of certified case files should be
delivered to the employer within two
business days. This would require the
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additional expense for overnight courier
service, and the Department declines to
adopt such a requirement. The
Department also notes that an employer
would be expected to already possess
copies of all of the relevant documents
relating to his application.
The same commenter suggested that
the rule be amended to include explicit
language that hearings for debarments
are available and specify the procedures
for them, and state that all relevant
documents and other evidentiary
material, including exculpatory
evidence, must be provided to the
employer. The Department has adopted
the suggestions of the commenter but
has done so outside of § 655.115. Given
the severity of debarment and
revocation, the short timeframes set
forth in § 655.115 are neither necessary
nor appropriate for these types of
determinations. Accordingly, the
Department has addressed the
administrative appeals procedures for
debarment and revocation in § 655.118
and § 655.117, respectively. Under the
Final Rule, debarment decisions are
stayed pending the outcome of any
requested administrative hearing and
subsequent appeals.
Another commenter suggested that
workers and their representatives
should be allowed to intervene in
administrative review proceedings. The
Department does not agree that
determinations on labor certification
applications should be turned into
multiparty adversary proceedings,
which would likely become unwieldy
and time-consuming. Workers and their
representatives may file complaints as
appropriate in accordance with other
provisions in the Final Rule.
One commenter suggested the rule
should also specify that the removal of
the requirement to answer the notice of
complaint in the de novo hearing does
not preclude the ALJ from requiring an
answer or its equivalent as a matter of
discretion or from limiting the
discoverability of information. The same
commenter believed the rule should
specify that the Department bears the
burden of proof in the proceedings,
because otherwise the employer would
effectively be presumed guilty and
required to prove its innocence.
The Department does not believe
there is any reason to add additional
language to the rule, which already
states that 29 CFR part 18 governs the
rules of procedure. Specifically, 29 CFR
18.1(b) and 18.5(e) cover the ALJ’s
discretion to request an answer or
require discovery. The burden of proof
is governed by common law principles
in which the moving party has the
burden of proof. In this case, the burden
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would be on the applicant to provide a
complete application in the first
instance, and if it is found to be
incomplete by the Department’s
Certifying Officer, then it is the
appellant/applicant’s burden to prove
that it submitted the requisite
information. The burden does not shift
to the government because it is not the
government that is requesting a benefit.
To ensure an expeditious review
process, the Final Rule provides that
ALJs conducting de novo hearings must
schedule such hearings within 5
calendar days, rather than 5 business
days, at the employer’s request. It
further clarifies that new evidence may
be introduced at such hearings.
Employers will not be prejudiced by
this provision, since the expedited
scheduling is to be performed only at
the appealing employer’s request. The
Final Rule further provides that ALJs
must render decisions within 10
calendar days after a de novo hearing.
Section 655.116—Job Service Complaint
System; Enforcement of Work Contracts
The NPRM contained the provision in
the current regulations regarding
complaints filed through the Job Service
Complaint system. Several commenters
suggested that site visits be
implemented, employer and worker
interviews be added, a 24/7 anonymous
call-in number be created, and
mediation offices (called ‘‘work visa
representational offices’’ by the
commenter) be created where contract
disputes can be discussed between the
employer and laborer. The Department
declines to create such additional
measures as a complaint system already
exists in the Job Service complaint
system found in 20 CFR Part 658,
subpart E, and any similar system
specific to H–2A agricultural clearance
orders or applications would result in
the duplication of effort and be a waste
of already scarce government resources.
Some commenters believe that this
rule is still too onerous, and that the
audits and compliance requirements
will continue to discourage farmers
from using the program. The program is
complex due to statutory requirements
and historical practice. However, the
Department has attempted, in this Final
Rule, to simplify the procedures where
appropriate while still ensuring program
integrity and worker protection. The
Department believes that this rule is
significantly easier to understand and
comply with than its predecessor.
One commenter stated that workers
should be punished by being
permanently barred from the program if
they move to an unauthorized employer
or overstay their visa. This is not an
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issue for the Department, which certifies
positions as being available to be filled
by H–2A workers. The Department does
not control the work status of H–2A
workers; that is a function performed by
DHS.
Another commenter suggested that a
mechanism should be created to precertify employers as being in
compliance with program requirements
and obligations prior to the issuance of
the Labor Certification. This is
something the Department will consider
implementing at a future time, when
employers have compiled an established
record of compliance with program
requirements.
A commenter suggested that the
Department institute procedures for
workers and their advocates to raise
grievances or lodge complaints for
Departmental review and expedited
resolution. The Department again notes
that the Job Service complaint system
referenced in § 655.116 and detailed in
20 CFR part 658, subpart E, which
handles complaints arising from
employer actions, and WHD’s authority
under 29 CFR part 501, whose
provisions include the investigation and
prosecution of valid complaints,
provide two effective mechanisms for
resolving complaints. The commenter
also requested that a graduated system
of fines be created, allowing a ‘‘learning
curve’’ for agricultural employers to
become more familiar with the H–2A
requirements. The Final Rule at 29 CFR
501.19 provides a number of factors that
the WHD takes into consideration when
assessing CMPs, including the type of
violation committed, efforts made in
good faith to comply, and the
explanation of the person charged with
the violation.
Section 655.117—Revocation of
Approved Labor Certifications
Several minor, non-substantive
changes were made to the language of
this provision for purposes of clarity
and to conform to other provisions of
the Final Rule. All substantive changes
made to the text of this provision are
addressed below.
(a) Comments Opposing Revocation
Because Other Penalties Sufficient
Several employers and employer
associations objected to revocation of
labor certifications on the grounds that
other penalties for non-compliance are
sufficient, citing the Department’s
increase in both the penalties for noncompliance and the bases upon which
non-compliance can be asserted, along
with the new document retention, audit
process, and expanded bases for
debarment. Similarly, several
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commenters cited the Department’s
existing ability to provide evidence to
the DHS supporting the revocation of a
petition.
We disagree that the existence of
these other penalties makes revocation
an unnecessary remedy. The
Department’s obligation to ensure
program integrity is self-evident. The
Department’s ability to revoke an
application is essential to maintaining
and enhancing program integrity and a
necessary companion to the flexibility
of a self-attestation model. The
Department should not have to rely on
DHS to ensure the integrity of its
programs.
(b) Revocation Too Severe a Penalty
Several employers and employer
associations objected to revocation of
labor certifications because of the
negative impact that it would have on
an employer’s business. A commenter
also stated that revocation could
effectively result in an employer
violating state law in Wyoming, which
assertedly prohibits sheepherders from
abandoning sheep. Given that
revocation is meant to be a sanction
against employers who have violated
the terms and conditions of the
certification or for whom the initial
certification is demonstrated to have
been unwarranted, it should be no
surprise that the employer may face
serious consequences as a result. It is in
the best interest of the Department to
ensure that the integrity of the H–2A
labor certification program is upheld. If
the granting of a labor certification was
not justified, revocation of such
certification is a reasonable measure for
the Department to take.
(c) Interference With DHS Authority
An association of growers requested
that the Department clarify the legal
basis for exercising the enforcement of
DHS regulations and the rationale for
doing so, stating that employers should
not have to face two enforcement
authorities with different policy
objectives enforcing the same
regulations. We agree with the
commenter’s concern that the
Department should not be enforcing
DHS regulations and accordingly have
deleted the reference to 8 CFR
214.2(h)(5) in § 655.117(a)(1).
(d) Grounds for Revocation
(1) Certification Not Justified—
§ 655.117(a)(1)
A law firm questioned the
Department’s authority to revoke a labor
certification application under Section
218 of the INA simply because the
Department has decided to revisit the
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merits of the application, stating that the
Department would need authority
comparable to that provided in Section
205 of the INA to do so. Additionally,
one law firm interprets Section 218(e) to
authorize the Department to revoke
certifications only in the case of fraud
or criminal misconduct. We disagree.
Section 218(e) of the INA addresses the
authority to revoke a certification and
does not specify any limitations on the
bases for which such authority may be
exercised.
Nevertheless, the Department does
agree that it should not revisit the merits
of a labor certification determination in
the absence of some form of willful
misconduct on the part of the employer.
Taking this concern into account, as
well as the seriousness of revocation as
a penalty, the Department has decided
to impose a stricter standard on
revocation as a penalty based upon the
CO’s finding that a certification was not
justified. Given the immediate and
devastating consequences revocation
could have on an employer’s business,
the Department has determined that
revocation based on a finding that the
certification was not justified at the time
it was granted is appropriate only when
the employer made a willful
misrepresentation on the labor
certification application. In such an
instance, the employer’s willful
misconduct has presumably contributed
to the Department’s initial erroneous
determination, making revocation fully
appropriate. Accordingly, we have
removed ‘‘based on the criteria set forth
in the INA’’ so that § 655.117(a)(1) now
reads ‘‘The CO finds that issuance of the
Temporary Agricultural Labor
Certification was not justified due to a
willful misrepresentation on the
application.’’
(2) Violation of Terms and Conditions of
Labor Certification—§ 655.117(a)(2)
An employer suggested that the
employer’s violation of the terms and
conditions of the labor certification
under § 655.117(a)(2) should be
qualified with ‘‘knowingly and
willfully.’’ An association of growers
suggested that the revocation could only
be exercised when the employer
willfully misrepresents a material fact in
the application. Similarly, an
association of growers suggested that the
Department should clarify that technical
or good faith violations of the regulation
should not result in an enforcement
action. After reviewing these comments,
the Department agrees that the standard
set forth in the NPRM allowing
revocation for any violation of an
approved temporary agricultural labor
certification was too broad. The
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Department has attempted to address
the commenters’ concerns by setting
forth in greater detail the types of
violations warranting revocation. Given
the seriousness of revocation as a
penalty, and in response to the
comments, we added in this Final Rule
an intent requirement (‘‘willfully’’) with
respect to violations of the terms or
conditions of the labor certification, and
we also added the condition that the
violation must be of a material term or
condition. We have also listed
separately in paragraphs
655.117(a)(2)(ii)—(v) other serious
violations which the Department would
have few other available remedies to
enforce and which may not necessarily
involve a willful violation of a material
term or condition of the labor
certification. These violations include:
The failure to cooperate with a DOL
investigation into the current
certification; the failure to comply with
one or more sanctions or remedies
imposed by the ESA or one or more
decisions or orders of the Secretary or
a court order secured by the Secretary
resulting from Department-initiated
legal action (not private suits) regarding
the current certification; and the failure
to cure, after notification, a substantial
violation of the applicable housing
standards regarding the current
certification.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations suggested that the
regulations should clarify that a
revocation may occur where the
employer does not offer the job terms
required in the regulations or does not
comply with the job terms required in
the regulations. Assuming that the
employer’s actions were willful, we
believe that this basis for revocation is
already covered by § 655.117(a)(2), since
the terms and conditions of the labor
certification incorporate the employer
attestations set forth in the regulations
under § 655.105.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations suggested that revocation
should be utilized when an employer
has an active certification and intends to
bring additional workers but is
unwilling or unable to provide the terms
and conditions of the work promised.
We believe that the grounds that the
commenter cited for revocation are
incorporated in § 655.117(a)(2),
assuming that the employer’s
unwillingness or inability to provide the
terms and conditions of the work
promised manifests itself in the willful
violation of a material term or condition
of the labor certification.
A group of farmworker advocacy
organizations suggested that revocation
should be used if a timely audit
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discovers that U.S. workers had been
discouraged or denied employment.
Again, we interpret § 655.117(a)(2) to
cover such a violation, if willful, since
an employer must attest on its labor
certification application that any U.S.
workers who applied for the job were
rejected only for lawful, job-related
reasons.
A group of farm worker advocacy
organizations suggested that revocation
of a current job order should be allowed
based on violations of prior job orders.
Substantial violations of prior job orders
are covered in the debarment section at
§ 655.118. We believe that debarment is
the more appropriate remedy for
substantial violations of prior job orders
since a revocation is meant to address
problems with the existing labor
certification.
(3) Referrals From WHD—
§ 655.117(a)(3)
A private citizen objected to the
inclusion of a recommendation by WHD
as a ground for revocation. The
Department believes that WHD plays a
critical role in upholding the integrity of
the labor certification process by
enforcing an employer’s obligation to
provide the wages, benefits, and
working conditions required under the
terms and conditions of a labor
certification. Accordingly, their input in
the revocation process would help to
protect workers from additional
violations or abuse by unscrupulous
employers. However, we have clarified
that the CO must actually find a
violation of sufficient gravity that leads
to the recommendation of revocation by
WHD and that 29 CFR 501.20 sets forth
the grounds under which WHD may
recommend revocation, which are
nearly identical to ETA’s grounds for
revocation provided under
§ 655.117(a)(2). Any WHD
recommendation for revocation must be
based on violations of the certification
in effect at the time of the recommended
revocation.
(4) Fraud or Willful Misrepresentation—
§ 655.117(a)(4)
The Department has included an
additional provision which sets forth
the Department’s authority to revoke a
labor certification based on a finding of
fraud or willful misrepresentation in
that certification, as provided in
§§ 655.112 and 655.113. Section
655.117(a)(4) provides that the
Department may revoke a certification if
a court or the DHS, or, as a result of an
audit, the CO, determines that there was
fraud or willful misrepresentation
involving the application.
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(e) Procedure—§ 655.117(b) and
Hearing—§ 655.117(c)
An association of growers suggested
that the Notice of Intent to Revoke
should include the statement of factual
grounds for the alleged basis for
revocation. The regulation already
provides that the Notice of Intent to
Revoke is to contain a detailed
statement of the grounds for the
proposed revocation and thereby would
include the factual grounds for the
proposed revocation. Accordingly, we
do not believe that it is necessary to
change the proposed language of the
provision.
One commenter suggested that
employers should be able to request a
hearing with respect to the Notice of
Intent to Revoke. The Department does
not believe that a hearing is strictly
necessary in all cases, but has added
language to § 655.117(a) of the Final
Rule specifying that a revocation may
only be made ‘‘after notice and
opportunity for a hearing (or rebuttal).’’
The regulations also allow an employer
to file an administrative appeal of a
revocation and provides for notice of the
opportunity to appeal in the CO’s final
decision.
While a group of farm worker
advocacy organizations expressed
concern that a final determination
should not be required to revoke a labor
certification, the Department received a
number of comments from a large
number of employers and employer
associations objecting to revocation
taking effect immediately at the end of
the 14-day window for the employer to
submit rebuttal evidence, if the
employer fails to do so. The commenters
cited due process concerns and the
devastating and irreversible impact that
revocation would have on farms while
the matter was being adjudicated. The
Department does not agree that allowing
the CO’s decision to become final if the
employer fails to submit rebuttal
evidence within 14 days constitutes a
violation of due process; an employer
should reasonably be able to compile a
response to the CO’s notice within 14
days.
To address legitimate due process
concerns, however, the Department has
changed the language in § 655.117(b)(3)
to provide that the filing of an
administrative appeal stays revocation.
Accordingly, an association of growers’
suggestion that the effective date of
revocation should be one day after the
appeal period expires so that the
employer would not be required to
cease employing the worker while it
decides whether to appeal is no longer
relevant.
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Two commenters expressed concern
about the Department’s ability to revoke
a labor certification on a very broad
range of criteria and suggested that the
Department provide a standard for the
Department’s decision to revoke when
the employer submits rebuttal evidence.
We understand the commenters’
concern and have articulated the
standard for which the Department may
revoke an application when the
employer submits rebuttal evidence.
Specifically, the regulations have now
been revised to provide that the CO
must determine that the employer more
likely than not meets one or more of the
bases for revocation under 655.117(a) in
order to revoke the application.
An association of growers suggested
extending the employer’s rebuttal
period from 14 days to 30 days with
extensions granted by the CO on a
reasonable basis, and if such a request
is denied unjustifiably, the denial may
be a basis of, or an additional reason for,
reversal by the Department. Similarly,
an association of growers suggested that
employers should be given 14 instead of
10 days to file an administrative appeal.
We disagree with the proposal to extend
the time period for rebuttal with
indefinite extensions by the CO, and
particularly the suggestion that the
denial of such a request for an extension
should be a basis for reversal of the
revocation, all of which would
unnecessarily delay the revocation
process. We also disagree with the
proposal to extend the time period for
an administrative appeal. We carefully
considered what time period would be
appropriate for employers to rebut the
notice of intent to revoke and to file an
administrative appeal. We would not be
issuing a notice of intent to revoke if the
reason for doing so did not seriously
jeopardize the integrity of the H–2A
labor certification process. Accordingly,
it is imperative for the Department to be
able to act quickly, especially if the
livelihood of the workers and an
employer’s ability to plan for its labor
needs are at stake. The addition of at
least a minimum of 20 days to the
process would not only impede the
efficiency of the labor certification
system but also prolong the period of
time for which employers would be
subject to uncertainty regarding their
labor needs, a concern that was as raised
by a commenter. As a result, we are
maintaining the proposed rule’s 14-day
period for rebuttal and 10-day period for
filing an administrative appeal.
An association of growers also
suggested that the CO should have more
than 14 days to reach a final decision—
that the CO should in fact have all the
time that he or she believes is necessary
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to reach the best possible decision on
the record as it is presented. While we
appreciate an association of growers’
concern that the Department have a
sufficient amount of time to render its
decision, 14 days is an adequate amount
of time for the Department to consider
all the facts at hand to make a decision
and to ensure that the revocation
proceedings move along in an
expeditious manner for the reasons
stated in the previous paragraph.
The Department takes very seriously
the commenters’ concerns about having
enough time and opportunity to reach
the best decision possible pertaining to
revocation. As a result, as discussed in
the preamble to § 655.115, given the
seriousness of the revocation penalty,
the Department is creating a separate
appeals process for revocation which
allows for greater time for deliberation
at the administrative appeals level.
Instead of applying the administrative
appeals process at § 655.115 to
revocation, as provided in the NPRM,
we have lengthened the timeframes for
hearings, to 15 calendar days after the
ALJ’s receipt of the ETA case file, and
for decisions, to 20 calendar days after
the hearing. This appeals process
provides the right balance between
ensuring that revocation occurs in a
timely manner before the expiration of
the labor certification, while also
providing a sufficient amount of time
for deliberation.
Two commenters suggested revising
the regulation so that an employer be
provided 14 days from the date that it
receives the Notice of Intent to Revoke
to provide rebuttal evidence instead of
from the date of the Notice. Given that
the Notice will be sent by means
ensuring next day delivery, the
employer will essentially have 13 days,
which is a reasonable amount of time to
provide rebuttal evidence. In addition,
because the date the employer actually
receives the Notice is virtually
impossible to verify, we have decided to
retain the date of the Notice as the
starting point for the 14 day rebuttal
period.
One commenter suggested phasing-in
the Department’s compliance and
control measures so that employers have
the opportunity to adapt to the program.
We do not believe that it is necessary to
phase-in such measures. Employers
have received notice of, and have had
an opportunity to comment on, the
measures that the Department has
proposed. Employers certainly have had
an opportunity to plan for such changes,
and we do not believe that providing
any additional time for employers to
adjust to the new requirements is
warranted.
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(f) Worker Protections
Section 655.118—Debarment
A group of farm worker advocacy
organizations suggested that ETA
require employers with open job orders
to accept the referral of H–2A workers
who are already present in the U.S. and
have been affected by revocation, and
that ETA should deny job orders to
employers who refuse such H–2A
workers. We understand the serious toll
revocation of a labor certification can
take on an employer’s workforce—both
U.S. and H–2A workers alike—and
agree that certain worker protections
should be triggered in the event of
revocation. We do not agree that the
SWAs should be in the business of
using taxpayer money to make referrals
of temporary foreign workers to open
job opportunities. However, we have
added a new provision at § 655.117(c)
setting forth an employer’s obligation to
its H–2A workers in the event of
revocation. Upon revocation, if the
workers have already departed the place
of recruitment, the employer will be
responsible for reimbursing each
worker’s inbound transportation and
subsistence expenses, outbound
transportation expenses unless the
worker accepts other H–2A work in the
U.S., any payments due to the worker
under the three-fourths guarantee, and
any other wages, benefits, and working
conditions due or owing the worker
under the regulations.
(a) The Department’s Debarment
Authority
The Department revised § 655.118(a)
of the proposed rule to more closely
parallel the language in Section 218 of
the INA setting forth the Department’s
debarment authority. The Department is
also clarifying that it interprets the
requirement that ‘‘the Secretary of Labor
has determined, after notice and
opportunity for a hearing, that the
employer during the previous two-year
period substantially violated a material
term or condition of the labor
certification’’ to mean that the
Department must notify the employer of
the Department’s intent to debar no later
than two years after the occurrence of
the violation (or in the case of a pattern
or practice, two years after the
occurrence of the most recent violation).
The Department’s rationale for this
interpretation is discussed in greater
detail in the Debarment Proceedings (20
CFR 655.118(e)) section of this
preamble.
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(g) Beyond the Scope of the Regulation
We received several comments that
were clearly beyond the scope of the
revocation provision. Among them were
several comments regarding issues that
touch upon agencies with responsibility
for H–2A issues that have nothing to do
with the labor certification process or
the enforcement of the obligations and
assurances made by employers with
respect to H–2A workers.
For example, a group of farmworker
advocacy organizations suggested that
the Department should establish an
MOU with ICE to alert ICE upon
revocation that an employer’s request
for workers has been denied and to
heighten inspections of that employer’s
I–9 forms to ensure that the employer
does not attempt to recruit
undocumented workers to fill the
positions originally designated for H–2A
workers. While we understand the
concern of the commenter, we do not
believe that the regulation is the
appropriate place to address the details
of the Department’s coordination and
communication with DHS in the event
of revocation.
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(b) Parties Subject to Debarment—
§ 655.118(a)
(1) Successors in Interest
One organization objected to the
debarment of an employer’s successor in
interest, rather than only those entities
with a substantial interest in the
employer. This commenter expressed
concern that because debarment can
result in the dissolution of the
employer’s business, debarring a
successor in interest would impede the
sale of assets and business to others who
are not complicit in the cause of
debarment. The Department’s primary
objective in debarring successors in
interest is to prevent persons or firms
who were complicit in the cause of
debarment from reconstituting
themselves as a new entity to take over
the debarred employer’s business. The
final regulation includes a definition of
successor in which the culpability of the
successor and its agents for the
violations resulting in debarment must
be considered. This definition will
avoid harm to successors that were not
culpable in the violations resulting in
debarment.
(2) Attorneys and Agents
One commenter suggested that agents
of employers should be debarrable as
well as employers, given that the
substantial violations listed in
§ 655.118(d) could be committed by
either the employer or the employer’s
agent. Another commenter also
expressed concern that agents could not
be sanctioned even though they may
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commit debarrable activities. We agree
that agents should be included as
debarrable parties if they have
committed a substantial violation. To be
consistent with the Department’s
permanent labor certification program,
we believe that substantial violations
should include acts committed by
attorneys of employers and, accordingly,
that attorneys of employers be
debarrable parties as well. Additionally,
the Department would consider an
attorney or agent who had knowledge of
or had reason to know of the employer’s
substantial violation to be complicit in
the employer’s violation and
accordingly, should also be subject to
debarment.
The preamble to the NPRM expressed
the Department’s intention to include
actions by agents and attorneys of
employers as debarrable offenses, and
include agents and attorneys as
debarrable parties. The regulatory text,
however, did not make this clear. Some
commenters expressed concern that this
language would render attorneys and
agents strictly liable for debarrable
offenses committed by their employer
clients. That was never the
Department’s intent. To clarify the
provision, the Department has broken
§ 655.118(a) of the NPRM into three
paragraphs. New § 655.118(b) specifies
that agents and attorneys may only be
debarred if they ‘‘participated in, had
knowledge of, or had reason to know of,
the employer’s substantial violation.’’
New § 655.118(c) establishes the
maximum debarment period of three
years, which applies to debarments of
employers, attorneys, and agents.
(c) Bases for Debarment—§ 655.118(d)
(1) General Opposition
Several commenters objected to the
debarment provision on the grounds
that it was too severe a penalty and
would discourage participation in the
H–2A program. Additionally, another
commenter expressed concern that
overly circumscribed debarment
regulations would continue to impede
enforcement by the Department. As
discussed in the preamble to the NPRM,
the proposed changes to the debarment
provision responded to the
unnecessarily narrow definition of
employer actions warranting debarment
in the current regulation, which has
hampered effective enforcement of the
H–2A program, and is also an important
part of the program’s shift toward an
attestation-based application process.
We have carefully considered the
comments that we received in response
to the NPRM and believe that the
debarment provisions in the Final Rule
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will uphold the integrity of the H–2A
labor certification program without
unfairly punishing employers who
utilize the program. We believe that
ETA debarment authority and WHD’s
authority to recommend debarment will
help to strengthen the Department’s
efforts to enforce the program
regulations.
The Department has reorganized this
provision in the Final Rule in order to
provide additional clarity to program
users. In the NPRM, the bases for
debarment were enumerated in
§ 655.118(b); in the Final Rule they are
enumerated in § 655.118(d). The NPRM
listed several violations in proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1) that the Department
would consider to be debarrable
substantial violations if ‘‘one or more
acts of commission or omission on the
part of the employer’’ could be shown.
For reasons discussed below, the Final
Rule distinguishes between program
violations that do not rise to the level of
debarrable substantial violations unless
‘‘a pattern of practice of acts of
commission on the part of the
employer’’ can be shown, which are
listed in paragraphs 655.118(d)(1)(i)–(v),
and program violations that are subject
to some other standard, which are listed
in paragraphs 655.118(d)(2)–(6).
Failure to cooperate with a DOL
investigation and failure to comply with
sanctions, remedies, decisions, and
orders issued by the Department were
listed as debarrable offenses under
§ 655.118(b)(1) of the NPRM. Those
provisions have been broken out
separately in the Final Rule as
§ 655.118(d)(4) and § 655.118(d)(5),
emphasizing that such violations are not
subject to § 655.118(d)(1)’s ‘‘pattern or
practice’’ standard. For reasons
described below, a new § 655.118(d)(6)
has been added to the rule allowing the
Department to debar for ‘‘[a] single
heinous act showing such flagrant
disregard for the law that future
compliance with program requirements
cannot reasonably be expected.’’
(2) Standards for Debarrable Offenses—
Additional Conditions and Clarification,
Including Pattern and Practice
Several commenters requested greater
clarification of what actions would be
subject to debarment and suggested
including additional qualifiers or
conditions to the various grounds for
debarment. Two commenters stated that
the listed grounds for debarment seem
to empower the Department to debar for
actions that merely ‘‘reflect’’ unlawful
activity, even though the actions might
not actually be unlawful. These
commenters requested additional
clarification as to what sort of activities
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would result in debarment. We disagree
with the commenters’ characterization
that the listed grounds for debarment do
not require a finding that the entity to
be debarred engaged in unlawful
activity. Mere suspicion of a violation of
the law is not sufficient to warrant
debarment. Rather, an actual violation
would be necessary, in accordance with
Section 218 of the INA which authorizes
debarment when an employer
substantially violates a material term or
condition of the labor certification with
respect to the employment of domestic
or nonimmigrant workers. In sum, the
use of the term ‘‘reflect’’ in the Final
Rule to describe debarrable ‘‘pattern or
practice’’ violations in
§ 655.118(d)(1)(ii)–(v) does not mean
that the Department is not required to
prove actual underlying program
violations.
Several commenters suggested that
the Department should require a pattern
or practice of substantial violations for
debarment. Of particular concern was
the prospect of debarment based on the
commission of one violation which they
alleged would deter participation in the
program. Additionally, one of these
commenters noted that employers who
are less sophisticated in their business
practices should be spared from
debarment for innocent oversights or
mistakes. We agree with commenters’
concerns and have qualified the acts set
forth under § 655.118(d)(1) with a
pattern or practice requirement.
However, the Department does not have
any available remedy other than
debarment to penalize and deter certain
program violations, and believes that
these violations constitute ‘‘substantial
violations’’ warranting debarment even
without a pattern or practice. These acts
are set forth separately in paragraphs
655.118(d)(2)–(6). These include: fraud;
the failure to pay the necessary fee in a
timely manner; and the failure to
cooperate with a DOL investigation or
interference with a DOL official
performing an investigation, inspection
or law enforcement function; the failure
to comply with one or more sanctions
or remedies imposed by the ESA, or
with one or more decisions of the
Secretary or court (regarding a
Department-initiated lawsuit); and a
single heinous act showing such flagrant
disregard for the law that future
compliance with program requirements
cannot reasonably be expected.
Several commenters requested that
the Department clarify and distinguish
what activity is debarrable from what
activity is subject to other penalties.
Many of the activities that would trigger
debarment also trigger other penalties.
We do not think that it is necessary to
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draw such a distinction. Generally, a
non-willful violation will not be
grounds for debarment unless it is part
of a pattern or practice. Debarrable
offenses are clearly delineated in
§ 655.118(d) of the Final Rule. Program
violations that are subject to other
penalties are listed elsewhere in the
Final Rule.
(3) ‘‘But Not Limited to’’—Proposed
§ 655.118(b), New § 655.118(d)
Several commenters argued that the
language ‘‘but not limited to’’ in
proposed § 655.118(b)’s list of the
available grounds for debarment was
overly broad and raised due process
concerns, as there would not be
sufficient notice of what additional
actions would be considered substantial
violations. We agree with the
commenters’ concerns, and given that
various grounds for debarment that are
specified in the Final Rule, we do not
believe that the ‘‘but not limited to’’
language is necessary. Accordingly it
has been deleted from the regulatory
text.
(4) Significant Injury to Wages, Benefits,
and Working Conditions—Proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(i), New § 655.118(d)(1)(i)
An association of growers suggested
that the Department clarify that the
significant injury to wages, benefits, and
working conditions be explicitly linked
to the employer’s hiring of H–2A
workers, which the association
interpreted as Congress’s concern in
establishing the labor certification
process. Thus, in the opinion of this
commenter, only significant injuries to
U.S. workers that would not have
occurred but for the hiring of H–2A
workers in the occupation would be
potentially relevant. We do not read
Section 218 of the INA so narrowly. A
substantial violation of a material term
or condition of the labor certification
with respect to the employment of U.S.
or non-immigrant workers encompasses
more than injuries arising directly from
the hiring of H–2A workers. For
instance, an employer may engage in a
pattern or practice of intentionally
paying its workers at a rate below the
minimum wage. The debarment of the
employer for such a flagrant violation
both of the FLSA and the terms and
conditions of the labor certification
would be warranted under Section 218
of the INA, despite the fact the violation
was not strictly dependent on the hiring
of H–2A workers.
A group of farm worker advocacy
organizations suggested that the
Department should have the discretion
to deny a certification to an employer
who has previously engaged in
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violations of employment-related laws,
whether or not there has been a final
administrative or judicial finding of
such violations and whether the
employer previously employed H–2A
workers or sought to do so. The
standard for debarment set forth under
Section 218(b)(2)(A) of the INA provides
that ‘‘[t]he employer during the previous
two-year period employed H–2A
workers and the Secretary of Labor has
determined, after notice and
opportunity for a hearing, that the
employer at any time during that period
substantially violated a material term or
condition of the labor certification with
respect to the employment of domestic
or non-immigrant workers.’’ The
commenter’s suggestion that the
employer only need to have engaged in
a violation of employment-related laws,
regardless of whether there has been a
final finding of the violation or whether
the employer previously employed H–
2A workers clearly goes beyond the
Department’s statutory authority to
debar. Accordingly, the Department
declines to debar.
(5) Ten Percent Threshold—Proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(i), New § 655.118(d)(1)(i)
An association of growers expressed
concern that under proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(i), an employer’s change
in the health or retirement plans or
benefits offered to its employees could
rise to the level of a debarrable
violation, even though the employer is
in full compliance with the job order.
The Department does not intend to
penalize employers who are in
compliance with the job order. Rather,
the Department intends to apply
debarment to acts that are significantly
injurious to benefits required to be
offered to employees under the H–2A
program, as opposed to all benefits,
such as health and retirement plans,
that an employer may offer to its
employees. Accordingly, the
Department has added in paragraph
(d)(1)(i) of the Final Rule as a qualifier
for ‘‘benefits,’’ ‘‘required to be offered
under the H–2A program.’’
Several employers objected to the 10
percent threshold required for a
significant injury under proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(i) because it would
disproportionately affect small
employers—i.e., an action taken against
one employee might be enough to
trigger a substantial violation against a
small employer. A group of farm worker
advocacy organizations objected to the
figure because it might allow egregious
actions to be taken against numbers of
employees that don’t meet the 10
percent threshold. We recognize the
concerns of both the employers and
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worker advocates and have eliminated
the 10 percent threshold and replaced it
with ‘‘a significant number.’’ Thus,
small employers would not be
disproportionately affected by this
provision. At the same time, the
provision makes it possible for a
substantial violation to occur even if the
injury affects less than 10 percent of
employees if the number of affected
employees is significant.
(6) Substantial Number of U.S. Workers
Similarly Employed—Proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(i), New § 655.118(d)(1)(i)
Two commenters objected to the
language in proposed § 655.118(b)(1)(i)
providing for debarment based on
actions significantly injuring the wages,
benefits, or working conditions of ‘‘a
substantial number of U.S. workers
similarly employed in the area of
intended employment.’’ These
commenters expressed concern that this
language might be read to extend
beyond U.S. workers potentially
employable in H–2A occupations,
which are the workers that the statutory
‘‘adverse effect’’ concept is supposed to
protect. These commenters believed that
this language might allow an employer
who fully complied with all program
requirements to be debarred based on a
finding by an economic expert that the
employment of H–2A workers
depressed the wages of other employers’
similarly employed workers in the area
of intended employment. Another
commenter also expressed concern that
it would be impossible for an employer
to know in advance whether its actions
would be significantly injurious to such
workers. We recognize these concerns.
The Department’s various program
requirements of this Final Rule have
been established to protect U.S. workers
from adverse effects, and an employer
that has complied with all of these
program requirements should not be
held responsible for any arguable
adverse effects that were unforeseen by
the Department. The Department has
accordingly deleted the reference to ‘‘a
substantial number of U.S. workers
similarly employed in the area of
intended employment’’ from
§ 655.118(d)(1)(i) of the Final Rule.
(7) Significant Failure To Offer
Employment to U.S. Workers—Proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(ii), New
§ 655.118(d)(1)(ii)
A group of farm worker advocacy
organizations expressed concern that
the use of the term ‘‘significant’’ under
proposed § 655.118(b)(1)(ii) limits the
authority of the Administrator/OFLC to
debar an employer who has taken
actions injurious to workers or refused
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to offer jobs to U.S. workers. We believe
that any violation by the employer no
matter how minor or how egregious
should be met with the appropriate
penalty. Given the severity of debarment
as a penalty for employers, however, the
violations constituting the grounds for
debarment must be significant.
Employer sanctions for violations which
do not rise to the level required for
debarment are available through other
penalties, including civil money
penalties.
(8) Failure To Recruit U.S. Workers—
Proposed § 655.118(b)(1)(iii), New
§ 655.118(d)(1)(iii)
An association of growers suggested
that the Department clarify that a
violation in the form of ‘‘a willful failure
to comply with the employer’s
obligations to recruit domestic workers’’
be subject to the following
qualifications: (1) That there are a
significant number of qualified U.S.
workers who, if recruited, would be
willing to make themselves available for
work at the time and place needed; and
(2) such failure is material—that if the
employer had done what was required,
qualified U.S. workers willing to do the
job would have been found. If an
employer complies with the recruitment
requirements of the Final Rule but fails
to recruit U.S. workers due to the fact
that such workers are unavailable, that
would not violate the regulation. Where,
however, an employer has willfully
failed to comply with its obligations
under the Final Rule to recruit U.S.
workers, it may be difficult if not
impossible for the Department to prove,
after the fact, that workers would have
been available if the proper steps had
been taken. When an employer has
purposely defaulted on its responsibility
to recruit U.S. workers, a substantial
violation of a material term of the labor
certification exists and the debarment
criteria are met. The Department
therefore declines to adopt this
suggested change.
(9) Failure To Comply With the Audit
Process—§ 655.118(d)(1)(iv)
The Department has explicitly
included in § 655.118(d)(1)(iv) of the
Final Rule an additional ground for
debarment for a significant failure to
comply with the audit process. This
potential ground of debarment was
expressly stated in § 655.112 of the
NPRM, but was inadvertently left out of
the debarment provisions.
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(10) Outside Area of Intended
Employment—Proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(vi), New
§ 655.118(d)(1)(v)
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A law firm questioned how the
employment of an H–2A worker outside
the area of intended employment would
support debarment under Section 218(b)
of the INA. As discussed earlier, the
statute authorizes debarment when an
employer substantially violates a
material term or condition of the labor
certification with respect to the
employment of domestic or
nonimmigrant workers. Section
655.105(b) requires the employer to
attest that it is offering terms and
working conditions normal to workers
similarly employed in the area of
intended employment and which are no
less favorable than those offered to the
H–2A workers and are not less than the
minimum terms and conditions
required under the regulations. Section
655.105(d) requires the employer to
attest that it will continue to cooperate
with the SWA by accepting referrals of
all eligible U.S. workers who apply for
the job opportunity until the end of the
recruitment period. Finally, § 655.110(b)
limits the scope of validity of a
certification to ‘‘the area of intended
employment.’’ The area of intended
employment thus plays a key role in
determining the employer’s particular
obligations with respect to the terms
and working conditions offered. An
employer would not be able to abide by
these attestations if it places its workers
outside the area of intended
employment and, accordingly, would be
committing a substantial violation of a
material term and condition of the labor
certification with respect to the U.S. and
H–2A workers alike.
An association of growers suggested
that the Department apply a ‘‘common
sense’’ interpretation of the regulations,
particularly with respect to where a
certification describes an area of
intended employment which, for
example, is within a 25 mile radius of
a particular city, but the worker ends up
working a field for a new customer that
is 27 miles from that city. The
Department understands the
commenter’s concern and expects the
CO to exercise the appropriate judgment
in the face of such circumstances.
(11) Incidental Work—Proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(vi), New
§ 655.118(d)(1)(v)
A group of farm worker advocacy
organizations supported the inclusion of
the employment of H–2A workers in an
activity not listed in the job order as a
debarrable offense because it would
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guard against employers that ‘‘have
shown a total disregard for the very
notion of corresponding employment,
and the results are unfair to similarly
employed U.S. workers.’’ However,
several commenters expressed concern
that employers whose workers would be
performing work that is incidental to the
activity listed in the job order could be
debarred under proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(vi) for ‘‘the employment
of an H–2A worker * * * in an activity
not listed in the job order.’’ ‘‘Other work
typically performed on a farm that is not
specifically listed on the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
and is minor (i.e., less than 20 percent
of the total time worked on the job
duties and activities that are listed on
the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification) and
incidental to the agricultural labor or
services for which the H–2A worker was
sought’’ is included in the definition of
agricultural labor and services at
§ 655.100(d)(1)(vi). Accordingly, work
that is incidental to the particular
agricultural labor or services that are
listed in the job order would be
considered to be part of the activity that
is listed in the job order. Contrary to the
assertion of some commenters,
permitting H–2A workers to engage in
incidental activity places those workers
in the same position as similarly
situated U.S. workers who would be
expected to perform incidental
agricultural work in addition to any
specific tasks for which they may have
been hired. The Final Rule therefore
notes that the employment of H–2A
workers in activities ‘‘minor and
incidental to the activity/activities listed
in the job order’’ does not constitute a
program violation.
One commenter also suggested that
the regulations should provide a means
to modify the job description covered by
a temporary agricultural labor
certification should a situation arise that
requires more than minor incidental
work, such as an act of nature requiring
structural repairs and/or clean-up, or
the temporary incapacity of a worker
due to illness or injury who could do
other work. The Department agrees with
the commenter’s concern and believes
the concern is adequately addressed by
the amendment procedures provided at
§ 655.107(d)(3) of the Final Rule.
(12) After Expiration of Job Order—
Proposed § 655.118(b)(1)(vi), New
§ 655.118(d)(1)(v)
Although the Department did not
receive any comments relating to this
issue, the Department has replaced
‘‘after the expiration of the job order and
any approved extension’’ in
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§ 655.118(d)(1)(v) with ‘‘after the period
of employment specified in the job
order and any approved extension’’ and
revised the corresponding heading for
greater clarity.
(13) Fees—Proposed § 655.118(b)(2),
New § 655.118(d)(2)
Several commenters noted the
inclusion of acts of commission or
omission that reflect the employer’s
failure to pay the necessary fee in a
timely manner as being too severe a
ground for debarment and questioned
whether the inclusion of these grounds
were within the Department’s authority
under the INA. The INA authorizes
debarment for a substantial violation of
a material term or condition of a labor
condition application with respect to
the employment of domestic or nonimmigrant workers. Section 655.109(h)
specifically provides that as a condition
of the issuance of the labor certification,
the employer must pay the processing
fee in a timely manner, and
§ 655.105(m) provides that an employer
must attest that all fees associated with
processing the temporary labor
certification will be processed in a
timely manner. Additionally, a law firm
objected to the inclusion of an
employer’s failure to pay the necessary
fee in a timely manner because it does
not comport with longstanding practice
in other existing immigration
procedures. However, an employer’s
failure to pay the necessary fee in a
timely manner has been a ground for
debarment under the H–2A regulations
since July 1987, and the Department
does not consider the absence of such a
practice in other program areas to
constitute a persuasive reason to
eliminate it. Accordingly, the
Department’s retention of this ground
for debarment supports the
Department’s longstanding practice and
is necessary for the Department to
administer effectively the H–2A labor
certification process.
Additionally, a wool growers
association was concerned that if the
check arrived one day late, then the
employer could be debarred under
proposed § 655.118(b)(2). We do not
read the provision to be that absolute
and inflexible. Even though
§ 655.109(h)(2) provides that fees
received by the CO no more than 30
days after the date the temporary labor
certification is granted will be
considered timely, the language of
‘‘timely manner’’ provides the
Department with some discretion so that
a check that arrives on the 31st day
would not automatically result in the
debarment of the employer. The
Department takes seriously its
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responsibility to administer the H–2A
program in a fair and reasonable
manner.
The Department, however, has
decided to add the qualifier of
‘‘persistent and prolonged’’ for the
failure to pay fees in a timely manner
in § 655.118(d)(2) to ensure a farmer
cannot have a certification revoked for
a single instance of a failure to timely
pay the fee upon certification.
Furthermore, the regulation now
provides for the issuance of a deficiency
notice to the applicant, allowing for a
reasonable opportunity to pay its fees
before the issuance of the Notice of
Intent to Debar.
(14) Fraud and Material
Misrepresentation—Proposed
§ 655.118(b)(3), New § 655.118(d)(3)
Although no comments were received
with respect to this provision, we have
simplified the language to eliminate
redundant references to fraud and
included fraud involving the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification as a ground for debarment
in accordance with § 655.112(d).
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(15) Significant Failure To Cooperate
With Investigations—Proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(v), New § 655.118(d)(4)
Several commenters objected to the
inclusion of acts of commission or
omission that reflect action impeding an
investigation. Full cooperation with
investigations to determine compliance
with the terms of the labor certification
application and the regulations is
essential to the viability of the H–2A
program. Accordingly, the labor
certification application provides that
the employer will cooperate fully with
any investigation undertaken pursuant
to statute or regulation. Impeding an
investigation would therefore qualify as
a substantial violation of a material term
of the labor certification application.
The Department has revised the
language in this provision to clarify that
not only impeding an investigation but
also a significant failure to cooperate
with a DOL investigation would
constitute a substantial violation.
Accordingly, the Department has
replaced ‘‘actions impeding an
investigation of an employer’’ with ‘‘[a]
significant failure to cooperate with a
DOL investigation or with a DOL official
performing an investigation, inspection,
or law enforcement function’’ and
revised the heading accordingly.
(16) Civil Judgment/Court Orders—
Proposed, § 655.118(b)(1)(iv), New
§ 655.118(d)(5)
A group of farm worker advocacy
organizations suggested that an
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employer’s failure to pay or comply
with the terms of a civil judgment or
court order in favor of any migrant or
seasonal agricultural workers or H–2A
workers should be an additional ground
for debarment and that such debarment
should remain indefinitely until an
employer has paid all wages due and
owing former workers. A group of farm
worker advocacy organizations also
suggested that at a minimum, the
regulations should specify that an
employer who has not paid assessed
back wages or civil money penalties or
complied with an injunction sought by
the Department or paid a judgment for
employment-related claims should not
be permitted to receive a certification.
Several of the grounds for debarment
suggested by these commenters
reflecting substantial violations are
already encompassed by these
regulations. The three year time limit on
debarment is specified in Section 218(b)
of the INA; indefinite debarment is not
permitted. Otherwise, the Department
declines to interject any claim or
remedy sought or any judgment
awarded in private litigation into the
labor certification process. To assure
employers that the heavy sanction of
debarment will not be imposed for
trivial instances of non-compliance, the
Department has clarified in the Final
Rule that debarment is applicable only
where an employer’s non-compliance is
‘‘significant.’’
The Department has clarified that the
failure ‘‘to comply with one or more
decisions or orders of * * * a court’’
means that the order must be secured by
the Secretary under Section 218 of the
INA. Accordingly, the Department has
replaced the reference to ‘‘a court’’ with
‘‘a court order secured by the Secretary’’
in § 655.118(d)(5).
(17) A Single Heinous Act—
§ 655.118(d)(6)
As discussed earlier, a group of farm
worker advocacy organizations objected
to the 10 percent threshold in proposed
§ 655.118(b)(1)(i) because such a figure
might allow egregious actions to be
taken against a number of employees
that don’t meet the 10 percent
threshold. The Department agreed and
eliminated the 10 percent threshold and
replaced it with ‘‘a significant number’’
under § 655.118(d)(1)(i). However, in
further considering the commenter’s
concern, the Department decided that it
was also necessary to address situations
where a single egregious action would
constitute a debarrable offense, yet,
given the seriousness of debarment as a
penalty, ensure that only the most
serious violators would be subject to
debarment. Accordingly, the
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Department has included as an
additional ground for debarment a
single heinous act showing such flagrant
disregard for the law that future
compliance with program requirements
cannot reasonably be expected.
(d) Debarment Proceedings—Proposed
§ 655.118(c), New § 655.118(e)
(1) Statutory Authority—Requirement
for Notice and Hearing
Some commenters expressed concern
that the regulations exceeded the
statutory grant of authority for
debarment provided to the Department
under the INA. These commenters
questioned whether the regulations
were consistent with the statutory
requirement that a determination of a
violation can only be made after notice
and an opportunity for hearing. We
believe that the regulations as proposed
were consistent with the statutory
requirement for notice and an
opportunity for a hearing. However, the
Department has now included a Notice
of Intent to Debar in the procedure to
provide an additional opportunity for
notice and rebuttal, which is consistent
with the procedure under the
Department’s revocation provision at
§ 655.117. If the employer fails to rebut
the allegations provided in the Notice of
Intent to Debar, the Department will
issue a Notice of Debarment. The
employer may then request a hearing
through the administrative appeals
process. Accordingly, the regulation’s
debarment procedures are consistent
with the statutory requirement that a
determination of a violation be made
after notice and an opportunity for
hearing. These additional procedures
provide even greater due process
protections to employers facing
debarment.
Additionally, several commenters
questioned whether the Department was
exceeding its statutory authority under
the INA, given that a final determination
of the violation would likely not occur
until more than two years have passed
since the violation. The INA provides
that ‘‘(A) the employer during the
previous two-year period employed H–
2A workers and the Secretary of Labor
has determined, after notice and
opportunity for hearing, that the
employer at any time during that period
substantially violated a material term or
condition of the labor certification with
respect to the employment of domestic
or nonimmigrant workers. (B) No
employer may be denied certification
under subpart (A) for more than three
years for any violation described in such
subparagraph.’’ 8 U.S.C. 1188(b)(2).
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The statute presents three
requirements for denial of a
certification. First, the employer must
have employed H–2A workers within
‘‘the previous two-year period;’’ second,
the Secretary must determine, after
notice and hearing, that a substantial
violation occurred during that two-year
period; and third, denial of certification
based on a finding of violations may not
extend for more than three years.
However, the statute does not place a
time limit on when the Secretary’s must
issue a final determination that a
substantial violation occurred. While a
substantial violation must have
occurred within the two-year period, so
long as a determination is ultimately
made that a violation occurred, a
certification may be denied based on
that violation. The most reasonable
reading of the debarment provision,
giving effect to all its language, is that
Congress intended the Secretary to
initiate an investigation leading to
debarment within two years of the
alleged violation and, by referring in
Section 218(b)(2)(B) of the INA to a
maximum three-year period, to permit
any eventual debarment action to be for
up to three years. The Department’s
interpretation of this provision was
codified in the prior regulations at 20
CFR 655.110(a) and upheld in Matter of
Global Horizons Manpower, Inc. and
Mordechai Orian, ALJ No. 2005–TAE–
00001 (June 16, 2006).
Several farm bureaus and growers’
associations suggested that employers
be provided with an opportunity to be
heard before the issuance of a Notice of
Debarment due to the concern that
parties opposed to the H–2A program
would initiate investigations that are not
aimed at improving working conditions
but rather seek to end an employer’s
ability to hire H–2A workers when
qualified workers are unavailable. As
discussed above, the Department
already provides employers with an
opportunity to be heard through the
rebuttal process and with an
opportunity for a hearing through the
appeals process, and debarment is
stayed upon the administrative appeal
by an employer. Having an additional
level of hearings would be overly
cumbersome and impede the
Department’s administration of the H–
2A program. Based on our experience
with the permanent labor certification
program, after which the H–2A
program’s debarment provision was
modeled, we have concluded that the
procedures set forth in the Final Rule,
which provide the employer an
opportunity to present rebuttal evidence
before a Notice of Debarment is issued
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and an opportunity to appeal a
debarment decision, provide employers
sufficient protection against meritless
claims.
The Department has also made several
minor, non-substantive modifications to
the text of this provision in the Final
Rule for purposes of clarity.
(2) Timing
Commenters expressed conflicting
concerns over the amount of time
debarment procedures would entail.
Two employer associations expressed
concern that because of the length of the
process, an employer could face
uncertainty as to its debarment status
and that the employer’s ability to plan
for its labor needs would be adversely
affected. An association of growers
proposed a much more drawn-out
procedure starting with a detailed notice
of an intent to debar from the
Department, a disclosure of the full
evidentiary record by the Department, a
pre-notice hearing with a minimum of
30 days (with extensions), issuance of a
formal notice of debarment by the
Department which should include the
factual and legal grounds for the
intended action, prescribe an effective
date that is after the time period for
filing a timely appeal, provide at least
14 days to appeal, and administrative
appeal by the employer, with the
proceedings to be governed by 29 CFR
part 18. We have already discussed the
reasons we have not included a prenotice hearing. The Final Rule already
requires a Notice of Intent to Debar and
a Notice of Debarment, both of which
are required to state the reason for the
debarment finding, including a detailed
explanation of the grounds for the
debarment. We believe that the
commenters raised a valid point about
prescribing an effective date that is after
the time period for filing a timely
appeal, and we have added to the
regulation the requirement that the
Notice of Debarment specify that the
employer have 30 days from the date the
notice is issued to file an administrative
appeal before debarment becomes
effective. Additionally, as we discussed
in the preamble to § 655.115, the
Department is creating a separate
appeals process for debarment which
allows for greater time for deliberation
at the administrative appeals level,
given the seriousness of debarment as a
penalty. Accordingly, we have deleted
the reference to § 655.115 as governing
administrative appeal rights. Under the
Final Rule, a debarred party may request
a hearing which would be governed by
the procedures set forth at 29 CFR part
18, and administrative law judge
decisions are no longer required to be
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77193
issued within a set period of time. We
believe that the procedures set forth in
these regulations provide a middle
ground between these two sets of
concerns by providing a period of time
that is both sufficient for thorough
consideration of the grounds for
debarment and expedient enough so as
to allow the Department to debar bad
actors before they can cause any
additional harm while also minimizing
the period of uncertainty for employers
in the case of a successful appeal.
(3) Review by the Administrative
Review Board
Concerns by the commenters about
the seriousness of debarment as a
penalty has prompted the Department to
include an additional level of
Departmental review for debarment
decisions. Accordingly, we are
providing a debarred party with an
opportunity to request a review of the
decision of the administrative law judge
with the Administrative Review Board
(ARB). The procedures for ARB review
are nearly identical to those provided at
29 CFR 501.42 through 501.45 for WHD.
However, one major difference is that if
the ARB fails to issue a final decision
within 90 days from the notice granting
the petition, the decision of the
administrative law judge will be the
final decision of the Secretary.
(4) Phasing In/Grace Period
Two commenters suggested phasing
in the Department’s compliance and
control measures so that employers have
the opportunity to adapt to the program.
We have addressed this comment in the
preamble discussion of § 655.117, which
governs revocation of labor
certifications.
(e) Debarment Involving Members of
Associations—Proposed § 655.118(d),
(e), and (f), New § 655.118(f), (g), and (h)
A group of farm worker advocacy
organizations suggested that debarment
should also apply to an association and
its members’ successors in interest so
that associations and their principals
will not be able to re-constitute
themselves and continue business as
usual. Because associations and/or their
members operate as employers under
the various scenarios addressed by the
regulations in § 655.118(f), (g), and (h),
the successor in interest language for
employers in § 655.118(a) would also
apply to associations and their members
as well. Accordingly, we do not believe
that it is necessary to change the
language in § 655.118(f), (g), or (h).
Although the Department did not
receive any other comments relating to
these provisions, the Department has
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decided that when a members of an
associations or an association acting as
a joint employer is disbarred, other
members of the association who ‘‘had
knowledge of’’ or ‘‘had reason to know
of’’ the violation shall not be subject to
debarment unless they participated in
the violation. Because Section 218 of the
INA requires that the employer
substantially violate a material term or
condition of the labor certification, an
employer that merely had knowledge of,
but did not actually participate in, the
violation could not be debarred. The
Department has never established
program obligations requiring members
of associations to report violations of
other members or of associations that
they have ‘‘knowledge of,’’ and mere
knowledge of another entity’s violation
does not constitute a debarrable offense.
Accordingly, the Department is
removing the references to ‘‘had
knowledge of’’ and ‘‘had reason to know
of’’ from § 655.118(f) and (g). Where a
member of an association both had
knowledge of a violation and directly
benefitted from that violation, however,
the member will be considered to be
complicit in the violation.
(f) Protections to Workers of Debarred
Employers
A legal services provider suggested
that the Department establish a system
allowing H–2A workers from a debarred
or decertified employer to be transferred
to the next available H–2A employer in
the state or region to protect these
workers from becoming jobless due to
enforcement actions against their
employer. Because debarment applies
only to an employer’s ability to obtain
future labor certifications, we believe
that it is neither necessary nor useful to
set up such a system, as a debarred
employer would not have any H–2A
workers.
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(m) Beyond the Scope of the Regulation
Two grower associations suggested
that the Department provide technical
assistance to employers on complying
with the H–2A program through training
and a 1–800 hotline on selecting agents.
The Department will provide guidance
materials and training to the public to
help explain how the H–2A program
works. The Department does not intend
at this time to establish a 1–800 phone
number or referral system for selecting
agents.
Timeline for Anticipated Training and
Education Outreach Initiatives
Commenters suggested that the
Department include a timeline for
training and education outreach
initiatives in the Final Rule and indicate
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who would be responsible for such
training and outreach—the Department
or the SWAs. The commenters also
provided specific ideas for training and
educational materials, including
training on how to respond to the threat
of litigation; how to respond to audits;
how to comply with all program
functions; the application process, and
how to avoid violations and penalties.
There were also requests for training in
both English and Spanish.
The Department appreciates the input
from commenters and the Office of
Foreign Labor Certification will prepare
and provide training based on these
comments although at this time cannot
describe the precise content and timing
of such training.
B. Revisions to 29 CFR Part 501
Comments received that discussed
whether the commenter was generally
in favor of or generally opposed the
proposed regulations typically did not
differentiate between the proposed
changes to 20 CFR part 655, Subpart B
and 29 CFR part 501. Comments
received on proposed changes in 29 CFR
part 501 typically commented on a
specific change proposed in this part.
These are addressed below.
Section 218(g)(2) of the INA
authorizes the Secretary of Labor to take
such actions, including imposing
appropriate penalties, seeking
appropriate injunctive relief, and
requiring specific performance of
contractual obligations, as may be
necessary to ensure employercompliance with the terms and
conditions of employment under this
section of the statute. The Secretary has
determined that the enforcement of the
contractual obligations of employers
under the H–2A Program is the
responsibility of the Wage and Hour
Division (WHD). Regulations at 29 CFR
part 501 were issued to implement the
WHD’s responsibilities under the H–2A
Program and the amendment of these
regulations is part of this proposed
rulemaking.
Concurrent with the Department’s
finalization of the proposed
amendments to its regulations in 20 CFR
part 655, Subpart B to modernize the
certification of temporary employment
of nonimmigrant H–2A workers, the
Department is finalizing the proposed
amendments to its regulations at 29 CFR
part 501 regarding enforcement under
the H–2A Program.
The changes proposed for enhanced
enforcement to complement the
modernized certification process, so that
workers are appropriately protected
when employers fail to meet the
requirements of the H–2A Program, are
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incorporated into this Final Rule. Given
the number of changes proposed for 29
CFR part 501 and the number of
sections affected by the proposed
changes, we have included the entire
text of the regulation and not just the
sections changed. We note that a
number of comments suggested changes
but that the existing text of the
regulation, which was to remain
unchanged, already addressed such
issues in the manner raised in the
comments. We will discuss comments
received and any changes to the
regulatory text in the NPRM in response
to comments.
Based on comments received and our
recognition of the need for clarification,
we made changes to the following
sections of the proposed rule: Sections
501.0, 501.1, 501.3 through 501.6, 501.8,
501.10, 501.15, 501.16, 501.19 through
501.22, 501.30 through 501.32, 501.41,
and 501.42.
The following sections have not been
changed from the notice of proposed
rulemaking (other than inserting nonsubstantive references to the
Administrative Review Board): Sections
501.2, 501.33, and 501.43 through
501.45.
The following sections were not
included in the proposed rule and have
not been amended (other than inserting
non-substantive references to the
Administrative Review Board) since
publication in 52 FR 20527, June 1,
1987: Sections 501.7, 501.17, 501.18,
501.34 through 501.40, 501.46, and
501.47.
Nomenclature Changes
The proposed rule made a number of
non-substantive nomenclature changes
and technical corrections to 29 CFR part
501. These include: reflecting that the
INA was amended in 1988 while the
current regulations were published in
June 1987 and H–2A provisions that
were in section 216 are now codified in
Section 218 of the INA; changing
references from the State Employment
Service offices to the SWA; reflecting
that appeals from administrative law
judge decisions are made to the
Department’s Administrative Review
Board; and replacing in some sections
references to the Secretary with
references to the Administrative Review
Board.
Section 501.0 Introduction
Language was added to the proposed
introduction § 501.0 to update the
reference to Section 218 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)
and provide that corresponding
employment only includes U.S. workers
who are newly hired by employers
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participating in the H–2A Program. Two
commenters disagreed with this change.
One found the Department’s argument
for removing U.S. farm workers who are
not newly hired from the protection of
the H–2A provisions unpersuasive. The
other noted that, while the Department
justifies these changes by noting
situations where H–2A workers are paid
more than similarly employed U.S.
workers will arise very rarely, if ever, in
practice, the fact that an irrational result
arises only rarely does not serve as a
justification for ever allowing it to occur
and requested the Department to
withdraw this proposed change. As we
stated in the preamble to the proposed
rule, the INA only requires that the
employment of the alien in such labor
or services not adversely affect the
wages and working conditions of
workers in the United States similarly
employed. Where an employee has
agreed to work at a certain wage, and
begins to receive that wage prior to the
time an employer has hired an H–2A
worker, the subsequent hiring and
payment of the H–2A worker at a rate
that is higher than the wage received by
the U.S. worker will not adversely affect
the wages and working conditions of the
U.S. worker—rather, the U.S. worker
will be paid precisely what he or she
would have had the H–2A worker not
been hired at all. As such, the
Department lacks the authority to
require that H–2A employers pay
existing workers the rates paid to
subsequently hired H–2A workers. The
Department has clarified in the Final
Rule that the phrase ‘‘in the
occupations’’ in proposed § 501.0 means
‘‘workers in the same occupations as the
H–workers.’’
One commenter proposed that the
definition of ‘‘corresponding
employment’’ be clarified to exclude
those persons who may be willing to
work limited hours or fewer days than
those for which full-time workers are
sought under an H–2A job order. These
regulations are applicable to the
employment of U.S. workers newly
hired by employers of H–2A workers in
the same occupations during the period
of time set forth in the labor certification
approved by ETA. These workers are
engaged in corresponding employment.
Any U.S. worker who is hired in
corresponding employment must
receive the benefits and protections
outlined in the H–2A job order, the
work contract, and the applicable
regulations. Consequently, an employee
who is hired to perform any work
covered by the job order during the
contract period is entitled to all the
material terms and conditions of the job
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order or work contract for the
corresponding employment, but not for
any time spent in work not covered by
the job order or work contract. If parttime workers are engaged in
corresponding employment, they are
entitled to the same rights as the H–2A
workers, including payment of the
AEWR (or highest applicable H–2Arequired rate). The H–2A record keeping
requirements mandate the recording of
all hours offered. Hours offered but not
worked by a part-time employee would
count towards the employer’s threefourths guarantee obligation. Some
minor, non-substantive changes were
made to the language of this provision
for purposes of clarity.
Section 501.1 Purpose and Scope
One commenter suggested that the
Wage and Hour Division does not need
to be an enforcement authority in
connection with the H–2A Program. As
discussed above, the Secretary
determined that the enforcement of the
contractual obligations of employers
under the H–2A Program is the
responsibility of the WHD and there is
no clear rationale for discontinuing
WHD’s responsibilities.
This section in the regulations
previously listed as an ETA
responsibility determining whether
employment had been offered to U.S.
workers for up to 50 percent of the
contract period. The proposed rule
requested comments on this
requirement and proposed eliminating
the 50 percent rule and replacing it with
expanded, up-front recruitment
requirements. In the final rule in 20 CFR
part 655, Subpart B, the requirement
will now be whether employment has
been offered to U.S. workers until the
end of the recruitment period specified
in § 655.102(f)(3), a change that is more
fully discussed in the preamble to the
final rule for 20 CFR part 655, Subpart
B. The language regarding this
requirement in the Final Rule has been
modified accordingly. Language in this
section also clarifies the WHD’s role
when U.S. workers are laid off or
displaced, in light of § 501.19(e)
discussing WHD’s authority to assess
civil money penalties for violations of
these requirements. Also, a commenter
noted that the statutory language
indicated that the Secretary was
authorized to take action as described in
§ 501.1(c) and the language has been
changed to reflect the statute.
One commenter suggested that the
proposed language for § 501.1(c)(2)
could be interpreted as disjunctive. The
comment contends that clarifying
language would deter violations by
preventing employers from shifting
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liability to other entities and ensure
workers’ access to a meaningful
recovery from either a FLC (see § 501.10
definitions for H–2A Labor Contractor
(H–2ALC) definition) or its bond
insurer. Accordingly, § 501.1(c)(2)
includes the term ‘‘and/or’’ to
demonstrate the liability of H–2ALCs as
well as their surety for violations of the
H–2A rules and regulations. This
change is intended to clarify the surety’s
and the H–2ALC’s liability and to
provide an additional means of wage
recovery.
The language of this provision has
also been modified to conform to
changes that have been made in § 501.20
of the Final Rule to WHD’s debarment
authority. The Final Rule provides that
WHD may ‘‘recommend * * *
debarment from future certifications,’’
as WHD will not have authority under
the Final Rule to itself debar from
certifications.
Section 501.2 Coordination of Intake
Between DOL Agencies
The proposed rule clarified the
procedure for addressing contractual H–
2A labor complaints filed with either
the ETA or any State Workforce Agency
(SWA). Such complaints will be
forwarded to the WHD office of the
Department and will be administratively
addressed as provided in these
regulations. No changes have been made
to § 501.2 in the Final Rule.
Section 501.3 Discrimination
Proposed § 501.3(b) added two
provisions to the existing regulation
prohibiting discrimination against
persons exercising rights under the H–
2A statute. The section modified the
debarment remedy to conform to
proposed § 501.20, which provided the
WHD with authority to debar violators
under certain conditions. The section
also added language codifying the
existing procedure for forwarding
complaints based on citizenship or
immigration status to the Department of
Justice, Civil Rights Division, Office of
Special Counsel for Immigration-Related
Unfair Employment Practices. Under
this procedure, complaints based on
citizenship or immigration status are
forwarded to the Department of Justice,
while aspects of the complaints which
allege a violation of this section, or any
other portion of the H–2A statute or
regulations, are investigated by the
WHD.
The Department received four
comments on § 501.3. One private
citizen stated that guest workers should
be protected from discrimination on the
same terms as U.S. workers. One nonprofit legal aid firm stated that H–2A
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employers have a reputation for
mistreating U.S. farm workers and urged
the Department to closely monitor
hiring and employment practices and
severely penalize employers who
discriminate against U.S. workers.
One agricultural organization stated
that the Department has not explained
the legal basis for this authority or the
proposed new procedures for handling
discrimination claims. The agricultural
organization also stated that
Congressional intent is contrary to the
Department’s assertion of broad
authority over undefined forms of
discrimination with an uncapped make
whole remedy.
The final regulation does not contain
new procedures for the investigation of
discrimination complaints. As part of
the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification, an employer
attests that it will not discriminate
against persons who exercise their rights
under the H–2A statute and regulations.
Authority for the current regulation is
found in Section 218(g)(2) of the INA
which authorizes the Secretary of Labor
to take such actions, including imposing
appropriate penalties and seeking
appropriate injunctive relief and
specific performance of contractual
obligations, as may be necessary to
ensure employer compliance with terms
and conditions of employment.
The agricultural organization further
stated that employment discrimination
claims should be handled by the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC). On the other hand, one farm
worker advocacy organization argued
that the Office of Special Counsel (OSC)
has no statutory authority to enforce the
rights of long-term, lawful permanent
residents. This commenter proposed
that § 501.3 should be modified to
empower the WHD to investigate and
prosecute complaints of discrimination
on all unlawful grounds, including
citizenship or immigrant status.
The Department has clarified the final
regulation to make clear that the WHD
will continue to investigate all alleged
violations of the H–2A statute and
regulations, and forward complaints of
citizenship and immigration status,
which it lacks authority to enforce, to
the Department of Justice. Similarly,
discrimination claims subject to EEOC
jurisdiction will be forwarded to that
agency. As noted above, where the same
operative facts that support an
allegation of citizenship discrimination
or any other type of discrimination also
support a claim of discrimination under
the H–2A statute and regulations, which
generally relate to retaliation for
exercising rights under the program, the
WHD will investigate the claim of
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discrimination under the H–2A statute
and regulations and refer the claim of
citizenship or other discrimination to
the Department of Justice or to any other
appropriate agency.
The language of this provision has
been modified to conform to the
changes made in § 501.20 of the Final
Rule to WHD’s debarment authority.
The Final Rule provides that WHD
‘‘may recommend to ETA debarment of
any such violator from future labor
certification,’’ rather than stating that
WHD ‘‘may initiate action to debar any
such violator from future labor
certification.’’
Section 501.3(a)(5) of the Final Rule
provides, consistent with the proposed
rule, that an employer may not retaliate
or discriminate against an employee
who has consulted with an attorney or
an employee of a legal assistance
program. This provision does not,
however, provide employees license to
aid or abet trespassing on an employer’s
property, including by persons offering
advocacy or legal assistance. No matter
how laudable the intent of those offering
advocacy or legal services, an employee
does not have the legal right to grant
others access to the private property of
an employer. A farm owner is entitled
to discipline employees who actively
aid and abet those who engage in illegal
activity such as trespassing. Absent any
evidence of a workers’ actively aiding or
abetting such activity, however, an
employer’s adverse action against an
employee in response to that employee
meeting with a representative of an
advocacy or legal services organization,
particularly on the worker’s own time
and not on the employer’s property,
would be viewed as retaliation.
Section 501.4 Waiver of Rights
Prohibited
Proposed § 501.4 proposed a change
to the existing regulation to conform to
the modified definition of
corresponding employment in § 501.0
and to remove language that was not
necessary to the meaning or
interpretation of the regulation. No
other change was intended. The final
regulation adds language that was
included in the prior regulation to make
clear that the prohibition on the waiver
of rights does not prevent agreements to
settle private litigation.
An agricultural organization
expressed concern that this provision
prohibits anyone from seeking a waiver
of rights and recommended that the
Department clarify that this does not
preclude offering a settlement,
proposing a waiver or general release, or
informally resolving disputes in the
workplace. As noted above, the
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Department has included language from
the current regulation stating that
agreements to settle private litigation are
not prohibited. In other contexts
employees may not waive statutory or
regulatory rights.
Section 501.5 Investigation Authority
of Secretary
This section reflects a change from the
proposed rule to reflect that WHD will
recommend debarment to ETA. See 29
CFR 501.20. In addition, the proposed
rule provided that sanctions may be
imposed on any employer that does not
cooperate with an H–2A investigation.
One commenter stated that the proposed
rule changed the broader term person to
employer and recommended the use of
the prior language. The term employer
is used to conform to the statutory
language. To be consistent with
language used elsewhere in the part and
in 20 CFR 655 Subpart B, this section
now includes the employer’s attorney or
agent.
Section 501.6 Cooperation With DOL
Officials
The proposed changes to § 501.6 were
intended to ensure that DOL officials
receive cooperation from employers
participating in the H–2A Program in
conducting audits, investigations, and
other enforcement procedures intended
to ensure the efficiency and
effectiveness of the Program and
included language specifically
addressing WHD’s authority to debar
under the H–2A Program. The
regulation was changed to reflect the
fact that WHD will make debarment
recommendations to ETA and has been
clarified to require all persons to
cooperate with investigations so that a
failure to cooperate, which encompasses
interference with an investigation,
would warrant appropriate action by
WHD.
Section 501.8 Surety Bond
In order to assure compliance with
the H–2A labor provisions and to ensure
the safety and security of workers under
the H–2A Program, proposed § 501.8
requires all H–2ALCs seeking H–2A
labor certification to obtain a surety
bond for $10,000, where the H–2ALC
employs fewer than 50 employees, or for
$20,000, where the H–2ALC’s
employees number 50 or more. The
purpose of § 501.8 is to ensure that
workers employed under the H–2A
Program receive all wages and benefits
owed to them by an H–2ALC who is
found to have violated the provisions of
the H–2A Program during the period for
which it was certified. Rather than
requiring H–2ALC applicants to remit
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the bonds directly to the Department,
however, proposed § 501.8 requires that
the H–2ALC attest to having obtained
the required bond and to provide the
specific bond and bonding company
information in conjunction with the H–
2A certification application.
The proposed requirement for a surety
bond from H–2ALCs was met with
approval from two commenters. A
worker advocacy organization suggested
that the Department consider other
associated worker costs in addition to
the number of employees to compute
the amount of the bond that the H–
2ALC would have to obtain.
Other commenters disagreed with the
surety bond requirement. An
agricultural organization that disagreed
with § 501.8, as it was proposed, argued
that the surety bonds will not be
financially feasible for any but the
largest H–2A contractors. It contends
that such bonds are not only financially
constrictive but are also difficult to
obtain in the bond underwriting market.
The Department notes, however, that
several states, including California,
Illinois, Oregon, and Idaho, have
adopted similar state regulations
requiring comparable surety bond
amounts from employers and labor
contractors without causing any
significant impediments to employers
and agricultural labor contractors. The
Final Rule has been modified in
response to these comments, however,
to create a smaller bonding requirement
of $5,000 for small H–2ALCs with fewer
than 25 employees.
Several commenters argued that the
Department’s ability to increase the
bond amounts based only on its
discretion is unreasonable and is
outside the scope of the Department’s
authority. Instead, they suggest that the
regulation provide more objective
criteria for setting the bond levels
instead of relying solely on the
discretion of the Secretary of Labor.
The Department has determined that
it has the authority, where warranted by
the circumstances and supported by
objective criteria, to require that an H–
2ALC obtain an increase in a bond
amount if it is deemed necessary to
effectuate the purposes of ensuring that
the H–2ALC comply with the
requirements and obligations of the H–
2A Program. A clarification that
objective criteria are required to support
an increase in the bond amount has
been added to the Final Rule. The due
process rights of H–2ALCs are further
preserved through the H–2ALC’s right to
request a hearing pursuant to § 501.33
regarding the Department’s
determination that the amount of a bond
is to be increased in order to be allowed
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to participate in the H–2A Program. By
reviewing the historic bonding
requirements in conjunction with
worker claims, the Department
preserves the discretionary authority
needed to ensure that the obligations
owed by the H–2ALCs to workers
employed under the H–2A program are
fulfilled, including wages paid, and to
ensure that the protections offered to
those workers by the H–2A Program are
maintained.
Section 501.10 Definitions
Section 501.10 incorporates the
definitions listed in 20 CFR part 655,
Subpart B that pertain to 29 CFR part
501. The discussion of definitions that
are common to both 20 CFR 655.100 and
29 CFR 501.10 can be found in the
preamble for 20 CFR 655, Subpart B
above. Several changes were made to
the definitions in § 501.10 to conform to
changes to the definitions in 20 CFR
655, Subpart B.
As noted in two comments, the
definition of employ in proposed 29
CFR 501.10 was defined as to suffer or
permit to work, whereas the terms
employer and employee were defined in
terms of the common law test. Since the
two concepts are different and the use
of suffer or permit to work is precluded
by the Supreme Court opinion in
Nationwide Mutual Ins. v. Darden, 503
U.S. 318, 322–323 (1992), the reference
to suffer or permit to work has been
removed.
The definition of work contract has
been updated to reflect language used in
the proposed changes to 20 CFR part
655, Subpart B.
The proposal, like the Final Rule,
utilized the term successor in interest in
§ 501.20. A definition of the term has
therefore been added to the Final Rule.
Section 501.15 Enforcement
This section updated references to
Section 218 of the INA and changed
language addressing corresponding
employment. Minor, non-substantive
changes have been made to the language
of the provision in the Final Rule for
purposes of clarity and to update crossreferences.
Section 501.16 Sanctions and
Remedies
The proposed rule modified the
current language to conform to the
proposed regulation at § 501.20, which
provided authority to the WHD to debar
violators under certain circumstances
and to conform to the bonding
requirements in 20 CFR part 655,
Subpart B.
A farm worker advocacy organization
comments that the proposed rule can be
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read to restrict payment of back wages
to fixed-site employers in the event that
a joint employment relationship exists
between a fixed-site employer and an
H–2ALC. Since it is the Department’s
intent to hold both employers in a joint
employment relationship liable for back
wages, the regulation has been clarified
to make that point plain.
The farm worker advocacy
organization also commented that the
distinction between the WHD’s
jurisdiction to debar and the ETA’s
jurisdiction to debar is unclear, and
expressed concern that some violations
that may merit debarment would not be
acted upon. The commenter suggested
that debarment authority be concurrent
to assure that all appropriate allegations
would be addressed. After careful
consideration of this alternative, the
Department has determined that WHD
will make debarment recommendations
to ETA. See preamble to § 501.20. The
Final Rule has been modified
accordingly. Because debarment is
addressed explicitly in § 655.118, and
because recommendations of debarment
are addressed explicitly in § 501.20, the
language from § 501.16 of the NPRM has
been deleted to avoid potential
confusion.
The rule has also been clarified to
make explicit that back wages may be
assessed in the event a U.S. worker is
adversely affected by a layoff or
displacement. This clarification
conforms the regulation to the
provisions of the proposed civil money
penalty and debarment regulations
which provide for penalties in the event
a U.S. worker is adversely affected by a
layoff or displacement. Assessment of
back wages in the event of a layoff or
displacement that is prohibited by these
regulations will help to ensure that the
employment of the alien in such labor
or services will not adversely affect the
wages and working conditions of U.S.
workers similarly employed. While the
authority to assess back wages is already
provided in the proposed regulation, the
clarification is useful in light of the
explicit penalty provisions in §§ 501.19
and 501.20.
Finally, the final rule modifies
§ 501.16 to make clear that injunctions
may be sought to reinstate U.S. workers
who are laid off or displaced in
violation of the attestation provision
found at § 655.105(j), where the
Administrator/WHD has found a
violation and the employer has refused
reinstatement.
Section 501.19 Civil Money Penalty
Assessment
Section 218(g)(2) of the INA
authorizes the Secretary to set
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appropriate penalties to assure
compliance with the terms and
conditions of employment under the H–
2A statute. Proposed § 501.19 increased
the maximum civil money penalties
from the current maximum of $1,000
per violation. Section 501.19(c)(1)
proposed an increase to a maximum
penalty to $5,000 per worker for a
willful failure to meet a condition of the
work contract or for discrimination
against a U.S. or H–2A worker who filed
a complaint, has testified or is about to
testify, or has exercised or asserted a
protected right. Section 501.19(d)
proposed a change to the maximum
penalty for interference with a WHD
investigation to $5,000 per
investigation. Section 501.19(e)
proposed an increase to $15,000 for the
maximum penalty for a willful failure to
meet a condition of the work contract
that results in displacing a U.S. worker
employed by the employer during the
period of employment on the
employer’s application, or during the
period of 75 days preceding such period
of employment. Section 501.19(c)(2)
proposed a new penalty of up to
$50,000 per worker for a violation of an
applicable housing or transportation
safety and health provision of the work
contract that causes the death or serious
injury of any worker. The section also
proposed a new penalty of up to
$100,000 per worker where the violation
of a safety and health provision
involving death or serious injury is
repeated or willful.
Three worker advocacy organizations
and a U.S. Senator supported the
Department’s proposal to increase the
amount of fines and penalties for
noncompliance with H–2A rules. One
commenter stated that enhanced
enforcement activities are key to an
effective attestation-based application
program and encouraged the
Department to utilize all fines levied for
noncompliance to further enhance
enforcement measures. Similarly, one
worker advocacy organization stated
that the increased money penalties are
welcomed and may have some tangible
deterrent effect; however, it did not
think they were adequate to achieve
meaningful assurance of employer
compliance.
Fourteen commenters opposed the
proposed increases in penalties and
fines, arguing that the increases are
excessive. Six commenters argued that
the excessive increases in fines and
penalties would discourage employers,
especially new employers, from using
the H–2A Program. Some agricultural
organizations raised concerns that the
increased penalties would deter
employers from participating in the
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program out of fear that excessive
penalties could end a business.
Similarly, some agricultural
organizations argued that the increased
penalties are excessive given the
complicated nature of the program and
the likelihood of an inadvertent mistake
on the part of the employer that could
prove to be financially disastrous. One
farm labor contractor argued that the
fines are unnecessary since employers
strive to treat all workers fairly and
attempt to follow the rules.
Some commenters suggested that the
Department not assess a $5,000 civil
money penalty against employers new
to the H–2A Program and the
certification requirements. While one
commenter endorsed and encouraged
the Department’s ability to utilize all
fines and penalties for noncompliance
with the H–2A rules, he raised some
concern that the proposal does not
provide any leeway to new users of the
program. The commenter recommended
a graduated system of fines to allow for
a learning curve for new users.
Similarly, one agricultural organization
suggested that the civil money penalties
be graduated for the first, second, and
third offenses to allow for a learning
curve due to the complexity of the
program.
Initially, it should be noted that the
current regulation at 29 CFR 501.19(c)
provides penalties in the maximum
amount of $1,000 for each act of
discrimination or interference. While
the Final Rule will result in increased
penalties in some cases, it will also limit
penalties for discrimination to $5,000
per worker and penalties for failure to
cooperate to $5,000 per investigation,
creating new caps for these penalties.
The Department has revised 29 CFR
501.19(d) to cover a ‘‘failure to
cooperate with an investigation’’ so that
the language of the violation is
consistent with §§ 501.6, 501.20, and
501.21.
The Department does not believe that
higher penalties, where applicable, will
prevent employers from participating in
the H–2A Program. Rather, the
Department agrees with this commenter
that enhanced enforcement activities are
key to an effective attestation-based
application program and will assist the
Department in enforcing worker
protections. The higher penalties are an
important and effective deterrent against
violators who disregard their obligations
under the attestation program and/or
who discriminate against workers.
It is worth noting that some
commenters believe that the penalties
are excessive, while others claim they
are inadequate. The Department
believes that the general penalties of no
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more than $1,000 for each violation, and
$5,000 for each willful failure to meet a
covered condition of the work contract
or for willful discrimination, are fully
appropriate, and those penalties have
been left unchanged in the Final Rule.
To clear up ambiguities in the proposed
rule, however, the Department has
inserted clarifying language specifying
how it is that the existence of separate
violations subject to those penalties will
be determined.
While the new sections increase the
amount of the penalties that the
Department may seek for some
violations, they do not modify or change
in any way the relevant factors that the
Administrator/WHD will use in
determining the amount of the penalty
as listed in the prior rule. The
Administrator/WHD will not seek the
maximum amount for every violation.
Rather, the Administrator/WHD will
continue to evaluate the relevant factors
listed in § 501.19(b), and the totality of
the circumstances, when determining
the amount of the penalty. The factors
that will be considered include, but are
not limited to, the previous history of
violation(s) of the H–2A provisions of
the Act and the regulations; the number
of H–2A employees, corresponding U.S.
employees or those U.S. workers
individually rejected for employment
affected by the violation(s); the gravity
of the violation(s); efforts made in good
faith to comply with the H–2A
provisions of the Act and these
regulations; explanation of the person
charged with the violation(s);
commitment to future compliance,
taking into account the public health,
interest or safety, and whether the
person has previously violated the H–
2A provisions of the Act; and the extent
to which the violator achieved a
financial gain due to the violation, or
the potential financial loss or potential
injury to the worker. The phrase ‘‘H–2A
employees, corresponding U.S.
employees or those U.S. workers
individually rejected for employment’’
has been substituted for the phrase
‘‘workers’’ in § 501.19(b)(2) of the
current regulation to clarify the scope of
potentially impacted workers that the
Department will examine in
determining an appropriate penalty, and
to make clear that workers will not be
considered unless they were sufficiently
proximate to the violation in question
that the Department can fairly consider
the workers to have suffered a direct
adverse effect. These criteria assure that
excessive penalties will not be assessed
and that penalties will be appropriately
tailored when minor or inadvertent
violations are committed.
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As previously noted, the Department’s
proposal also allows the Administrator/
WHD to seek higher civil money
penalties for a violation of an applicable
housing or transportation safety and
health provision of the work contract
that causes death or serious injury of
any worker. The Department has
corrected a typographical error in
§ 501.19(c)(3), which inadvertently
stated that ‘‘[f]or purposes of paragraph
(c)(3) of this section, the term serious
injury means.’’ The proposed section
should have referenced paragraph (c)(2).
One agricultural organization
supported increased prosecution of
repeat or flagrant violators of the H–2A
Program instead of implementing
excessive fines for inadvertent
violations. Some commenters disagreed
with the $50,000 penalty per worker for
these violations, and one agricultural
organization opposed additional
penalties of $50,000, and $100,000 for
violations that result in injury and
death. These commenters expressed
concerns that in some circumstances an
employer could have no reasonable
means of knowing about housing or
transportation defects or an employee’s
misbehavior or carelessness that could
lead to serious injury or death. One
agricultural organization argued that
these penalty increases would not
reduce accidents but would rather deter
employers from participating in the H–
2A Program.
The Department is sensitive to the fact
that the proposed penalties represent
increases of up to 100 times the current
maximum penalty amount.
Nevertheless, the Department believes
that the current penalties are grossly
inadequate to address serious program
violations that kill or seriously injure
workers. In light of the concerns
expressed, however, and to better tailor
the proposed very substantial penalties
to the employer’s actual level of
culpability, the Department has
modified the penalties in the Final Rule.
The Final Rule provides that ‘‘[f]or a
violation of a housing or transportation
safety and health provision of the work
contract that proximately causes the
death or serious injury of any worker,
the civil money penalty shall not exceed
$25,000 per worker, unless the violation
is a repeat or willful violation, in which
case the penalty shall not exceed
$50,000 per worker, or unless the
employer failed, after notification, to
cure the specific violation, in which
case the penalty shall not exceed
$100,000 per worker.’’
The Department also notes in
response to these commenters that the
Administrator/WHD will not seek the
full amount in every circumstance. The
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Department will continue to evaluate
the relevant factors listed in § 501.19(b),
and the totality of the circumstances, to
determine the civil money penalty
assessment for these violations. For
instance, the gravity of the violation(s);
efforts made in good faith to comply
with the H–2A provisions of the Act and
these regulations; explanation of the
person charged with the violation(s);
and the extent to which the violator
achieved a financial gain due to the
violation, or the potential financial loss
or potential injury to the worker will be
considered by the Department in
determining the civil money penalty
assessment against an employer for a
violation of an applicable housing or
transportation safety and health
provision of the work contract that
causes death or serious injury of any
worker. The Department believes that
evaluating these relevant factors, along
with the totality of the circumstances,
should alleviate the commenter’s
concerns that excessive penalties will be
assessed for inadvertent violations.
Furthermore, one commenter expressed
concern that serious injury is not further
defined. It is the Department’s view that
§ 501.19(c)(3), which defines serious
injury as the permanent loss or
substantial impairment of the senses,
function of a bodily member, organ, or
mental faculty, or the loss of movement
of a body part, is sufficient to put
employers on notice as to the types of
injuries that the Department will
consider when assessing a penalty.
One agricultural organization stated
that penalties are not the proper
deterrent to stop safety violations
because they are imposed after an
accident and recommended greater
emphasis on preventing accidents.
Similarly, two agricultural organizations
requested a specified time period for
employers to correct violations before
penalties would be assessed. One
agricultural organization stated that
employers who make good faith efforts
to comply with the revised H–2A
Program should be allowed a 60 day
compliance period to correct the error
without the assessment of fines and
penalties.
While the Department recognizes the
need to prevent accidents before they
happen, the Department believes that
the burden to do so should rest with the
employer who has attested that the
housing and/or transportation provided
to the workers meets all applicable
requirements. Furthermore, the ability
to assess a civil money penalty where
violations have been found will serve as
an important incentive for employers to
ensure that the housing and
transportation that they provide are safe
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to the H–2A and U.S. workers and meet
all applicable safety and health
requirements. The Department does not
believe that a 60 day compliance period
after a violation has been discovered
would ensure that employers fulfill
their obligations to provide safe housing
and transportation. Rather, the 60 day
compliance period would not be an
effective deterrent for employers who
might not cure safety violations until
discovered by the Department.
One law firm argued that, to the
extent that the Department contemplates
issuing fines for violations of other laws,
such as the Occupational Safety and
Health Act or Fair Labor Standards Act,
those fines would be duplicative and
not authorized by law. The law firm also
argued that there is no justifiable basis
for treating H–2A employers more
harshly than non-H–2A employers for
violations of the same statute, but even
if special treatment for violations of
other laws by H–2A employers could be
justified, any enhanced enforcement
through heavier penalties or other
punitive action for failure to comply
fully with other laws as violations of the
H–2A regulations should at least be
deferred for at least 3 years after any
new rules are implemented. The
Department does not and will not assess
penalties for the same housing violation
under multiple laws at the same time.
Where an employer violates an OSHA
Temporary Labor Camp standard, which
could also be a violation of the H–2A
housing regulations, a violation will be
charged under only one of those
statutes. WHD follows this practice in
enforcing OSHA temporary labor camp
standards and MSPA housing standards
that can apply to the same facility.
However, an employer has an obligation
to follow all applicable laws and
regulations. To the extent that an
employer is covered by the FLSA, the
Division may enforce and seek remedies
under both the H–2A program and the
FLSA. Of course, payment of the AWER,
or the prevailing hourly wage or piece
rate under the H–2A Program, would
also satisfy the obligation to pay the
minimum wage under the FLSA. While
all of the facts and circumstances of a
given case will be considered in the
assessment of any penalty, the
Department has determined that a
blanket 3 year deferral of penalty
assessments is not warranted.
The proposed § 501.19(e) states that
the civil money penalty shall not exceed
$15,000 per worker for willful layoff or
displacement of any similarly situated
U.S. worker employed in the occupation
that is the subject of the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification in
the area of intended employment within
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the period beginning 75 days before the
date of need. A civil money penalty will
not be assessed for layoffs where the
employer has offered the opportunity to
the laid-off U.S. worker, and the U.S.
worker(s) either refused the job
opportunity or was rejected for the job
opportunity for lawful, job-related
reasons. The Final Rule has changed the
75 day period to a period within 60 days
of the date of need in conformity with
the change to § 655.100(a)(1)(ii) which
modified the requirement that the
employer begin advertising within 75
days of the date of need to within 60
days of the date of need.
Some commenters argued that
$15,000 for displacement of a domestic
worker was excessive and could put a
small farm out of business. The
Department is sensitive to the fact that
this penalty represents a fifteen-fold
increase in the maximum penalty
provided for any offense under the
current regulations. Nevertheless,
unlawfully displacing a domestic
worker is a serious offense that has a
substantial adverse effect on the
displaced worker, and thus falls within
the core of the Department’s
enforcement responsibilities. Balancing
these competing concerns, the
Department has decided to adopt a
$10,000 maximum penalty for
displacement of a U.S. worker in the
Final Rule, a tenfold increase over the
current maximum penalty for any
violation. This penalty will provide the
Department with an important
enforcement tool under this attestationbased program. The Department
believes that a significant penalty will
serve as an important deterrent for
employers who might turn away
qualified U.S. workers from an
occupation covered by an Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification. As discussed above, the
Department will continue to evaluate
the relevant factors listed in § 501.19(b),
as well as the totality of the
circumstances, to determine the civil
money penalty assessment for these
violations.
One commenter argued that the
Department was purporting to legalize
the displacement of U.S. farm workers
based on nothing more than an
employer’s unscrutinized, self-serving
statement that U.S. workers did not
want, or were unqualified for, the job.
The Department did not intend this
consequence, and on further
consideration has determined that such
an expansive safe harbor provision for
layoffs is not necessary. Layoffs that are
for lawful, job-related reasons are
already protected under the text of the
Final Rule, and the Department does not
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believe that it is appropriate to allow an
employer to legitimize an otherwise
illegal layoff simply by later offering the
laid-off employee a new position. The
Department has therefore limited the
application of the safe harbor provision
to situations ‘‘where all H–2A workers
were laid off’’ before any U.S. workers
were. In such a situation, the
employment of H–2A workers will not
have factored into the layoff of the U.S.
workers.
One agricultural organization argued
that the safe harbor provision seems to
require an actual offer and would not be
satisfied by a good faith, but
unsuccessful, attempt to locate the
domestic worker. The agricultural
organization noted that it may be
difficult to locate domestic workers to
make the offer and recommended that
the attestation could be satisfied with
reasonable, good-faith efforts to contact
these workers through a written
communication to the worker’s last
known address or any other reasonably
specific attempt to make contact. In
light of the modifications to the safe
harbor provision, these comments have
been rendered moot.
The agricultural organization also
argued that this section should be
revised because the maximum period of
admission under the H–2A Program for
one employer is 10 months, making it
possible that the employer could
discharge the domestic worker at the
end of the employer’s period of need
and then begin a new employment
period 2 months later. This employer
would have discharged the domestic
worker within the displacement
provision timeline, notwithstanding the
fact that the employer was in
compliance with the H–2A Program.
The agricultural organization argued
that this could expose employers to
large fines for no reason other than the
timing of the seasons. The agricultural
organization recommended that the
section be revised to reflect the time
frames inherent in the H–2A regulations
to avoid this inequitable outcome. As
noted above, the time frames have been
modified to prohibit displacement and
layoff within 60 days of the date of
need. In any event, in light of the
modifications to the safe harbor
provision, these comments have been
rendered moot.
One law firm requested that the
Department remove what they
considered improper, substantial new
penalties against agents and attorneys of
H–2A employers who are found or
accused of making material
misrepresentations in the certification
application process. The law firm stated
that such disciplinary measures are
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usually handled through the state bar
association and that imposing
substantial penalties, including
debarment merely for accusations of
material misrepresentations, is a
violation of due process principles.
There is no explicit reference in this
provision to attorneys or agents. As is
discussed at greater length in the
preamble to Part 655, the Department
will not hold attorneys and agents
strictly liable under the Final Rule for
the misconduct of their clients. Rather,
the Department will require some
degree of personal culpability on the
part of attorneys and agents before
applying any form of penalty to them.
Some commenters argued that the
new regulations failed to provide an
appeals process for violations or fines
and requested that procedures be
developed to allow employers to appeal
violations and fines when good faith
efforts were taken to comply with the
rules. The Department already provides
such a process in Subpart C—
Administrative Proceedings. The
current § 501.30 provides the
administrative proceedings that will be
applied with respect to a determination
to impose an assessment of civil money
penalties. Under current and proposed
§ 501.33(a), any person who desires
review of a civil money penalty
determination shall make written
request for an administrative hearing no
later than 30 days after issuance of the
notice to the official who issued the
determination at the Wage and Hour
Division. Such timely filing of an
administrative appeal stays the
determination pending the outcome of
the appeals process pursuant to
proposed § 501.33(d).
Section 501.20—Debarment and
Revocation
The current regulations provide ETA
with the authority to deny certification
(i.e., debarment) and revoke certificates
while requiring the WHD to report
findings and make recommendations to
ETA to deny future certifications and
revoke current certificates. The NPRM
proposed providing debarment
authority for issues arising from WHD
investigations to the Administrator/
WHD, while debarment authority for
issues arising out of the attestation
process would have remained with
ETA. The Final Rule modifies the
proposal by adhering to the current
practice, providing ETA authority for
debarment and revocation, and
providing the Wage and Hour Division
authority to make a debarment
recommendation.
A number of commenters opposed
extending debarment authority to the
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WHD. These commenters requested that
debarment authority remain with ETA
to avoid inconsistencies in the
interpretation of the H–2A regulations
between WHD and ETA. One of these
commenters stated that extending
debarment authority to the WHD would
enhance enforcement, while
recommending regulatory language
requiring coordination between the two
agencies. One commenter stated that the
WHD should have concurrent
debarment authority with ETA to ensure
that debarment is available for all
appropriate violations.
After a careful review of the
comments, the Department has
concluded that providing debarment
authority to two different agencies
within the Department for different,
though potentially overlapping types of
violations could result in unnecessary
confusion. Debarment authority will
therefore remain with ETA, which will
entertain recommendations from WHD.
However, under the current system
the Board of Alien Labor Certification
Appeals (BALCA) adjudicates appeals of
ETA debarment determinations based
upon WHD recommendations, while
appeals of WHD back wage and civil
money penalty assessments are
adjudicated by the Administrative
Review Board (ARB). WHD debarment
recommendations generally arise from
the same set of facts, involving the same
evidence as WHD back wage and civil
money penalty assessments. To
conserve resources and avoid
unnecessary duplication of litigation,
the Final Rule specifies at § 501.20(e)
that ‘‘In considering a recommendation
made by the Wage and Hour Division to
debar an employer or to revoke a
temporary agricultural labor
certification, the Administrator/OFLC
shall treat final agency determinations
that the employer has committed a
violation as res judicata and shall not
reconsider those determinations.’’
The standards for debarment
recommendations used by WHD have
been conformed to ensure that they are
identical to the standards used by ETA
for debarment actions under 20 CFR
655, Subpart B, thus ensuring
consistency in application, though ETA
has some additional standards that are
not applicable to the WHD role and will
not be utilized by WHD.
The proposed rule did not include a
change to the current revocation
procedures, under which WHD provides
recommendations to ETA for certificate
revocation. That procedure is adopted
in the Final Rule, together with more
specific revocation criteria, which have
been modified to conform to the criteria
set forth in 20 CFR 655, Subpart B.
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Section 501.21 Failure To Cooperate
With Investigations
Administrator/WHD that are subject to
hearing requests under § 501.33.
Section 501.21 has been modified in
the Final Rule to conform to the changes
made in § 501.20 regarding WHD’s
authority to make debarment and
revocation recommendations to ETA.
The relevant language in the Final Rule
now provides that ‘‘a civil money
penalty may be assessed for each failure
to cooperate with an investigation, and
other appropriate relief may be sought.
In addition, the WHD shall report each
such occurrence to ETA, and ETA may
debar the employer from future
certification. The WHD may also
recommend to ETA that an existing
certification be revoked.’’
Section 501.33 Requests for Hearing
The proposed rule added language to
the regulation to make clear that
exhaustion of the appeal of the
Administrator/WHD’s determination is
required before a party may appeal an
agency ruling to Federal court. No
comments were received and the Final
Rule is adopted as proposed.
Section 501.22 Payment and
Collection of Civil Money Penalties
No changes to this section were
proposed in the NPRM. The text of the
current regulation has been included in
the Final Rule with only one alteration,
specifying that a ‘‘penalty is due within
30 days.’’
Section 501.30 Applicability of
Procedures and Rules
The language in § 501.30 was revised
in the proposed rule to illustrate the
administrative process for assessing
civil money penalties and seeking a
debarment under the H–2A Program.
With the exception of civil money
penalty assessments and debarment
disputes, the Department of Labor may
file an action directly in Federal court
seeking enforcement. Section 501.30 has
been modified in the Final Rule to
conform to the changes made in
§ 501.20 regarding WHD’s authority to
make debarment recommendations to
ETA.
Section 501.31 Written Notice of
Determination Required
The administrative process was
revised in the proposed rule to reference
WHD’s authority to debar. Section
501.31 has been modified by deleting
the phrase ‘‘to debar’’ to reflect the fact
that WHD recommendations for
debarment do not constitute
‘‘determinations’’ of the Administrator/
WHD that are subject to hearing requests
under § 501.33.
Section 501.32
Contents of Notice
This section was revised in the
proposed rule to reference WHD’s
authority to debar. Section 501.32 has
been modified by deleting the phrase
‘‘whether to debar and the length of the
debarment’’ to reflect the fact that WHD
recommendations for debarment do not
constitute ‘‘determinations’’ of the
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Section 501.41 Decision and Order of
Administrative Law Judge
Some minor, non-substantive changes
were made to paragraph (c) of this
provision, including the creation of a
new paragraph (d), for purposes of
clarity and consistency with § 501.42.
Section 501.42 Exhaustion of
Administrative Remedies
Proposed § 501.42 clarified the
current regulation to assure that the
exhaustion of all administrative
remedies is required before an appeal of
the decision of the administrative law
judge can be taken to the Federal courts
pursuant to the Administrative
Procedure Act.
One commenter noted that the
additional language, stating that the
decision of the administrative law judge
shall be inoperative pending final
review of the Administrative Review
Board’s (ARB) decision, was
unnecessary to ensure exhaustion and
harmful to workers. In Darby v.
Cisneros, 509 U.S. 137, 152 (1993), the
Supreme Court decided that agencies
may not require exhaustion of
administrative remedies before an
appeal may be filed with a federal
district court unless a rule is adopted
that an agency appeal must be taken
before judicial review is available, and
it is provided that the initial decision is
inoperative pending appeal. Id.
Accordingly, the additional language is
necessary to the exhaustion
requirement. Further, it is unclear what
harm may result from requiring that
workers await a decision by the ARB
before appealing to Federal court. There
is a distinct public benefit from the
uniform agency decision making
process accorded by ARB review.
Additional language has been added to
this provision to clarify when an
administrative law judge’s decision
becomes final agency action.
C. Revisions to 29 CFR Parts 780 and
788
In the notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM) published February 13, 2008,
the Department proposed a modification
to Parts 780 and 788 of the FLSA
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regulations to recognize that the
production of ‘‘Christmas’’ trees through
the application of agricultural and
horticultural techniques to be harvested
and sold for seasonal ornamental use
constitutes agriculture as the term is
defined under the FLSA. As explained
in the preamble to the NPRM, the
Department deemed this change
necessary in light of the Fourth Circuit
Court of Appeals’ decision in U.S.
Department of Labor v. North Carolina
Growers Association, 377 F.3d 345 (4th
Cir. 2004), and because it recognizes
that modern production of such trees
typically involves extensive care and
management.
Many individual employers, trade
associations, and associations of
growers approved of the Department’s
proposed rule to classify Christmas tree
farming as an agricultural activity under
FLSA. Several commenters noted that
the Christmas tree industry had
undergone significant changes, such as
no longer harvesting from natural
stands, in the time since the FLSA was
first passed in 1938. Commenters also
listed a range of current common
practices shared by Christmas tree
producers and other row crop farmers,
such as planting, pruning, weed control,
pest control, transplanting, and
harvesting under a deadline. The insight
provided by these comments further
confirms that the determination to
classify Christmas tree farming as
agriculture under the FLSA is
appropriate.
Two commenters suggested that many
of these activities were also covered by
the 1938 FLSA primary definition of
agriculture. Moreover, the commenters
maintained that, since the FLSA
classifies nursery activities as an
agricultural activity, Christmas tree
production and harvesting, which the
commenters believed to be nearly
identical to those in nursery production
and harvesting, must also be classified
as agricultural activity.
Several commenters expressed
appreciation for the Department’s
attempt to establish a national standard
for Christmas tree labor status. Several
others maintained that the ambiguity
surrounding the industry’s status had
hurt Christmas tree growers nationally
because laws were not being applied in
a uniform fashion across the states. In
addition, many commenters pointed to
the Fourth Circuit’s 2004 decision in
North Carolina Growers Association, in
which the court held that Christmas tree
farming fit the definition of agriculture
as proof that Christmas tree production
was an agricultural activity. See 377
F.3d at 352. This holding created
confusion between the Department’s
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classification and federal law. Two
commenters noted that Christmas tree
growers located in the Fourth Circuit
may have achieved clarity with respect
to their status as agricultural producers,
but the status of all other Christmas tree
growers not within the jurisdiction of
the Fourth Circuit remained unclear
until now.
Other commenters added that, under
many other federal rules including
property tax, sales tax, and agricultural
worker’s protection standards for
pesticide use, Christmas tree growers
were already considered to be
agricultural. Several commenters
acknowledged that certain Christmas
tree growers may dig trees with a soil
ball, which is considered a nursery
activity and therefore an agricultural
activity, but may also produce trees for
harvesting by cutting, which has,
historically, not been considered to be
agricultural activity. The commenters
noted that the decision to dig or cut a
tree depends on market conditions at
the time of harvest, and the same
employees could hypothetically
participate in both scenarios. Two
commenters concluded, however, that
this difference between nursery and
Christmas tree harvesting was irrelevant
because the production practices
remained the same and should be
construed as agriculture. Likewise, one
commenter wrote that the same
equipment was often used for both
Christmas tree production and nursery
projects.
Three commenters offered suggestions
for minor changes to the rule stating that
the proposed language offered overly
specific timeframes for horticultural
operations. The commenters argued that
such timeframes may vary according to
region and tree species and that future
changes to horticultural procedures
might affect some of the listed activities
in the rule. One commenter further
stated that removing the timeframes
would not affect the Christmas tree
industry’s ability to operate within the
FLSA’s definition of agriculture, but
would possibly eliminate an
unnecessary rigidity that might
otherwise disqualify Christmas tree
production that appropriately qualifies
for agricultural status. The Fourth
Circuit’s reasoning in the North
Carolina Growers Association case
clearly articulated that performance of
certain actions on the plants is an
important indicator that what is being
produced is a seasonal ornamental
horticultural commodity. See 377 F.3d
at 345. The regulatory language
addressing timeframes is sufficiently
flexible to allow for variation in
timeframes due to region, species, and
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procedural differences. Indeed, the
Final Rule expressly qualifies the listed
timeframes by saying that the
agricultural techniques applied must be
those ‘‘such as the following.’’ The
Department will not apply the listed
timeframes with undue rigidity.
One commenter, commenting on its
own behalf and on behalf of numerous
advocacy groups, opposed the rule,
asserting that, while the H–2A program
offered more comprehensive protections
for workers than did the H–2B
classification (under which many
Christmas tree harvest workers had
previously been allowed into the
country to work), Christmas tree
workers under the H–2A Program would
lose their coverage under MSPA as well
as their claims to overtime. The
commenter added that the matter of
overtime pay was critical because the
Christmas tree harvest season can be
extremely intense with extensive
overtime work. Temporary, nonimmigrant workers for Christmas tree
production have been brought in under
the H–2A Program and not the H–2B
non-agricultural Program for many years
now based on the IRC definition of
agriculture, which the H–2A regulations
use (as well as the FLSA definition of
agriculture), and would not have been
within the definition of a worker subject
to MSPA. The proposed rule insures
equity within the industry in that
employers across the country will be
bound by the same requirements under
the FLSA in the wake of the Fourth
Circuit’s North Carolina Growers
Association decision. See id. The
Department is adopting the proposed
changes for 29 CFR Part 780 without
change.
No comments were received with
respect to the proposed change to 29
CFR Part 788.10. Therefore, the
Department is adopting the proposed
rule without change in the Final Rule.
III. Administrative Information
A. Executive Order 12866—Regulatory
Planning and Review
Under Executive Order (E.O.) 12866,
the Department must determine whether
a regulatory action is ‘‘significant’’ and
therefore subject to the requirements of
the E.O. and subject to review by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). Section 3(f) of the E.O. defines
a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’ as an
action that is likely to result in a rule
(1) having an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more, or
adversely and materially affecting a
sector of the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or State, local or
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tribal governments or communities (also
referred to as ‘‘economically
significant’’); (2) creating serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering
with an action taken or planned by
another agency; (3) materially altering
the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or
policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the E.O. The
Department has determined that this
Final Rule is not an ‘‘economically
significant regulatory action’’ under
Section 3(f)(1) of E.O.12866. The
procedures for filing an Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
under the H–2A visa category on behalf
of nonimmigrant temporary agricultural
workers, under this regulation, will not
have an economic impact of $100
million or more. The regulation will not
adversely affect the economy or any
sector thereof, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment, nor
public health or safety in a material
way. In fact, this Final Rule is intended
to provide relief to affected employers
both directly, by modernizing the
process by which they can apply for H–
2A labor certification, and indirectly, by
increasing the available legal workforce.
The Department, however, has
determined that this Final Rule is a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ under
Section 3(f)(4) of the E.O. Summary of
Impacts. The changes in this Final Rule
are expected to have little net direct cost
impact on employers, above and beyond
the baseline of the current costs
required by the program as it is
currently implemented. The reengineering of the program
requirements, including attestationbased applications and pre-application
recruitment, will have the effect of
reducing employer application costs in
time and resources and introduce
processing efficiencies that will reduce
costs for employers, particularly costs
associated with loss of labor due to
delayed certifications.
Employer costs for newspaper
advertising will increase slightly, as the
Final Rule will require that one of the
two currently required advertisements
be run on a Sunday. However, the
Department believes that this cost
increase will be offset by the certainty
the Final Rule will provide regarding
total recruitment costs. Most
significantly, the Final Rule has
eliminated the possibility that
additional, unstated recruitment
measures may be imposed on program
users at the last minute, and further
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provides program users an annual list of
traditional labor supply states that will
inform them in advance of precisely
where they will be required to engage in
out-of-state newspaper advertising.
Civil money penalties have increased
substantially under the Final Rule, but
these represent avoidable costs, and the
Department believes that they will have
the deterrent effect of fostering greater
program compliance under the Final
Rule.
The biggest cost to employers under
the Final Rule is likely to be an
increased cost of foreign recruitment,
since employers can no longer allow
foreign recruiters with whom they are in
privity of contract to charge foreign
workers fees for recruitment. The
Department believes that this cost can
be substantially offset by collaborative
recruitment, however, and that it will
not be so large as to overcome
employers’ cost savings resulting from
streamlining of the application process
and program efficiencies. The
Department requested comment on what
costs these policies introduce and what
efficiencies may be gained from
adopting these new procedures, to foster
a thorough consideration and discussion
of the rule’s costs and benefits before its
finalization. Several commenters
believed that the proposed changes
could increase costs for employers and
doubted that they would achieve the
proposed objectives. Many of these
concerns have been addressed by
changes in the Final Rule, including
reductions in the newspaper advertising
and record retention requirements.
The additional record retention costs
for employers are minimal and the Final
Rule includes a three-year requirement
as compared to the originally proposed
five-year requirement. The new record
retention requirements will require a
burden of approximately ten minutes
per year per application to retain the
application and supporting documents
above and beyond the one year of
retention required by regulations of the
Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission (EEOC) at 29 CFR 1602.14,
promulgated pursuant to Title VII of the
Civil Rights Act and the Americans
With Disabilities Act, and 29 CFR
1627.3(b)(3), promulgated pursuant to
the Age Discrimination in Employment
Act. In FY 2007, 7,725 employers filed
requests for 80,294 workers. Using
standard administrative wage rates,
including benefits, of $60.42 15 per hour,
this additional burden for each of the
15 Derived by utilizing the Bureau of Labor
Statistics 2006 median wage for Human Resources
Manager wage of $42.55 and a 1.42 factor for the
cost of benefits and taxes.
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two years following the mandated year
above is approximately $77,791 total per
year (or approximately $10 per
applicant per year) if the current
number of requests remains constant.
Any increase in the use of the program
would result in the same ultimate
burden to each individual applicant.
Employers will experience
efficiencies as a result of the
reengineering of the process. These
savings are expected to result primarily
from the simplified attestation-based
application. While the Department
cannot precisely estimate the cost
savings as a result of this time saved, it
believes that employers will experience
economic benefits as a result of this
reengineering of the application process
to an attestation-based submission,
including lower advertising costs and
fewer unanticipated labor costs due to
post-date-of-need hiring requirements.
Savings to employers will be universal
to new users as well as current
participants. Savings from efficiency
gains may be impacted, however, by
increased usage of the program by
agricultural employers, which could
delay processing times within the
Department.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
When an agency issues a rulemaking
proposal, the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) requires that a regulatory
flexibility analysis be prepared and
made available for public comment. The
RFA must describe the impact of the
rule on small entities. See 5 U.S.C.
603(a). Section 605 of the RFA allows an
agency to certify a rule, in lieu of
preparing an analysis, if the rulemaking
is not expected to have significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The Assistant
Secretary of ETA has notified the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy, Small Business
Administration (SBA), and certifies
under the RFA at 5 U.S.C. 605(b), that
this rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The rule does
not substantively change existing
obligations for employers who choose to
participate in the H–2A temporary
agricultural worker program.
The factual basis for such a
certification is that even though this
rule can and does affect small entities,
there are not a substantial number of
small entities that will be affected, nor
is there a significant economic impact
upon those small entities that are
affected. Of the total 2,089,790 farms in
the United States, 98 percent have sales
of less than $750,000 per year and fall
within SBA’s definition of small
entities. In FY 2007, however, only
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7,725 employers filed requests for only
80,294 workers. That represents fewer
than 1 percent of all farms in the United
States. Even if all of the 7,725 employers
who filed applications under H–2A in
FY2007 were small entities, that is still
a relatively small number of employers
affected. The Department does
anticipate a substantial increase in
program usage as a result of the Final
Rule, but even a doubling in program
usage would mean the participation of
only about 15,500 employers, not all of
whom would be small entities.
Even more important than the number
of small entities affected, however, the
Department believes that the costs
incurred by employers under this Final
Rule will not be substantially different
from those incurred under the current
application filing process. Employers
seeking to hire foreign workers on a
temporary basis under the H–2A
program must continue to establish to
the Secretary of Labor’s satisfaction that
their recruitment attempts have not
yielded enough qualified and available
U.S. workers and that their hiring of
foreign workers will not adversely affect
the wages and working conditions of
similarly employed U.S. workers.
Similar to the current process,
employers under this newly
reengineered H–2A process will file a
standardized application for temporary
labor certification and will retain
recruitment documentation, a
recruitment report, and any supporting
evidence or documentation justifying
the temporary need for the services or
labor to be performed.
To estimate the cost of this reformed
H–2A process on employers, the
Department calculated the current costs
each employer likely pays in the range
of $124.00–$170.00 to meet the
advertising and recruitment
requirements for a job opportunity, and
spends approximately 3 hours of staff
time preparing the standardized
applications for the required offered
wage rate and for temporary labor
certification, final recruitment report,
and retaining all other required
documentation (e.g., newspaper ads, job
orders, business necessity) in a file for
audit purposes that is not otherwise
required to be retained in the normal
course of business. In estimating
employer staff time costs, the
Department used the median hourly
wage rate for a Human Resources
Manager ($42.55), as published by the
U.S. Department of Labor’s
Occupational Employment Statistics
survey, O*Net OnLine,16 and increased
16 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics 2006 wage
data.
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it by a factor of 1.42 to account for
employee benefits and other
compensation for a total staff time cost
of $181.26 per applicant.
The Department acknowledges that
there might be some extremely small
businesses that may incur additional
costs to file their application on-line if
and when the Department moves to an
electronic processing model. The total
costs for the small entities affected by
this program will most likely be reduced
or stay the same as the costs for
participating in the current program.
Even assuming that all entities who file
H–2A labor certification applications
are considered to be small businesses,
the net economic effect is not
significant.
The Department invited comments
from members of the public who
believed there will be a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities or who disagree with the size
standard used by the Department in
certifying that this Final Rule will not
have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Several small farmers and ranchers
offered that the proposal could have
substantial impact on sheepherding
operations and other small farmers.
However, the comments offered
addressed costs arising from
requirements that were either already in
place or were required by statute and
therefore were unchanged by this
rulemaking. Several other commenters
from farming enterprises voiced concern
that the Department’s determination
that the rulemaking was not
economically significant was a
judgment as to the economic
significance of the industry. This was
clearly a misconstruction of the
Department’s intent. The Department
recognizes the economic importance of
the agricultural and farming sector of
the economy and has embarked on this
rulemaking to ensure that there are
sufficient workers available to ensure
the economic success of both individual
farms and the agricultural sector as a
whole.
Several other commenters, including
individual farmers and a law firm
representing farming concerns, objected
to what they saw as high costs of
compliance with the new changes when
taken together with the increased costs
of filing applications with DHS. The
Department appreciates and recognizes
the strong cost pressures on American
agricultural firms and has taken steps to
reduce the costs of compliance
wherever possible to ensure that farms
of all sizes have the ability to participate
in the program and have access to a
reliable and legal workforce. We believe
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the improvements to this Final Rule
address many of these concerns, while
ensuring program integrity and worker
protections.
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act (UMRA) of 1995
(2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) directs agencies
to assess the effects of a Federal
regulatory action on State, local, and
tribal governments, and the private
sector to determine whether the
regulatory action imposes a Federal
mandate. A Federal mandate is defined
in the Act at 2 U.S.C. 658(5)–(7) to
include any provision in a regulation
that imposes an enforceable duty upon
State, local, or tribal governments, or
imposes a duty upon the private sector
which is not voluntary. Further, each
agency is required to provide a process
where State, local, and tribal
governments may comment on the
regulation as it develops, which further
promotes coordination between the
Federal and the State, local, and tribal
governments.
The Department of Labor provided
several opportunities for State, local,
and tribal government input.
Representatives from the Department in
OFLC hosted webinars with the States
on December 2 and 5, 2007, and then
again on March 12 and 25, 2008, to
discuss the issues outlined in Training
and Employment Guidance Letter
(TEGL) 11–07, Change 1 (November 14,
2007) that are now codified in the
regulation. In addition, the Department
hosted and continues to host regular
conference calls to discuss these issues.
Further, the Department fielded
questions about the verification process
from the States and posted the
responses to them as Frequently Asked
Questions on the program office Web
site. Finally, the Department invited
comments from all individuals, which
includes State representatives, through
the comment process for this regulation.
As a result of these efforts, the
Department received only six (6)
comments from State agencies on
unfunded mandates.
Each of the commenters stated that
the regulation imposes an unfunded
mandate because there are insufficient
funds to support the H–2A activities at
the State level. One commenter stated
that the State would have difficulty
maintaining the same level of quality in
the program. Another commenter stated
that the rule represents an unfunded
mandate because there is no funding for
litigation defense.
The Department disagrees that this
final rule imposes an unfunded
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mandate. As noted in the proposed rule,
the SWAs are required to perform
certain activities for the Federal
government under this program, and are
compensated for the resources used in
performing these activities. Further,
under this final rule, the SWAs
responsibilities are streamlined and
generally reduced because they no
longer are responsible for the
substantive review of H–2A
applications, which will allow the
States to use grant funds for other
program purposes. The Department
recognizes that certain States may see an
increase in the use of the program, as
two commenters discussed, and as a
result, may experience an increase in
activities over another State with less
H–2A activity. The Department
addressed this issue in the proposed
rule when it stated that it would analyze
the amount of grants to each State to
fund H–2A activities. The Department
believes it would be premature to make
a blanket statement regarding any
increases the States may experience
until after the new requirements are
implemented. Therefore, the
Department intends to make funding
determinations based on that analysis
and after an analysis of any increased
usage trends among particular States as
part of its normal program management
operations. The Department believes it
is also premature to presume that the
States will have to bear a significant cost
to defend against any potential litigation
associated with the implementation of
this final rule, and which is typically
considered part of a grantee’s
programmatic responsibility, should it
occur. A more substantive discussion on
the Department’s position on defending
any potential litigation is located in
other sections of the preamble.
Several commenters expressed a
concern about using already limited
Wagner-Peyser Act funds to compensate
for H–2A activities. Although the
Department understands the
commenters’ concern that WagnerPeyser Act funds may be discontinued,
such arguments are not relevant at this
time given that the Department
currently funds Wagner-Peyser Act
activities and intends to continue doing
so in the future.
Another commenter stated that TEGL
11–07, Change 1 imposes an unfunded
mandate because compliance with the
TEGL, which is now codified in the
final rule, is a condition for the
continued receipt of Wagner-Peyser Act
funds. That same commenter also noted
that the rule is more restrictive than
H.R. 4088 (introduced in the 110th
Congress), which is similar to the TEGL.
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With regard to this comment, the
Department included references to this
TEGL in the proposed rule merely to
inform the public that the provisions of
the TEGL were clarified and codified in
this rule. Because the Department
already requires States under current
program guidance to verify the
employment authorization of workers
before making H–2A referrals, the Final
Rule’s codification of these verification
requirements will not impose significant
new costs on States. The fact that a State
may lose its funding for failing to
comply with the program requirements,
including those in the TEGL and now
codified in this final rule, does not rise
to the level of an unfunded mandate.
The Department notes that this program
is voluntary and like all voluntary
Federal programs, it comes with
responsibilities for managing the
program and penalties for failing to
adhere to those program requirements.
There were no comments from the
private sector on this issue. Therefore,
for the reasons stated above, the
Department has determined that this
final rule does not impose any
unfunded mandates.
D. Executive Order 13132—Federalism
Executive Order 13132 addresses the
Federalism impact of an agency’s
regulations on the States’ authority.
Under E.O. 13132, Federal agencies are
required to consult with States prior to
and during the implementation of
national policies that have a direct effect
on the States, the relationship between
the Federal Government and the States,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Further, an agency
is permitted to limit a State’s discretion
when it has statutory authority and the
regulation is a national activity that
addresses a problem of national
significance. The Department received
one comment on this section. This
commenter stated that the Department’s
reversal of a long-standing position on
U.S. worker self-attestation creates a
Federalism impact. According to this
commenter, TEGL 11–07, Change 1,
mandates that SWAs perform preemployment eligibility verifications on
every U.S. worker that requests a
referral to an H–2A job order. This
commenter requests that the Department
prepare a summary impact statement
and acknowledge that many States
currently have attestation-based systems
for U.S. worker access to public labor
exchange services.
The Department disagrees with this
commenter’s assessment of a Federalism
impact and therefore, the need for a
summary impact statement. In this case
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there is no direct effect on the States.
The H–2A program is a Federal program
that regulates work visas for temporary
agriculture workers, protects
employment opportunities for U.S.
workers, and prevents an adverse effect
on the wages and working conditions of
U.S. workers. As noted elsewhere in this
preamble, the Department has not
reviewed the H–2A program
comprehensively since its inception in
1986. These changes are consistent with
the Department’s review, program
experience, and years of stakeholder
feedback on longstanding concerns
about the integrity of the prior program.
Therefore, as a program of national
scope, the Department is implementing
requirements that apply uniformly to all
States.
Even if there were an argument that
the Department should defer to the
States on the eligibility verification
requirements, the Department is
authorized by the INA to implement
Federal regulations to ensure
consistency across States on
immigration matters. In addition, given
that the H–2A program is an
immigration program, it also is a
program related to national security
with national significance requiring
Federal oversight and uniformity.
Further, the relationship the States have
with this program and the Federal
government is by grants from the
Department to the States for the sole
purpose of maintaining consistency
across States. As a voluntary Federal
program, the Department may change
the direction from time to time as
dictated by the changes to immigration
concerns, but at the same time are
consistent with the underlying
legislation.
Furthermore, the Department
consulted with the States on the
eligibility verification requirements by
several means. Representatives from the
Department in OFLC hosted webinars
with the States on December 2 and 5,
2007, and then again on March 12 and
25, 2008, to discuss the issues outlined
in the TEGL that are now codified in the
regulation. In addition, the Department
hosted and continues to host regular
conference calls to discuss these issues.
Further, the Department fielded
questions about the verification process
from the States and posted the
responses to them as Frequently Asked
Questions on the program office Web
site. Finally, the Department invited
comments from all individuals, which
includes State representatives, through
the comment process for this regulation.
Therefore, for the reasons stated, the
Department has determined that this
rule does not have sufficient Federalism
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implications to warrant the preparation
of a summary impact statement.
E. Executive Order 13175—Indian
Tribal Governments
Executive Order 13175 requires
Federal agencies to develop policies in
consultation with tribal officials when
those policies have tribal implications.
This final rule regulates the H–2A visa
program and does not have tribal
implications. Therefore, the Department
has determined that this E.O. does not
apply to this rulemaking. The
Department did not receive any
comments related to this section.
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F. Assessment of Federal Regulations
and Policies on Families
Section 654 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act of 1999 (5 U.S.C. 601 note) requires
agencies to assess the impact of Federal
regulations and policies on families.
The assessment must address whether
the regulation strengthens or erodes the
stability, integrity, autonomy, or safety
of the family.
The final rule does not have an
impact on the autonomy or integrity of
the family as an institution, as it is
described under this provision. The
Department has determined that
although there may be some costs
associated with the final rule, they are
not of a magnitude to adversely affect
family well-being. The Department did
not receive any comments related to this
section.
G. Executive Order 12630—Protected
Property Rights
Executive Order 12630, Governmental
Actions and the Interference with
Constitutionality Protected Property
Rights, prevents the Federal government
from taking private property for public
use without compensation. It further
institutes an affirmative obligation that
agencies evaluate all policies and
regulations to ensure there is no impact
on constitutionally protected property
rights. Such policies include rules and
regulations that propose or implement
licensing, permitting, or other condition
requirements or limitations on private
property use, or that require dedications
or exactions from owners of private
property.
The Department received one
comment on this section. This
commenter stated that this rule would
have a ‘‘takings’’ implication if farmers
are forced out of business under this
rule. The Department disagrees with
this assessment. Although the cost
associated with this regulatory action
has an impact on commerce, it is not the
type of impact addressed by the E.O.
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This final rule does not propose or
implement licensing, permitting or
other condition requirements on the use
of private property nor does it require
dedications or exactions from owners of
private property. Accordingly, the
Department has determined this rule
does not have takings implications.
H. Executive Order 12988—Civil Justice
Reform
Section 3 of E.O. 12988, Civil Justice
Reform, requires Federal agencies to
draft regulations in a manner that will
reduce needless litigation and will not
unduly burden the Federal court
system. Therefore, agencies are required
to review regulations for drafting errors
and ambiguity; to minimize litigation;
ensure that it provides a clear legal
standard for affected conduct rather
than a general standard; and promote
simplification and burden reduction.
The rule has been drafted in clear
language and with detailed provisions
that aim to minimize litigation. The
purpose of this final rule is to
streamline the H–2A program and
simplify the application process.
Therefore, the Department has
determined that the regulation meets the
applicable standards set forth in Section
3 of E.O. 12988. The Department
received no comments regarding this
section.
I. Plain Language
Every Federal agency is required to
draft regulations that are written in
plain language to better inform the
public about policies. The Department
has assessed this final rule under the
plain language requirements and
determined that it follows the
Government’s standards requiring
documents to be accessible and
understandable to the public. The
Department did not receive any
comments related to this section.
J. Executive Order 13211—Energy
Supply
This final rule is not subject to E.O.
13211, which assesses whether a
regulation is likely to have a significant
adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy.
Accordingly, the Department has
determined that this rule does not
represent a significant energy action and
does not warrant a Statement of Energy
Effects. The Department did not receive
any comments related to this section.
K. Paperwork Reduction Act
1. Summary
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501) information collection
requirements, which must be
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implemented as a result of this
regulation, were submitted to OMB on
February 14, 2008, in conjunction with
the NPRM. Persons are not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number as required in 5 CFR
1320.11(l). The public was given 60
days to comment on this information
collection under the NPRM even though
originally the Department gave the
public only 45 days to comment on the
rest of the NPRM. On March 27, 2008,
the Department published a notice in
the Federal Register extending the
comment period to April 14, 2008, for
the rest of the NPRM, which then
coincided with the comment period for
the information collection. This same
information collection was again
submitted for public comment under
another NPRM for a different program.
The comments received pertaining to
this rule were taken into consideration
and a final package with the forms
needed to implement this rule was
submitted to OMB and received final
approval on November 21, 2008, under
OMB control number 1205–0466. The
approval will expire on November 30,
2011. The information required under
this collection is mandated in this final
rule at §§ 655.100(a), 655.101,
655.102(c), 655.104(d), 655.105,
655.106, 655.107, 655.108, and 655.109.
The collection of information for the
current H–2A program under the
regulations in effect prior to the
effective date of this rule were approved
under OMB control number 1205–0015
(Form ETA 750) and OMB Control
Number 1205–0134 (Form ETA 790).
The Form ETA 750 will be gradually
phased out and will no longer be used
for the H–2A program for applications
filed with a beginning date of need of
July 1, 2009 or later. The Form ETA 790
will continue to be used in the H–2A
program as it is required under 20 CFR
653.501 for all agricultural job orders.
As noted above, this final rule
implements the use of the new
information collection that OMB
approved on November 21, 2008, under
OMB control number 1205–0466. The
approval will expire on November 30,
2011. The new Form ETA 9142, with
instructions and appendices, has a
public reporting burden estimated to
average 2.17 hours for Form ETA 9142
per response or application filed. The
Department has made changes to this
final rule after receiving comments to
the proposed rule and has made changes
to the forms for clarity and program
functionality. However, these changes
do not impact the overall annual burden
hours for the H–2A program information
collection. The total costs associated
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with the form, as defined by the
Paperwork Reduction Act, is a
maximum of $1,100 per employer for
the Form ETA 9142. For an additional
explanation of how the Department
calculated the burden hours and related
costs, the Paperwork Reduction Act
package for this information collection
may be obtained from the RegInfo.gov
Web site at https://www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/PRAMain or by contacting the
Department at: Office of Policy and
Research, Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Ave., NW., Washington,
DC 20210 or by phone request to 202–
693–3700 (this is not a toll-free number)
or by e-mail at
DOL_PRA_PUBLIC@dol.gov.
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2. Comments
The Department received only a few
comments on this section of the NPRM.
In each case, the commenters noted that
there appeared to be an increase in the
number of hours required under the
new regulations, especially for the
second recruitment report. One
commenter estimated that it would take
approximately 6.5 hours for an
employer to complete two (2)
recruitment reports, but did not provide
data or a supporting rationale for this
estimate. Most of the commenters did
not specifically address the issue of our
methodology or assumptions.
The combined paperwork burden
estimate for the forms used for the H–
2A program under the regulations in
effect prior to the effective date of this
final rule, Forms ETA 750 and ETA 790,
was approximately 2.5 hours. Under
this new collection of information, the
Department estimates that the burden
will be approximately 2.17 hours for
Form ETA 9142, which includes one
hour on average per employer to prepare
the recruitment reports. There will be
some employers who only require a few
minutes to complete the recruitment
report if only a few (or no) workers
apply for the job opportunity, while
other employers may spend two or more
hours compiling the recruitment report
if many workers apply for the job
opportunity. As for other information
requirements, the Department estimates
that the affidavits of publication or tear
sheets, which should be requested at the
time of publication, require only one
extra minute of time. Further, the
Department estimates that requesting
notice from the SWA confirming
distribution of the job order will also
only take an extra minute of time.
Therefore, without more persuasive
analysis rebutting the analysis used by
the Department, we assume our
calculations are representative of the
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actual hourly burden for the new
collection.
Another commenter stated that the
form itself lacked sufficient space and
the ‘‘description for complying * * *
[is] inadequate and materially
misleading of the terms and conditions
employers need to provide * * *.’’ The
Department notes, however, that this
comment is related to the Form ETA
750, which will be discontinued, rather
than the new collection form, ETA 9142.
In addition, the Department added a
notation to the new form that permits
employers to submit additional pages of
information if there is not sufficient
space on the form for a response. In
such cases, the information must clearly
correspond to the appropriate section
and question number noted on the form.
A couple of commenters on this
section asked if any of the paperwork
could be shifted to the Department, such
as making copies of job orders, placing
advertisements, and obtaining the tear
sheets. Although the Department
appreciates these comments, we find no
reasonable justification for assuming
this type of expense or responsibility.
The responsibility for the applicable
reporting requirements lies with
program participant, which in this case
is the applicant. The Department will
continue to seek ways to improve
program management efficiency and as
noted elsewhere in this preamble, will
be looking to implement an online
application process in the future.
List of Subjects
20 CFR Part 655
Administrative practice and
procedure, Foreign workers,
Employment, Employment and training,
Enforcement, Forest and forest products,
Fraud, Health professions, Immigration,
Labor, Passports and visas, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Unemployment, Wages,
Working conditions.
29 CFR Part 501
Administrative practice and
procedure, Agriculture, Aliens,
Employment, Housing, Housing
standards, Immigration, Labor, Migrant
labor, Penalties, Transportation, Wages.
29 CFR Part 780
Agricultural commodities,
Agriculture, Employment, Forests and
forest products, Labor, Minimum wages,
Nursery stock, Overtime pay, Wages.
29 CFR Part 788
Employment, Forests and forest
products, Labor, Overtime pay, Wages.
■ For the reasons stated in the preamble,
the Department of Labor amends 20 CFR
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part 655 and 29 CFR parts 501, 780, and
788 as follows:
TITLE 20—EMPLOYEES’ BENEFITS
PART 655—TEMPORARY
EMPLOYMENT OF FOREIGN
WORKERS IN THE UNITED STATES
1. The authority citation for part 655
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: Section 655.0 issued under 8
U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(E)(iii), 1101(a)(15)(H)(i)
and (ii), 1182(m), (n) and (t), 1184(c), (g), and
(j), 1188, and 1288(c) and (d); sec. 3(c)(1),
Pub. L. 101–238, 103 Stat. 2099, 2102 (8
U.S.C. 1182 note); sec. 221(a), Pub. L. 101–
649, 104 Stat. 4978, 5027 (8 U.S.C. 1184
note); sec. 303(a)(8), Pub. L. 102–232, 105
Stat. 1733, 1748 (8 U.S.C. 1101 note); sec.
323(c), Pub. L. 103–206, 107 Stat. 2428; sec.
412(e), Pub. L. 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681 (8
U.S.C. 1182 note); sec. 2(d), Pub. L. 106–95,
113 Stat. 1312, 1316 (8 U.S.C. 1182 note);
Pub. L. 109–423, 120 Stat. 2900; and 8 CFR
214.2(h)(4)(i).
Section 655.00 issued under 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(ii), 1184(c), and 1188; and 8
CFR 214.2(h).
Subparts A and C issued under 8 CFR
214.2(h).
Subpart B issued under 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a), 1184(c), and 1188; and 8
CFR 214.2(h).
Subparts D and E authority repealed.
Subparts F and G issued under 8 U.S.C.
1288(c) and (d); and sec. 323(c), Pub. L. 103–
206, 107 Stat. 2428.
Subparts H and I issued under 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(b) and (b)(1), 1182(n) and
(t), and 1184(g) and (j); sec. 303(a)(8), Pub. L.
102–232, 105 Stat. 1733, 1748 (8 U.S.C. 1101
note); sec. 412(e), Pub. L. 105–277, 112 Stat.
2681; and 8 CFR 214.2(h).
Subparts J and K authority repealed.
Subparts L and M issued under 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(i)(c) and 1182(m); sec. 2(d),
Pub. L. 106–95, 113 Stat. 1312, 1316 (8 U.S.C.
1182 note); Pub. L. 109–423, 120 Stat. 2900;
and 8 CFR 214.2(h).
2. Revise the heading to part 655 to
read as set forth above.
■ 3. Revise § 655.1 to read as follows:
■
§ 655.1
Purpose and scope of subpart A.
This subpart sets forth the procedures
governing the labor certification process
for the temporary employment of
nonimmigrant foreign workers in the
United States (U.S.) in occupations
other than agriculture or registered
nursing.
■ 4. Revise subpart B to read as follows:
Subpart B—Labor Certification
Process for Temporary Agricultural
Employment in the United States (H–
2A Workers)
Sec.
655.90
655.92
655.93
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Purpose and scope of subpart B.
Authority of ETA–OFLC.
Special procedures.
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655.100 Overview of subpart B and
definition of terms.
655.101 Applications for temporary
employment certification in agriculture.
655.102 Required pre-filing recruitment.
655.103 Advertising requirements.
655.104 Contents of job offers.
655.105 Assurances and obligations of H–
2A employers.
655.106 Assurances and obligations of H–
2A Labor Contractors.
655.107 Processing of applications.
655.108 Offered wage rate.
655.109 Labor certification determinations.
655.110 Validity and scope of temporary
labor certifications.
655.111 Required departure.
655.112 Audits.
655.113 H–2A applications involving fraud
or willful misrepresentation.
655.114 Petition for higher meal charges.
655.115 Administrative review and de novo
hearing before an administrative law
judge.
655.116 Job Service Complaint System;
enforcement of work contracts.
655.117 Revocation of approved labor
certifications.
655.118 Debarment.
655.119 Document retention requirements.
§ 655.90
Purpose and scope of subpart B.
This subpart sets out the procedures
established by the Secretary of the
United States Department of Labor (the
Secretary) to acquire information
sufficient to make factual
determinations of:
(a) Whether there are sufficient able,
willing, and qualified U.S. workers
available to perform the temporary and
seasonal agricultural employment for
which an employer desires to import
nonimmigrant foreign workers (H–2A
workers); and
(b) Whether the employment of H–2A
workers will adversely affect the wages
and working conditions of workers in
the U.S. similarly employed.
§ 655.92
Authority of ETA–OFLC.
Temporary agricultural labor
certification determinations are made by
the Administrator, Office of Foreign
Labor Certification (OFLC) in the
Department of Labor’s (the Department
or DOL) Employment & Training
Administration (ETA), who, in turn,
may delegate this responsibility to a
designated staff member; e.g., a
Certifying Officer (CO).
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§ 655.93
Special procedures.
(a) Systematic process. This subpart
provides procedures for the processing
of applications from agricultural
employers and associations of
employers for the certification of
employment of nonimmigrant workers
in agricultural employment.
(b) Establishment of special
procedures. To provide for a limited
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degree of flexibility in carrying out the
Secretary’s responsibilities under the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA),
while not deviating from statutory
requirements, the Administrator, OFLC
has the authority to establish or to
devise, continue, revise, or revoke
special procedures in the form of
variances for processing certain H–2A
applications when employers can
demonstrate upon written application to
the Administrator, OFLC that special
procedures are necessary. These include
special procedures in effect for the
handling of applications for
sheepherders in the Western States (and
adaptation of such procedures to
occupations in the range production of
other livestock), and for custom
combine crews. In a like manner, for
work in occupations characterized by
other than a reasonably regular workday
or workweek, such as the range
production of sheep or other livestock,
the Administrator, OFLC has the
authority to establish monthly, weekly,
or bi-weekly adverse effect wage rates
(AEWR) for those occupations for a
statewide or other geographical area.
Prior to making determinations under
this section, the Administrator, OFLC
will consult with employer and worker
representatives.
§ 655.100 Overview of subpart B and
definition of terms.
(a) Overview. (1) Application filing
process. (i) This subpart provides
guidance to employers desiring to apply
for a labor certification for the
employment of H–2A workers to
perform agricultural employment of a
temporary or seasonal nature. The
regulations in this subpart provide that
such employers must file with the
Administrator, OFLC an H–2A
application on forms prescribed by the
ETA that describe the material terms
and conditions of employment to be
offered and afforded to U.S. and H–2A
workers. The application must be filed
with the Administrator, OFLC at least
45 calendar days before the first date the
employer requires the services of the H–
2A workers. The application must
contain attestations of the employer’s
compliance or promise to comply with
program requirements regarding
recruitment of eligible U.S. workers, the
payment of an appropriate wage, and
terms and conditions of employment.
(ii) No more than 75 and no fewer
than 60 calendar days before the first
date the employer requires the services
of the H–2A workers, and as a precursor
to the filing of an Application for
Temporary Employment Certification,
the employer must initiate positive
recruitment of eligible U.S. workers and
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cooperate with the local office of the
State Workforce Agency (SWA) which
serves the area of intended employment
to place a job order into intrastate and
interstate recruitment. Prior to
commencing recruitment an employer
must obtain the appropriate wage for the
position directly from the ETA National
Processing Center (NPC). The employer
must then place a job order with the
SWA; place print advertisements
meeting the requirements of this
regulation; contact former U.S.
employees; and, when so designated by
the Secretary, recruit in other States of
traditional or expected labor supply
with a significant number of U.S.
workers who, if recruited, would be
willing to make themselves available at
the time and place needed. The SWA
will post the job order locally, as well
as in all States listed in the application
as anticipated work sites, and in any
additional States designated by the
Secretary as States of traditional or
expected labor supply. The SWA will
keep the job order open until the end of
the designated recruitment period. No
more than 50 days prior to the first date
the employer requires the services of the
H–2A workers, the employer will
prepare and sign an initial written
recruitment report that it must submit
with its Application for Temporary
Employment Certification
(www.foreignlaborcert.doleta.gov). The
recruitment report must contain
information regarding the original
number of openings for which the
employer recruited. The employer’s
obligation to engage in positive
recruitment will end on the actual date
on which the H–2A workers depart for
the place of work, or 3 days prior to the
first date the employer requires the
services of the H–2A workers,
whichever occurs first.
(iii) The Application for Temporary
Employment Certification must be filed
by mail unless the Department
publishes a Notice in the Federal
Register requiring that applications be
filed electronically. Applications that
meet threshold requirements for
completeness and accuracy will be
processed by NPC staff, who will review
each application for compliance with
the criteria for certification. Each
application must meet requirements for
timeliness and temporary need and
must provide assurances and other
safeguards against adverse impact on
the wages and working conditions of
U.S. workers. Employers receiving a
labor certification must continue to
cooperate with the SWA by accepting
referrals—and have the obligation to
hire qualified and eligible U.S. workers
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who apply—until the end of the
designated recruitment period.
(2) Deficient applications. The CO
will promptly review the application
and notify the applicant in writing if
there are deficiencies that render the
application not acceptable for
certification, and afford the applicant a
5 calendar day period (from date of the
employer’s receipt) to resubmit a
modified application or to file an appeal
of the CO’s decision not to approve the
application as acceptable for
consideration. Modified applications
that fail to cure deficiencies will be
denied.
(3) Amendment of applications. This
subpart provides for the amendment of
applications. Where the recruitment is
not materially affected by such
amendments, additional positive
recruitment will not be required.
(4) Determinations. (i)
Determinations. If the employer has
complied with the criteria for
certification, including recruitment of
eligible U.S. workers, the CO must make
a determination on the application by
30 days before the first date the
employer requires the services of the H–
2A workers. An employer’s failure to
comply with any of the certification
criteria or to cure deficiencies identified
by the CO may lengthen the time
required for processing, resulting in a
final determination less than 30 days
prior to the stated date of need.
(ii) Certified applications. This
subpart provides that an application for
temporary agricultural labor
certification will be certified if the CO
finds that the employer has not offered
and does not intend to offer foreign
workers higher wages, better working
conditions, or fewer restrictions than
those offered and afforded to U.S.
workers; that sufficient U.S. workers
who are able, willing, qualified, and
eligible will not be available at the time
and place needed to perform the work
for which H–2A workers are being
requested; and that the employment of
such nonimmigrants will not adversely
affect the wages and working conditions
of similarly employed U.S. workers.
(iii) Fees. (A) Amount. This subpart
provides that each employer (except
joint employer associations) of H–2A
workers will pay the appropriate fees to
the Department for each temporary
agricultural labor certification received.
(B) Timeliness of payment. The fee
must be received by the CO no later
than 30 calendar days after the granting
of each temporary agricultural labor
certification. Fees received any later are
untimely. A persistent or prolonged
failure to pay fees in a timely manner
is a substantial program violation which
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may result in the denial of future
temporary agricultural labor
certifications and/or program
debarment.
(iv) Denied applications. This subpart
provides that if the application for
temporary agricultural labor
certification is denied, in whole or in
part, the employer may seek expedited
review of the denial, or a de novo
hearing, by an administrative law judge
as provided in this subpart.
(b) Transition of filing procedures
from current regulations. (1)
Compliance with these regulations.
Employers with a date of need for H–2A
workers for temporary or seasonal
agricultural services on or after July 1,
2009 must comply with all of the
obligations and assurances required in
this subpart.
(2) Transition from former
regulations. Employers with a date of
need for H–2A workers for temporary or
seasonal agricultural services prior to
July 1, 2009 will file applications in the
following manner:
(i) Obtaining required wage rate. An
employer will not obtain an offered
wage rate through the NPC prior to
filing an application, but will complete
and submit Form ETA–9142,
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification no less than 45 days prior
to their date of need. The employer will
simultaneously submit Form ETA–790
Agricultural and Food Processing
Clearance Order, along with the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification, directly to the NPC having
jurisdiction over H–2A applications.
(ii) Pre-filing activities. Activities
required to be conducted prior to filing
under the final rule will be conducted
post-filing during this transition period.
The employer will be expected to make
attestations in its application applicable
to its future activities concerning
recruitment, payment of the offered
wage rate, etc. Employers will not be
required to complete an initial
recruitment report for submission with
the application, but will be required to
complete a recruitment report for
submission to the NPC prior to
certification, and will also be required
to complete a final recruitment report
covering the entire recruitment period.
(iii) Acceptance of application. Upon
receipt, the NPC will provide the
employer with the wage rate to be
offered, at a minimum, by the employer,
and will process the application in a
manner consistent with new § 655.107,
issuing a notification of deficiencies for
any curable deficiencies within 7
calendar days.
(iv) Processing of application. Once
the application and job order have been
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accepted, the NPC will transmit a copy
of the job order to the SWA(s) serving
the area of intended employment to
initiate intrastate and interstate
clearance, request that the SWA(s)
schedule an inspection of the housing,
and provide instructions to the
employer to commence positive
recruitment in a manner consistent with
§ 655.102(d)(2) through (4). The NPC
will designate labor supply States
during this period on a case-by-case
basis. Such designations must be based
on information provided by State
agencies or by other sources, and will to
the extent information is available take
into account the success of recent efforts
by out-of-State employers to recruit in
that State.
(c) Definitions of terms used in this
subpart. For the purposes of this
subpart:
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) means
a person within the DOL’s Office of
Administrative Law Judges appointed
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 3105, or a panel of
such persons designated by the Chief
Administrative Law Judge from the
Board of Alien Labor Certification
Appeals (BALCA) established by part
656 of this chapter, which will hear and
decide appeals as set forth in § 655.115.
Administrator, OFLC means the
primary official of the Office of Foreign
Labor Certification (OFLC), or the
Administrator, OFLC ’s designee.
Adverse effect wage rate (AEWR)
means the minimum wage rate that the
Administrator, OFLC has determined
must be offered and paid to every H–2A
worker employed under the DOLapproved Application for Temporary
Employment Certification in a particular
occupation and/or area, as well as to
U.S. workers hired by employers into
corresponding employment during the
H–2A recruitment period, to ensure that
the wages of similarly employed U.S.
workers will not be adversely affected.
Agent means a legal entity or person,
such as an association of agricultural
employers, or an attorney for an
association, that:
(1) Is authorized to act on behalf of
the employer for temporary agricultural
labor certification purposes;
(2) Is not itself an employer, or a joint
employer, as defined in this paragraph
(c) of this section with respect to a
specific application; and
(3) Is not under suspension,
debarment, expulsion, or disbarment
from practice before any court or the
Department, the Board of Immigration
Appeals, the immigration judges, or the
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) under 8 CFR 292.3 or 1003.101.
Agricultural association means any
nonprofit or cooperative association of
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farmers, growers, or ranchers (including
but not limited to processing
establishments, canneries, gins, packing
sheds, nurseries, or other fixed-site
agricultural employers), incorporated or
qualified under applicable State law,
that recruits, solicits, hires, employs,
furnishes, houses or transports any
worker that is subject to sec. 218 of the
INA. An agricultural association may act
as the agent of an employer for purposes
of filing an Application for Temporary
Employment Certification, and may also
act as the sole or joint employer of H–
2A workers.
Application for Temporary
Employment Certification means the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB)-approved form submitted by an
employer to secure a temporary
agricultural labor certification
determination from DOL. A complete
submission of the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
includes both the form and the
employer’s initial recruitment report.
Area of intended employment means
the geographic area within normal
commuting distance of the place
(worksite address) of the job
opportunity for which the certification
is sought. There is no rigid measure of
distance which constitutes a normal
commuting distance or normal
commuting area, because there may be
widely varying factual circumstances
among different areas (e.g., average
commuting times, barriers to reaching
the worksite, quality of the regional
transportation network, etc.). If the
place of intended employment is within
a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA),
including a multistate MSA, any place
within the MSA is deemed to be within
normal commuting distance of the place
of intended employment. The borders of
MSAs are not controlling in the
identification of the normal commuting
area; a location outside of an MSA may
be within normal commuting distance
of a location that is inside (e.g., near the
border of) the MSA.
Attorney means any person who is a
member in good standing of the bar of
the highest court of any State,
possession, territory, or commonwealth
of the U.S., or the District of Columbia,
and who is not under suspension,
debarment, expulsion, or disbarment
from practice before any court or the
Department, the Board of Immigration
Appeals, the immigration judges, or
DHS under 8 CFR. 292.3 or 1003.101.
Such a person is permitted to act as an
agent or attorney for an employer and/
or foreign worker under this subpart.
Certifying Officer (CO) means the
person designated by the Administrator,
OFLC to make determinations on
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applications filed under the H–2A
program.
Chief Administrative Law Judge
means the chief official of the DOL
Office of Administrative Law Judges or
the Chief Administrative Law Judge’s
designee.
Date of need means the first date the
employer requires the services of H–2A
worker as indicated in the employer’s
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification.
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) means the Federal agency having
control over certain immigration
functions that, through its sub-agency,
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS), makes
the determination under the INA on
whether to grant visa petitions filed by
employers seeking H–2A workers to
perform temporary agricultural work in
the U.S.
DOL or Department means the United
States Department of Labor.
Eligible worker means an individual
who is not an unauthorized alien (as
defined in sec. 274A(h)(3) of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1324a(h)(3)) with respect to the
employment in which the worker is
engaging.
Employee means employee as defined
under the general common law of
agency. Some of the factors relevant to
the determination of employee status
include: the hiring party’s right to
control the manner and means by which
the work is accomplished; the skill
required to perform the work; the source
of the instrumentalities and tools for
accomplishing the work; the location of
the work; the hiring party’s discretion
over when and how long to work; and
whether the work is part of the regular
business of the hiring party. Other
applicable factors may be considered
and no one factor is dispositive.
Employer means a person, firm,
corporation or other association or
organization that:
(1) Has a place of business (physical
location) in the U.S. and a means by
which it may be contacted for
employment;
(2) Has an employer relationship with
respect to H–2A employees or related
U.S. workers under this subpart; and
(3) Possesses, for purposes of filing an
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification, a valid Federal Employer
Identification Number (FEIN).
Employment Standards
Administration (ESA) means the agency
within DOL that includes the Wage and
Hour Division (WHD), and which is
charged with carrying out certain
investigative and enforcement functions
of the Secretary under the INA.
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Employment Service (ES) refers to the
system of Federal and State entities
responsible for administration of the
labor certification process for temporary
and seasonal agricultural employment
of nonimmigrant foreign workers. This
includes the SWAs and the OFLC,
including the NPCs.
Employment and Training
Administration (ETA) means the agency
within the DOL that includes OFLC.
Federal holiday means a legal public
holiday as defined at 5 U.S.C. 6103.
Fixed-site employer means any person
engaged in agriculture who meets the
definition of an employer as those terms
are defined in this subpart who owns or
operates a farm, ranch, processing
establishment, cannery, gin, packing
shed, nursery, or other similar fixed-site
location where agricultural activities are
performed and who recruits, solicits,
hires, employs, houses, or transports
any worker subject to sec. 218 of the
INA or these regulations as incident to
or in conjunction with the owner’s or
operator’s own agricultural operation.
For purposes of this subpart, person
includes any individual, partnership,
association, corporation, cooperative,
joint stock company, trust, or other
organization with legal rights and
duties.
H–2A Labor Contractor (H–2ALC)
means any person who meets the
definition of employer under this
paragraph (c) of this section and is not
a fixed-site employer, an agricultural
association, or an employee of a fixedsite employer or agricultural
association, as those terms are used in
this part, who recruits, solicits, hires,
employs, furnishes, houses, or
transports any worker subject to sec. 218
of the INA or these regulations.
H–2A worker means any temporary
foreign worker who is lawfully present
in the U.S. to perform agricultural labor
or services of a temporary or seasonal
nature pursuant to sec.
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the INA, as
amended.
INA means the Immigration and
Nationality Act, as amended, 8 U.S.C.
1101 et seq.
Job offer means the offer made by an
employer or potential employer of H–2A
workers to eligible workers describing
all the material terms and conditions of
employment, including those relating to
wages, working conditions, and other
benefits.
Job opportunity means a job opening
for temporary, full-time employment at
a place in the U.S. to which a U.S.
worker can be referred.
Joint employment means that where
two or more employers each have
sufficient definitional indicia of
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employment to be considered the
employer of an employee, those
employers will be considered to jointly
employ that employee. Each employer
in a joint employment relationship to an
employee is considered a joint employer
of that employee.
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) means the
organizational component of the
Department that assures the safety and
health of America’s workers by setting
and enforcing standards; providing
training, outreach, and education;
establishing partnerships; and
encouraging continual improvement in
workplace safety and health under the
Occupational Safety and Health Act, as
amended.
Office of Foreign Labor Certification
(OFLC) means the organizational
component of the ETA that provides
national leadership and policy guidance
and develops regulations and
procedures to carry out the
responsibilities of the Secretary under
the INA concerning the admission of
foreign workers to the U.S. to perform
work described in sec.
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the INA, as
amended.
Positive recruitment means the active
participation of an employer or its
authorized hiring agent in recruiting
and interviewing qualified and eligible
individuals in the area where the
employer’s job opportunity is located
and any other State designated by the
Secretary as an area of traditional or
expected labor supply with respect to
the area where the employer’s job
opportunity is located, in an effort to fill
specific job openings with U.S. workers.
Prevailing means, with respect to
practices engaged in by employers and
benefits other than wages provided by
employers, that:
(1) Fifty percent or more of employers
in an area and for an occupation engage
in the practice or offer the benefit; but
only if
(2) This 50 percent or more of
employers also employs in aggregate 50
percent or more of U.S. workers in the
occupation and area (including H–2A
and non-H–2A employers for purposes
of determinations concerning the
provision of family housing, frequency
of wage payments, and workers
supplying their own bedding, but nonH–2A employers only for
determinations concerning the
provision of advance transportation).
Prevailing piece rate means that
amount that is typically paid to an
agricultural worker per piece (which
includes, but is not limited to, a load,
bin, pallet, bag, bushel, etc.), to be
determined by the SWA according to a
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methodology published by the
Department. As is currently the case, the
unit of production will be required to be
clearly described; e.g., a field box of
oranges (11⁄2 bushels), a bushel of
potatoes, and Eastern apple box (11⁄2
metric bushels), a flat of strawberries
(twelve quarts), etc.
Prevailing hourly wage means the
hourly wage determined by the SWA to
be prevailing in the area in accordance
with State-based wage surveys.
Representative means a person or
entity employed by, or duly authorized
to act on behalf of, the employer with
respect to activities entered into for,
and/or attestations made with respect
to, the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification.
Secretary means the Secretary of the
United States Department of Labor, or
the Secretary’s designee.
Secretary of Homeland Security
means the chief official of the United
States Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) or the Secretary of
Homeland Security’s designee.
Secretary of State means the chief
official of the United States Department
of State (DOS) or the Secretary of State’s
designee.
State Workforce Agency (SWA) means
the State government agency that
receives funds pursuant to the WagnerPeyser Act to administer the public
labor exchange delivered through the
State’s One-Stop delivery system in
accordance with the Wagner-Peyser Act
at 29 U.S.C. 49 et seq. Separately, SWAs
receive ETA grants, administered by
OFLC, to assist them in performing
certain activities related to foreign labor
certification, including conducting
housing inspections.
Strike means a labor dispute wherein
employees engage in a concerted
stoppage of work (including stoppage by
reason of the expiration of a collectivebargaining agreement) or engage in any
concerted slowdown or other concerted
interruption of operation. Whether a job
opportunity is vacant by reason of a
strike or lock out will be determined by
evaluating for each position identified
as vacant in the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
whether the specific vacancy has been
caused by the strike or lock out.
Successor in interest means that, in
determining whether an employer is a
successor in interest, the factors used
under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
and the Vietnam Era Veterans’
Readjustment Assistance Act will be
considered. When considering whether
an employer is a successor for purposes
of § 655.118, the primary consideration
will be the personal involvement of the
firm’s ownership, management,
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supervisors, and others associated with
the firm in the violations resulting in a
debarment recommendation. Normally,
wholly new management or ownership
of the same business operation, one in
which the former management or owner
does not retain a direct or indirect
interest, will not be deemed to be a
successor in interest for purposes of
debarment. A determination of whether
or not a successor in interest exists is
based on the entire circumstances
viewed in their totality. The factors to
be considered include:
(1) Substantial continuity of the same
business operations;
(2) Use of the same facilities;
(3) Continuity of the work force;
(4) Similarity of jobs and working
conditions;
(5) Similarity of supervisory
personnel;
(6) Similarity in machinery,
equipment, and production methods;
(7) Similarity of products and
services; and
(8) The ability of the predecessor to
provide relief.
Temporary agricultural labor
certification means the certification
made by the Secretary with respect to an
employer seeking to file with DHS a visa
petition to employ one or more foreign
nationals as an H–2A worker, pursuant
to secs. 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a), 214(a) and
(c), and 218 of the INA that:
(1) There are not sufficient workers
who are able, willing, and qualified, and
who will be available at the time and
place needed, to perform the
agricultural labor or services involved in
the petition, and
(2) The employment of the foreign
worker in such agricultural labor or
services will not adversely affect the
wages and working conditions of
workers in the U.S. similarly employed
(8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a), 1184(a)
and (c), and 1188).
United States (U.S.), when used in a
geographic sense, means the continental
United States, Alaska, Hawaii, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and the
territories of Guam, the Virgin Islands,
and, as of the transition program
effective date, as defined in the
Consolidated Natural Resources Act of
2008, Public Law 110–229, Title VII, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands.
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS) means the
Federal agency making the
determination under the INA whether to
grant petitions filed by employers
seeking H–2A workers to perform
temporary agricultural work in the U.S.
United States worker (U.S. worker)
means a worker who is
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(1) A citizen or national of the U.S.,
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or
(2) An alien who is lawfully admitted
for permanent residence in the U.S., is
admitted as a refugee under sec. 207 of
the INA, is granted asylum under sec.
208 of the INA, or is an immigrant
otherwise authorized (by the INA or by
DHS) to be employed in the U.S.
Wages means all forms of cash
remuneration to a worker by an
employer in payment for personal
services.
Within [number and type] days
means, for purposes of determining an
employer’s compliance with the timing
requirements for appeals and requests
for review, a period that begins to run
on the first business day after the
Department sends a notice to the
employer by means normally assuring
next-day delivery, and will end on the
day that the employer sends whatever
communication is required by these
rules back to the Department, as
evidenced by a postal mark or other
similar receipt.
Work contract means all the material
terms and conditions of employment
relating to wages, hours, working
conditions, and other benefits, required
by the applicable regulations in Subpart
B of 20 CFR part 655, Labor Certification
for Temporary Agricultural Employment
of H–2A Aliens in the U.S. (H–2A
Workers), or these regulations, including
those terms and conditions attested to
by the H–2A employer, which contract
between the employer and the worker
may be in the form of a separate written
document. In the absence of a separate
written work contract incorporating the
required terms and conditions of
employment, agreed to by both the
employer and the worker, the work
contract at a minimum shall be the
terms of the job order, as provided in 20
CFR part 653, Subpart F, and covered
provisions of the work contract shall be
enforced in accordance with these
regulations.
(d) Definition of agricultural labor or
services of a temporary or seasonal
nature. For the purposes of this subpart
means the following:
(1) Agricultural labor or services,
pursuant to sec. 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of
the INA at 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a),
is defined as:
(i) Agricultural labor as defined and
applied in sec. 3121(g) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1954 at 26 U.S.C.
3121(g);
(ii) Agriculture as defined and applied
in sec. 3(f) of the Fair Labor Standards
Act of 1938 (FLSA) at 29 U.S.C. 203(f).
Work performed by H–2A workers, or
workers in corresponding employment,
that is not defined as agriculture in sec.
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3(f) is subject to the provisions of the
FLSA as provided therein, including the
overtime provisions in sec. 7(a) 29
U.S.C. 207(a);
(iii) The pressing of apples for cider
on a farm;
(iv) Logging employment; or
(v) Handling, planting, drying,
packing, packaging, processing,
freezing, grading, storing, or delivering
to storage or to market or to a carrier for
transportation to market, in its
unmanufactured state, any agricultural
or horticultural commodity while in the
employ of the operator of a farm where
no H–2B workers are employed to
perform the same work at the same
establishment; or
(vi) Other work typically performed
on a farm that is not specifically listed
on the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification and is minor
(i.e., less than 20 percent of the total
time worked on the job duties and
activities that are listed on the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification) and incidental to the
agricultural labor or services for which
the H–2A worker was sought.
(2) An occupation included in either
of the statutory definitions cited in
paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (ii) of this
section is agricultural labor or services,
notwithstanding the exclusion of that
occupation from the other statutory
definition.
(i) Agricultural labor. For purposes of
paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section means
all services performed:
(A) On a farm, in the employ of any
person, in connection with cultivating
the soil, or in connection with raising or
harvesting any agricultural or
horticultural commodity, including the
raising, shearing, feeding, caring for,
training, and management of livestock,
bees, poultry, and furbearing animals
and wildlife;
(B) In the employ of the owner or
tenant or other operator of a farm, in
connection with the operation or
maintenance of such farm and its tools
and equipment, or in salvaging timber
or clearing land of brush and other
debris left by a hurricane, if the major
part of such service is performed on a
farm;
(C) In connection with the production
or harvesting of any commodity defined
as an agricultural commodity in sec.
15(g) of the Agricultural Marketing Act,
as amended at 12 U.S.C. 1141j, or in
connection with the ginning of cotton,
or in connection with the operation or
maintenance of ditches, canals,
reservoirs, or waterways, not owned or
operated for profit, used exclusively for
supplying and storing water for farming
purposes;
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(D)(1) In the employ of the operator of
a farm in handling, planting, drying,
packing, packaging, processing,
freezing, grading, storing, or delivering
to storage or to market or to a carrier for
transportation to market, in its
unmanufactured state, any agricultural
or horticultural commodity, but only if
such operator produced more than onehalf of the commodity with respect to
which such service is performed;
(2) In the employ of a group of
operators of farms (other than a
cooperative organization) in the
performance of service described in
paragraph (d)(2)(i)(D)(1) of this section,
but only if such operators produced all
of the commodity with respect to which
such service is performed. For purposes
of this paragraph, any unincorporated
group of operators will be deemed a
cooperative organization if the number
of operators comprising such group is
more than 20 at any time during the
calendar quarter in which such service
is performed;
(3) The provisions of paragraphs
(d)(2)(i)(D)(1) and (2) of this section do
not apply to services performed in
connection with commercial canning or
commercial freezing or in connection
with any agricultural or horticultural
commodity after its delivery to a
terminal market for distribution for
consumption; or
(4) On a farm operated for profit if
such service is not in the course of the
employer’s trade or business and is not
domestic service in a private home of
the employer.
(E) For purposes of (d)(2)(i) of this
section, the term farm includes stock,
dairy, poultry, fruit, fur-bearing animal,
and truck farms, plantations, ranches,
nurseries, ranges, greenhouses or other
similar structures used primarily for the
raising of agricultural or horticultural
commodities, and orchards. See sec.
3121(g) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986 at 26 U.S.C. 3121(g).
(ii) Agriculture. For purposes of
paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section
agriculture means farming in all its
branches and among other things
includes the cultivation and tillage of
the soil, dairying, the production,
cultivation, growing, and harvesting of
any agricultural or horticultural
commodities (including commodities as
defined as agricultural commodities in
12 U.S.C. 1141j(g)), the raising of
livestock, bees, fur-bearing animals, or
poultry, and any practices (including
any forestry or lumbering operations)
performed by a farmer or on a farm as
an incident to or in conjunction with
such farming operations, including
preparation for market, delivery to
storage or to market or to carriers for
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transportation to market. See 29 U.S.C.
203(f), as amended.
(iii) Agricultural commodity. For
purposes of paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this
section agricultural commodity
includes, in addition to other
agricultural commodities, crude gum
(oleoresin) from a living tree, and gum
spirits of turpentine and gum rosin as
processed by the original producer of
the crude gum (oleoresin) from which
derived. Gum spirits of turpentine
means spirits of turpentine made from
gum (oleoresin) from a living tree and
gum rosin means rosin remaining after
the distillation of gum spirits of
turpentine. See 12 U.S.C. 1141j(g), sec.
15(g) of the Agricultural Marketing Act,
as amended, and 7 U.S.C. 92.
(3) Of a temporary or seasonal nature.
(i) On a seasonal or other temporary
basis. For the purposes of this subpart,
of a temporary or seasonal nature means
on a seasonal or other temporary basis,
as defined in the WHD’s regulation at 29
CFR 500.20 under the Migrant and
Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection
Act (MSPA).
(ii) MSPA definition. The definition of
on a seasonal or other temporary basis
found in MSPA is summarized as
follows:
(A) Labor is performed on a seasonal
basis where, ordinarily, the employment
pertains to or is of the kind exclusively
performed at certain seasons or periods
of the year and which, from its nature,
may not be continuous or carried on
throughout the year. A worker who
moves from one seasonal activity to
another, while employed in agriculture
or performing agricultural labor, is
employed on a seasonal basis even
though the worker may continue to be
employed during a major portion of the
year.
(B) A worker is employed on other
temporary basis where he or she is
employed for a limited time only or the
worker’s performance is contemplated
for a particular piece of work, usually of
short duration. Generally, employment
which is contemplated to continue
indefinitely is not temporary.
(C) On a seasonal or other temporary
basis does not include (i) the
employment of any foreman or other
supervisory employee who is employed
by a specific agricultural employer or
agricultural association essentially on a
year round basis; or (ii) the employment
of any worker who is living at his or her
permanent place of residence, when that
worker is employed by a specific
agricultural employer or agricultural
association on essentially a year round
basis to perform a variety of tasks for his
or her employer and is not primarily
employed to do field work.
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(iii) Temporary. For the purposes of
this subpart, the definition of
‘‘temporary’’ in paragraph (d)(3) of this
section refers to any job opportunity
covered by this subpart where the
employer needs a worker for a position
for a limited period of time, including,
but not limited to, a peakload need,
which is generally less than 1 year,
unless the original temporary
agricultural labor certification is
extended pursuant to § 655.110.
§ 655.101 Applications for temporary
employment certification in agriculture.
(a) Application Filing Requirements.
(1) An employer that desires to apply for
temporary employment certification of
one or more nonimmigrant foreign
workers must file a completed DOL
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification form and, unless a specific
exemption applies, the initial
recruitment report. If an association of
agricultural producers files the
application, the association must
identify whether it is the sole employer,
a joint employer with its employermember employers, or the agent of its
employer-members. The association
must retain documentation
substantiating the employer or agency
status of the association and be prepared
to submit such documentation to the CO
in the event of an audit.
(2) If an H–2ALC intends to file an
application, the H–2ALC must meet all
of the requirements of the definition of
employer in § 655.100(b), and comply
with all the assurances, guarantees, and
other requirements contained in this
part and in part 653, subpart F, of this
chapter. The H–2ALC must have a place
of business (physical location) in the
U.S. and a means by which it may be
contacted for employment. H–2A
workers employed by an H–2ALC may
not perform services for a fixed-site
employer unless the H–2ALC is itself
providing the housing and
transportation required by § 655.104(d)
and (h), or has filed a statement
confirming that the fixed-site employer
will provide compliant housing and/or
transportation, as required by § 655.106,
with the OFLC, for each fixed-site
employer listed on the application. The
H–2ALC must retain a copy of the
statement of compliance required by
§ 655.106(b)(6).
(3) An association of agricultural
producers may submit a master
application covering a variety of job
opportunities available with a number
of employers in multiple areas of
intended employment, just as though all
of the covered employers were in fact a
single employer, as long as a single date
of need is provided for all workers
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requested by the application and the
combination of job opportunities is
supported by an explanation
demonstrating a business reason for the
combination. The association must
identify on the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification,
by name and address, each employer
that will employ H–2A workers. If the
association is acting solely as an agent,
each employer will receive a separate
labor certification.
(b) Filing. The employer may send the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification and all supporting
documentation by U.S. Mail or private
mail courier to the NPC. The
Department will publish a Notice in the
Federal Register identifying the
address(es), and any future address
changes, to which applications must be
mailed, and will also post these
addresses on the DOL Internet Web site
at https://
www.foreignlaborcert.doleta.gov/. The
form must bear the original signature of
the employer (and that of the employer’s
authorized attorney or agent if the
employer is represented by an attorney
or agent). An association filing a master
application as a joint employer may sign
on behalf of its employer members. The
Department may also require
applications to be filed electronically in
addition to or instead of by mail.
(c) Timeliness. A completed
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification must be filed no less than
45 calendar days before date of need.
(d) Emergency situations. (1) Waiver
of time period and required pre-filing
activity. The CO may waive the time
period for filing and pre-filing wage and
recruitment requirements set forth in
§ 655.102, along with their associated
attestations, for employers who did not
make use of temporary alien agricultural
workers during the prior year’s
agricultural season or for any employer
that has other good and substantial
cause (which may include unforeseen
changes in market conditions), provided
that the CO can timely make the
determinations required by § 655.109(b).
(2) Employer requirements. The
employer requesting a waiver of the
required time period and pre-filing wage
and recruitment requirements must
submit to the NPC a completed
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification, a completed job offer on
the ETA Form 790 Agricultural and
Food Processing Clearance Order, and a
statement justifying the request for a
waiver of the time period requirement.
The statement must indicate whether
the waiver request is due to the fact that
the employer did not use H–2A workers
during the prior agricultural season or
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whether the request is for other good
and substantial cause. If the waiver is
requested for good and substantial
cause, the employer’s statement must
also include detailed information
describing the good and substantial
cause which has necessitated the waiver
request. Good and substantial cause may
include, but is not limited to, such
things as the substantial loss of U.S.
workers due to weather-related
activities or other reasons, unforeseen
events affecting the work activities to be
performed, pandemic health issues, or
similar conditions.
(3) Processing of Applications. The
CO shall promptly transmit the job
order, on behalf of the employer, to the
SWA serving the area of intended
employment and request an expedited
review of the job order in accordance
with § 655.102(e) and an inspection of
housing in accordance with
§ 655.104(d)(6)(iii). The CO shall
process the application and job order in
accordance with § 655.107, issue a wage
determination in accordance with
§ 655.108 and, upon acceptance, require
the employer to engage in positive
recruitment consistent with
§ 655.102(d)(2), (3), and (4). The CO
shall require the SWA to transmit the
job order for interstate clearance
consistent with § 655.102(f). The CO
shall specify a date on which the
employer will be required to submit a
recruitment report in accordance with
§ 655.102(k). The CO will make a
determination on the application in
accordance with § 655.109.
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§ 655.102
Required pre-filing activity.
(a) Time of filing of application. An
employer may not file an Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification before all of the pre-filing
recruitment steps set forth in this
section have been fully satisfied, except
where specifically exempted from some
or all of those requirements by these
regulations. Modifications to these
requirements for H–2ALCs are set forth
in § 655.106.
(b) General Attestation Obligation. An
employer must attest on the Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification that it will comply with all
of the assurances and obligations of this
subpart and to performing all necessary
steps of the recruitment process as
specified in this section.
(c) Retention of documentation. An
employer filing an Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
must maintain documentation of its
advertising and recruitment efforts as
required in this subpart and be prepared
to submit this documentation in
response to a Notice of Deficiency from
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the CO prior to the CO rendering a Final
Determination, or in the event of an
audit. The documentation required in
this subpart must be retained for a
period of no less than 3 years from the
date of the certification. There is no
record retention requirement for any
application (and supporting
documentation) after the Secretary has
made a final decision to deny the
application.
(d) Positive recruitment steps. An
employer filing an application must:
(1) Submit a job order to the SWA
serving the area of intended
employment;
(2) Run two print advertisements (one
of which must be on a Sunday, except
as provided in paragraph (g) of this
section);
(3) Contact former U.S. employees
who were employed within the last year
as described in paragraph (h) of this
section; and
(4) Based on an annual determination
made by the Secretary, as described in
paragraph (i) of this section, recruit in
all States currently designated as a State
of traditional or expected labor supply
with respect to each area of intended
employment in which the employer’s
work is to be performed as required in
paragraph (i)(2) of this section.
(e) Job order. (1) The employer must
submit a job order to the SWA serving
the area of intended employment no
more than 75 calendar days and no
fewer than 60 calendar days before the
date of need for intrastate and interstate
clearance, identifying it as a job order to
be placed in connection with a future
application for H–2A workers. If the job
opportunity is located in more than one
State, the employer may submit a job
order to any one of the SWAs having
jurisdiction over the anticipated
worksites. Where a future master
application will be filed by an
association of agricultural employers,
the SWA will prepare a single job order
in the name of the association on behalf
of all employers that will be duly named
on the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification.
Documentation of this step by the
applicant is satisfied by maintaining
proof of posting from the SWA
identifying the job order number(s) with
the start and end dates of the posting of
the job order.
(2) The job order submitted to the
SWA must satisfy all the requirements
for newspaper advertisements contained
in § 655.103 and comply with the
requirements for agricultural clearance
orders in 20 CFR part 653 Subpart F and
the requirements set forth in § 655.104.
(3) The SWA will review the contents
of the job order as provided in 20 CFR
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part 653 Subpart F and will work with
the employer to address any
deficiencies, except that the order may
be placed prior to completion of the
housing inspection required by 20 CFR
653.501(d)(6) where necessary to meet
the timeframes required by statute and
regulation. However, the SWA must
ensure that housing within its
jurisdiction is inspected as
expeditiously as possible thereafter.
Any issue with regard to whether a job
order may properly be placed in the job
service system that cannot be resolved
with the applicable SWA may be
brought to the attention of the NPC,
which may direct that the job order be
placed in the system where the NPC
determines that the applicable program
requirements have been met. If the NPC
concludes that the job order is not
acceptable, it shall so inform the
employer using the procedures
applicable to a denial of certification set
forth in § 655.109(e).
(f) Intrastate/Interstate recruitment.
(1) Upon receipt and acceptance of the
job order, the SWA must promptly place
the job order in intrastate clearance on
its active file and begin recruitment of
eligible U.S. workers. The SWA
receiving the job order under paragraph
(e) of this section will promptly
transmit, on behalf of the employer, a
copy of its active job order to all States
listed in the job order as anticipated
worksites. The SWA must also transmit
a copy of all active job orders to no
fewer than three States, which must
include those States, if any, designated
by the Secretary as traditional or
expected labor supply States (‘‘out-ofState recruitment States’’) for the area of
intended employment in which the
employer’s work is to be performed as
defined in paragraph (i) of this section.
(2) Unless otherwise directed by the
CO, the SWA must keep the job order
open for interstate clearance until the
end of the recruitment period, as set
forth in § 655.102(f)(3). Each of the
SWAs to which the job order was
referred must keep the job order open
for that same period of time and must
refer each eligible U.S. worker who
applies (or on whose behalf an
application is made) for the job
opportunity.
(3) (i) For the first 5 years after the
effective date of this rule, the
recruitment period shall end 30 days
after the first date the employer requires
the services of the H–2A workers, or on
the last day the employer requires the
services of H–2A workers in the
applicable area of intended
employment, whichever is sooner (the
30-day rule). During that 5-year period,
the Department will endeavor to study
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the costs and benefits of providing for
continuing recruitment of U.S. workers
after the H–2A workers have already
entered the country. Unless prior to the
expiration of the 5-year period the
Department conducts a study and
publishes a notice determining that the
economic benefits of such extended
recruitment period outweigh its costs,
the recruitment period will, after the
expiration of the 5-year period, end on
the first date the employer requires the
services of the H–2A worker.
(ii) Withholding of U.S. workers
prohibited. The provisions of this
paragraph shall apply so as long as the
30-day rule is in place.
(A) Complaints. Any employer who
has reason to believe that a person or
entity has willfully and knowingly
withheld U.S. workers prior to the
arrival at the job site of H–2A workers
in order to force the hiring of U.S.
workers during the 30-day rule under
paragraph (f)(3)(i) of this section may
submit a written complaint to the CO.
The complaint must clearly identify the
person or entity who the employer
believes has withheld the U.S. workers,
and must specify sufficient facts to
support the allegation (e.g., dates,
places, numbers and names of U.S.
workers) which will permit an
investigation to be conducted by the CO.
(B) Investigations. The CO must
immediately investigate the complaint.
The investigation must include
interviews with the employer who has
submitted the complaint, the person or
entity named as responsible for
withholding the U.S. workers, and the
individual U.S. workers whose
availability has purportedly been
withheld.
(C) Written findings. Where the CO
determines, after conducting the
interviews required by this paragraph,
that the employer’s complaint is valid
and justified, the CO shall immediately
suspend the application of the 30-day
rule under paragraph (f)(3)(i) of this
section to the employer. The CO’s
determination shall be the final decision
of the Secretary.
(g) Newspaper advertisements. (1)
During the period of time that the job
order is being circulated by the SWA(s)
for interstate clearance under paragraph
(f) of this section, the employer must
place an advertisement on 2 separate
days, which may be consecutive, one of
which must be a Sunday (except as
provided in paragraph (g)(2) of this
section), in a newspaper of general
circulation serving the area of intended
employment that has a reasonable
distribution and is appropriate to the
occupation and the workers likely to
apply for the job opportunity. Both
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newspaper advertisements must be
published only after the job order is
accepted by the SWA for intrastate/
interstate clearance.
(2) If the job opportunity is located in
a rural area that does not have a
newspaper with a Sunday edition, the
employer must, in place of a Sunday
edition, advertise in the regularly
published daily edition with the widest
circulation in the area of intended
employment.
(3) The newspaper advertisements
must satisfy the requirements of
§§ 655.103 and 655.104. The employer
must maintain copies of newspaper
pages (with date of publication and full
copy of ad), or tear sheets of the pages
of the publication in which the
advertisements appeared, or other proof
of publication containing the text of the
printed advertisements and the dates of
publication furnished by the newspaper.
(4) If a professional, trade or ethnic
publication is more appropriate for the
occupation and the workers likely to
apply for the job opportunity than a
general circulation newspaper, and is
the most likely source to bring
responses from able, willing, qualified,
and available U.S. workers, the
employer may use a professional, trade
or ethnic publication in place of one of
the newspaper advertisements, but may
not replace the Sunday advertisement
(or the substitute required by paragraph
(g)(2) of this section).
(h) Contact with former U.S.
employees. The employer must contact
by mail or other effective means its
former U.S. employees (except those
who were dismissed for cause,
abandoned the worksite, or were
provided documentation at the end of
their previous period of employment
explaining the lawful, job-related
reasons they would not be re-contacted)
employed by the employer in the
occupation at the place of employment
during the previous year and solicit
their return to the job. The employer
must maintain copies of correspondence
signed and dated by the employer or, if
other means are used, maintain dated
logs demonstrating that each worker
was contacted, including the phone
number, e-mail address, or other means
that was used to make contact. The
employer must list in the recruitment
report any workers who did not return
to the employ of the employer because
they were either unable or unwilling to
return to the job or did not respond to
the employer’s request, and must retain
documentation, if provided by the
worker, showing evidence of their
inability, unwillingness, or nonresponsiveness.
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(i) Additional positive recruitment. (1)
Each year, the Secretary will make a
determination with respect to each State
whether there are other States
(‘‘traditional or expected labor supply
States’’) in which there are a significant
number of able and qualified workers
who, if recruited, would be willing to
make themselves available for work in
that State, as well as which newspapers
in each traditional or expected labor
supply State that the employer may use
to fulfill its obligation to run a
newspaper advertisement in that State.
Such determination must be based on
information provided by State agencies
or by other sources within the 120 days
preceding the determination (which will
be solicited by notice in the Federal
Register), and will to the extent
information is available take into
account the success of recent efforts by
out-of-State employers to recruit in that
State. The Secretary will not designate
a State as a traditional or expected labor
supply State if the State has a significant
number of employers that are recruiting
for U.S. workers for the same types of
occupations and comparable work. The
Secretary’s annual determination as to
traditional or expected labor supply
States, if any, from which applicants
from each State must recruit will be
published in the Federal Register and
made available through the ETA Web
site.
(2) Each employer must engage in
positive recruitment in those States
designated in accordance with
paragraph (i)(1) with respect to the State
in which the employer’s work is to be
performed. Such recruitment will
consist of one newspaper advertisement
in each State in one of the newspapers
designated by the Secretary, published
within the same period of time as the
newspaper advertisements required
under paragraph (g) of this section. An
employer will not be required to
conduct positive recruitment in more
than three States designated in
accordance with paragraph (i)(1) for
each area of intended employment
listed on the employer’s application.
The advertisement must refer applicants
to the SWA nearest the area in which
the advertisement was placed.
(j) Referrals of U.S. workers. SWAs
may only refer for employment
individuals for whom they have verified
identity and employment authorization
through the process for employment
verification of all workers that is
established by INA sec. 274A(b). SWAs
must provide documentation certifying
the employment verification that
satisfies the standards of INA sec.
274A(a)(5) and its implementing
regulations at 8 CFR 274a.6.
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(k) Recruitment report. (1) No more
than 50 days before the date of need the
employer must prepare, sign, and date
a written recruitment report. The
recruitment report must be submitted
with the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification. The
recruitment report must:
(i) List the original number of
openings for which the employer
recruited;
(ii) Identify each recruitment source
by name;
(iii) State the name and contact
information of each U.S. worker who
applied or was referred to the job
opportunity up to the date of the
preparation of the recruitment report,
and the disposition of each worker;
(iv) Confirm that former employees
were contacted and by what means; and
(v) If applicable, explain the lawful
job-related reason(s) for not hiring any
U.S. workers who applied for the
position.
(2) The employer must update the
recruitment report within 48 hours of
the date that is the end of the
recruitment period as specified in
§ 655.102(f)(3). This supplement to the
recruitment report must meet the
requirements of paragraph (k)(1) of this
section. The employer must sign and
date this supplement to the recruitment
report and retain it for a period of no
less than 3 years. The supplement to the
recruitment report must be provided in
the event of an audit.
(3) The employer must retain resumes
(if provided) of, and evidence of contact
with (which may be in the form of an
attestation), each U.S. worker who
applied or was referred to the job
opportunity. Such resumes and
evidence of contact must be retained
along with the recruitment report and
the supplemental recruitment report for
a period of no less than 3 years, and
must be provided in response to a
Notice of Deficiency or in the event of
an audit.
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§ 655.103
Advertising requirements.
All advertising conducted to satisfy
the required recruitment steps under
§ 655.102 before filing the Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification must meet the
requirements set forth in this section
and at § 655.104 and must contain terms
and conditions of employment which
are not less favorable than those that
will be offered to the H–2A workers. All
advertising must contain the following
information:
(a) The employer’s name and
location(s) of work, or in the event that
a master application will be filed by an
association, a statement indicating that
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the name and location of each member
of the association can be obtained from
the SWA of the State in which the
advertisement is run;
(b) The geographic area(s) of
employment with enough specificity to
apprise applicants of any travel
requirements and where applicants will
likely have to reside to perform the
services or labor;
(c) A description of the job
opportunity for which certification is
sought with sufficient information to
apprise U.S. workers of services or labor
to be performed and the anticipated
period of employment of the job
opportunity;
(d) The wage offer, or in the event that
there are multiple wage offers (such as
where a master application will be filed
by an association and/or where there are
multiple crop activities for a single
employer), the range of applicable wage
offers and, where a master application
will be filed by an association, a
statement indicating that the rate(s)
applicable to each employer can be
obtained from the SWA;
(e) The three-fourths guarantee
specified in § 655.104(i);
(f) If applicable, a statement that work
tools, supplies, and equipment will be
provided at no cost to the worker;
(g) A statement that housing will be
made available at no cost to workers,
including U.S. workers, who cannot
reasonably return to their permanent
residence at the end of each working
day;
(h) If applicable, a statement that
transportation and subsistence expenses
to the worksite will be provided by the
employer;
(i) A statement that the position is
temporary and a specification of the
total number of job openings the
employer intends to fill;
(j) A statement directing applicants to
report or send resumes to the SWA of
the State in which the advertisement is
run for referral to the employer;
(k) Contact information for the
applicable SWA and the job order
number.
§ 655.104
Contents of job offers.
(a) Preferential treatment of aliens
prohibited. The employer’s job offer
must offer to U.S. workers no less than
the same benefits, wages, and working
conditions that the employer is offering,
intends to offer, or will provide to H–
2A workers. Except where otherwise
permitted under this section, no job
offer may impose on U.S. workers any
restrictions or obligations that will not
be imposed on the employer’s H–2A
workers.
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(b) Job qualifications. Each job
qualification listed in the job offer must
not substantially deviate from the
normal and accepted qualifications
required by employers that do not use
H–2A workers in the same or
comparable occupations and crops.
(c) Minimum benefits, wages, and
working conditions. Every job offer
accompanying an H–2A application
must include each of the minimum
benefit, wage, and working condition
provisions listed in paragraphs (d)
through (q) of this section.
(d) Housing. (1) Obligation to provide
housing. The employer must provide
housing at no cost to the worker, except
for those U.S. workers who are
reasonably able to return to their
permanent residence at the end of the
work day. Housing must be provided
through one of the following means:
(i) Employer-provided housing.
Employer-provided housing that meets
the full set of DOL OSHA standards set
forth at 29 CFR 1910.142, or the full set
of standards at §§ 654.404 through
654.417 of this chapter, whichever are
applicable under § 654.401; or
(ii) Rental and/or public
accommodations. Rental or public
accommodations or other substantially
similar class of habitation that meets
applicable local standards for such
housing. In the absence of applicable
local standards, State standards will
apply. In the absence of applicable local
or State standards, DOL OSHA
standards at 29 CFR 1910.142 will
apply. Any charges for rental housing
must be paid directly by the employer
to the owner or operator of the housing.
The employer must document that the
housing complies with the local, State,
or Federal housing standards. Such
documentation may include but is not
limited to a certificate from a State
Department of Health or other State or
local agency or a statement from the
manager or owner of the housing.
(2) Standards for range housing.
Housing for workers principally
engaged in the range production of
livestock shall meet standards of DOL
OSHA for such housing. In the absence
of such standards, range housing for
sheepherders and other workers
engaged in the range production of
livestock must meet guidelines issued
by ETA.
(3) Deposit charges. Charges in the
form of deposits for bedding or other
similar incidentals related to housing
must not be levied upon workers.
However, employers may require
workers to reimburse them for damage
caused to housing, bedding, or other
property by the individual workers
found to have been responsible for
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damage which is not the result of
normal wear and tear related to
habitation.
(4) Charges for public housing. If
public housing provided for migrant
agricultural workers under the auspices
of a local, county, or State government
is secured by the employer, the
employer must pay any charges
normally required for use of the public
housing units (but need not pay for
optional, extra services) directly to the
housing’s management.
(5) Family housing. When it is the
prevailing practice in the area of
intended employment and the
occupation to provide family housing,
family housing must be provided to
workers with families who request it.
(6) Housing inspection. In order to
ensure that the housing provided by an
employer under this section meets the
relevant standard:
(i) An employer must make the
required attestation, which may include
an attestation that the employer is
complying with the procedures set forth
in § 654.403, at the time of filing the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification pursuant to § 655.105(e)(2).
(ii) The employer must make a request
to the SWA for a housing inspection no
less than 60 days before the date of
need, except where otherwise provided
under this part.
(iii) The SWA must make its
determination that the housing meets
the statutory criteria applicable to the
type of housing provided prior to the
date on which the Secretary is required
to make a certification determination
under INA sec. 218(c)(3)(A), which is 30
days before the employer’s date of need.
SWAs must not adopt rules or
restrictions on housing inspections that
unreasonably prevent inspections from
being completed in the required time
frame, such as rules that no inspections
will be conducted where the housing is
already occupied or is not yet leased. If
the employer has attested to and met all
other criteria for certification, and the
employer has made a timely request for
a housing inspection under this
paragraph, and the SWA has failed to
complete a housing inspection by the
statutory deadline of 30 days prior to
date of need, the certification will not be
withheld on account of the SWA’s
failure to meet the statutory deadline.
The SWA must in such cases inspect the
housing prior to or during occupation to
ensure it meets applicable housing
standards. If, upon inspection, the SWA
determines the supplied housing does
not meet the applicable housing
standards, the SWA must promptly
provide written notification to the
employer and the CO. The CO will take
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appropriate action, including notice to
the employer to cure deficiencies. An
employer’s failure to cure substantial
violations can result in revocation of the
temporary labor certification.
(7) Certified housing that becomes
unavailable. If after a request to certify
housing (but before certification), or
after certification of housing, such
housing becomes unavailable for
reasons outside the employer’s control,
the employer may substitute other rental
or public accommodation housing that
is in compliance with the local, State, or
Federal housing standards applicable
under paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section
and for which the employer is able to
submit evidence of such compliance.
The employer must notify the SWA in
writing of the change in
accommodations and the reason(s) for
such change and provide the SWA
evidence of compliance with the
applicable local, State or Federal safety
and health standards, in accordance
with the requirements of paragraph
(d)(1)(ii) of this section. The SWA must
notify the CO of all housing changes and
of any noncompliance with the
standards set forth in paragraph
(d)(1)(ii) of this section. Substantial
noncompliance can result in revocation
of the temporary labor certification
under § 655.117.
(e) Workers’ compensation. The
employer must provide workers’
compensation insurance coverage in
compliance with State law covering
injury and disease arising out of and in
the course of the worker’s employment.
If the type of employment for which the
certification is sought is not covered by
or is exempt from the State’s workers’
compensation law, the employer must
provide, at no cost to the worker,
insurance covering injury and disease
arising out of and in the course of the
worker’s employment that will provide
benefits at least equal to those provided
under the State workers’ compensation
law for other comparable employment.
The employer must retain for 3 years
from the date of certification of the
application, the name of the insurance
carrier, the insurance policy number,
and proof of insurance for the dates of
need, or, if appropriate, proof of State
law coverage.
(f) Employer-provided items. Except
as provided in this paragraph, the
employer must provide to the worker,
without charge or deposit charge, all
tools, supplies, and equipment required
to perform the duties assigned. The
employer may charge the worker for
reasonable costs related to the worker’s
refusal or negligent failure to return any
property furnished by the employer or
due to such worker’s willful damage or
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destruction of such property. Where it is
a common practice in the particular
area, crop activity and occupation for
workers to provide tools and equipment,
with or without the employer
reimbursing the workers for the cost of
providing them, such an arrangement
will be permitted, provided that the
requirements of sec. 3(m) of the FLSA
at 29 U.S.C. 203(m) are met. Section
3(m) does not permit deductions for
tools or equipment primarily for the
benefit of the employer that reduce an
employee’s wage below the wage
required under the minimum wage, or,
where applicable, the overtime
provisions of the FLSA.
(g) Meals. The employer either must
provide each worker with three meals a
day or must furnish free and convenient
cooking and kitchen facilities to the
workers that will enable the workers to
prepare their own meals. Where the
employer provides the meals, the job
offer must state the charge, if any, to the
worker for such meals. The amount of
meal charges is governed by § 655.114.
(h) Transportation; daily subsistence.
(1) Transportation to place of
employment. If the employer has not
previously advanced such
transportation and subsistence costs to
the worker or otherwise provided such
transportation or subsistence directly to
the worker by other means and if the
worker completes 50 percent of the
work contract period, the employer
must pay the worker for reasonable
costs incurred by the worker for
transportation and daily subsistence
from the place from which the worker
has departed to the employer’s place of
employment. For an H–2A worker
coming from outside of the U.S., the
place from which the worker has
departed is the place of recruitment,
which the Department interprets to
mean the appropriate U.S. consulate or
port of entry. When it is the prevailing
practice of non-H–2A agricultural
employers in the occupation in the area
to do so, or when the employer extends
such benefits to similarly situated H–2A
workers, the employer must advance the
required transportation and subsistence
costs (or otherwise provide them) to
U.S. workers. The amount of the
transportation payment must be no less
(and is not required to be more) than the
most economical and reasonable
common carrier transportation charges
for the distances involved. The amount
of the daily subsistence payment must
be at least as much as the employer
would charge the worker for providing
the worker with three meals a day
during employment (if applicable), but
in no event less than the amount
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permitted under paragraph (g) of this
section.
(2) Transportation from last place of
employment to home country. If the
worker completes the work contract
period, and the worker has no
immediately subsequent H–2A
employment, the employer must
provide or pay for the worker’s
transportation and daily subsistence
from the place of employment to the
place from which the worker,
disregarding intervening employment,
departed to work for the employer. For
an H–2A worker coming from outside of
the U.S., the place from which the
worker has departed will be considered
to be the appropriate U.S. consulate or
port of entry.
(3) Transportation between living
quarters and worksite. The employer
must provide transportation between
the worker’s living quarters (i.e.,
housing provided or secured by the
employer pursuant to paragraph (d) of
this section) and the employer’s
worksite at no cost to the worker, and
such transportation must comply with
all applicable Federal, State or local
laws and regulations, and must provide,
at a minimum, the same vehicle safety
standards, driver licensure, and vehicle
insurance as required under 29 U.S.C.
1841 and 29 CFR part 500, subpart D.
If workers’ compensation is used to
cover such transportation, in lieu of
vehicle insurance, the employer must
either ensure that the workers’
compensation covers all travel or that
vehicle insurance exists to provide
coverage for travel not covered by
workers’ compensation.
(i) Three-fourths guarantee. (1) Offer
to worker. The employer must guarantee
to offer the worker employment for a
total number of work hours equal to at
least three-fourths of the workdays of
the total period beginning with the first
workday after the arrival of the worker
at the place of employment or the
advertised contractual first date of need,
whichever is later, and ending on the
expiration date specified in the work
contract or in its extensions, if any. For
purposes of this paragraph a workday
means the number of hours in a
workday as stated in the job order and
excludes the worker’s Sabbath and
Federal holidays. The employer must
offer a total number of hours to ensure
the provision of sufficient work to reach
the three-fourths guarantee. The work
hours must be offered during the work
period specified in the work contract, or
during any modified work contract
period to which the worker and
employer have mutually agreed and has
been approved by the CO. The work
contract period can be shortened by
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agreement of the parties only with the
approval of the CO. In the event the
worker begins working later than the
specified beginning date of the contract,
the guarantee period begins with the
first workday after the arrival of the
worker at the place of employment, and
continues until the last day during
which the work contract and all
extensions thereof are in effect.
Therefore, if, for example, a work
contract is for a 10-week period, during
which a normal workweek is specified
as 6 days a week, 8 hours per day, the
worker would have to be guaranteed
employment for at least 360 hours (e.g.,
10 weeks × 48 hours/week = 480-hours
× 75 percent = 360). If a Federal holiday
occurred during the 10-week span, the
8 hours would be deducted from the
total guaranteed. A worker may be
offered more than the specified hours of
work on a single workday. For purposes
of meeting the guarantee, however, the
worker will not be required to work for
more than the number of hours
specified in the job order for a workday,
or on the worker’s Sabbath or Federal
holidays. However, all hours of work
actually performed may be counted by
the employer in calculating whether the
period of guaranteed employment has
been met. If the employer affords the
U.S. or H–2A worker during the total
work contract period less employment
than that required under this paragraph,
the employer must pay such worker the
amount the worker would have earned
had the worker, in fact, worked for the
guaranteed number of days.
(2) Guarantee for piece rate paid
worker. If the worker will be paid on a
piece rate basis, the employer must use
the worker’s average hourly piece rate
earnings or the AEWR, whichever is
higher, to calculate the amount due
under the guarantee.
(3) Failure to work. Any hours the
worker fails to work, up to a maximum
of the number of hours specified in the
job order for a workday, when the
worker has been offered an opportunity
to do so in accordance with paragraph
(i)(1) of this section, and all hours of
work actually performed (including
voluntary work over 8 hours in a
workday or on the worker’s Sabbath or
Federal holidays), may be counted by
the employer in calculating whether the
period of guaranteed employment has
been met. An employer seeking to
calculate whether the number of hours
has been met must maintain the payroll
records in accordance with paragraph
(j)(2) of this section.
(4) Displaced H–2A worker. The
employer is not liable for payment
under paragraph (i)(1) of this section to
an H–2A worker whom the CO certifies
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is displaced because of the employer’s
compliance with § 655.105(d) with
respect to referrals made after the
employer’s date of need. The employer
is, however, liable for return
transportation for any such displaced
worker in accordance with paragraph
(h)(2) of this section.
(5) Obligation to provide housing and
meals. Notwithstanding the threefourths guarantee contained in this
section, employers are obligated to
provide housing and subsistence for
each day of the contract period up until
the day the workers depart for other H–
2A employment, depart to the place
outside of the U.S. from which the
worker came, or, if the worker
voluntarily abandons employment or is
terminated for cause, the day of such
abandonment or termination.
(j) Earnings records. (1) The employer
must keep accurate and adequate
records with respect to the workers’
earnings, including but not limited to
field tally records, supporting summary
payroll records, and records showing
the nature and amount of the work
performed; the number of hours of work
offered each day by the employer
(broken out by hours offered both in
accordance with and over and above the
three-fourths guarantee at paragraph
(i)(3) of this section); the hours actually
worked each day by the worker; the
time the worker began and ended each
workday; the rate of pay (both piece rate
and hourly, if applicable); the worker’s
earnings per pay period; the worker’s
home address; and the amount of and
reasons for any and all deductions taken
from the worker’s wages.
(2) Each employer must keep the
records required by this part, including
field tally records and supporting
summary payroll records, safe and
accessible at the place or places of
employment, or at one or more
established central recordkeeping
offices where such records are
customarily maintained. All records
must be available for inspection and
transcription by the Secretary or a duly
authorized and designated
representative, and by the worker and
representatives designated by the
worker as evidenced by appropriate
documentation (an Entry of Appearance
as Attorney or Representative, Form G–
28, signed by the worker, or an affidavit
signed by the worker confirming such
representation). Where the records are
maintained at a central recordkeeping
office, other than in the place or places
of employment, such records must be
made available for inspection and
copying within 72 hours following
notice from the Secretary, or a duly
authorized and designated
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representative, and by the worker and
designated representatives as described
in this paragraph.
(3) To assist in determining whether
the three-fourths guarantee in paragraph
(i) of this section has been met, if the
number of hours worked by the worker
on a day during the work contract
period is less than the number of hours
offered, as specified in the job offer, the
records must state the reason or reasons
therefore.
(4) The employer must retain the
records for not less than 3 years after the
completion of the work contract.
(k) Hours and earnings statements.
The employer must furnish to the
worker on or before each payday in one
or more written statements the
following information:
(1) The worker’s total earnings for the
pay period;
(2) The worker’s hourly rate and/or
piece rate of pay;
(3) The hours of employment offered
to the worker (broken out by offers in
accordance with, and over and above,
the guarantee);
(4) The hours actually worked by the
worker;
(5) An itemization of all deductions
made from the worker’s wages; and
(6) If piece rates are used, the units
produced daily.
(l) Rates of pay. (1) If the worker is
paid by the hour, the employer must
pay the worker at least the AEWR in
effect at the time recruitment for the
position was begun, the prevailing
hourly wage rate, the prevailing piece
rate, or the Federal or State minimum
wage rate, whichever is highest, for
every hour or portion thereof worked
during a pay period; or
(2)(i) If the worker is paid on a piece
rate basis and the piece rate does not
result at the end of the pay period in
average hourly piece rate earnings
during the pay period at least equal to
the amount the worker would have
earned had the worker been paid at the
appropriate hourly rate, the worker’s
pay must be supplemented at that time
so that the worker’s earnings are at least
as much as the worker would have
earned during the pay period if the
worker had instead been paid at the
appropriate hourly wage rate for each
hour worked;
(ii) The piece rate must be no less
than the piece rate prevailing for the
activity in the area of intended
employment; and
(iii) If the employer who pays by the
piece rate requires one or more
minimum productivity standards of
workers as a condition of job retention,
such standards must be specified in the
job offer and must be normal, meaning
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that they may not be unusual for
workers performing the same activity in
the area of intended employment.
(m) Frequency of pay. The employer
must state in the job offer the frequency
with which the worker will be paid,
which must be at least twice monthly.
(n) Abandonment of employment or
termination for cause. If the worker
voluntarily abandons employment
before the end of the contract period,
fails to report for employment at the
beginning of the contract period, or is
terminated for cause, and the employer
notifies the Department and DHS in
writing or by any other method
specified by the Department or DHS in
a manner specified in a notice
published in the Federal Register not
later than 2 working days after such
abandonment or abscondment occurs,
the employer will not be responsible for
providing or paying for the subsequent
transportation and subsistence expenses
of that worker under paragraph (h) of
this section, and that worker is not
entitled to the three-fourths guarantee
described in paragraph (i) of this
section. An abandonment or
abscondment shall be deemed to begin
after a worker fails to report for work at
the regularly scheduled time for 5
consecutive working days without the
consent of the employer. Employees
may be terminated for cause, however,
for shorter unexcused periods of time
that shall not be considered
abandonment or abscondment.
(o) Contract impossibility. If, before
the expiration date specified in the work
contract, the services of the worker are
no longer required for reasons beyond
the control of the employer due to fire,
weather, or other Act of God that makes
the fulfillment of the contract
impossible, the employer may terminate
the work contract. Whether such an
event constitutes a contract
impossibility will be determined by the
CO. In the event of such termination of
a contract, the employer must fulfill a
three-fourths guarantee for the time that
has elapsed from the start of the work
contract to the time of its termination as
described in paragraph (i)(1) of this
section. The employer must:
(1) Return the worker, at the
employer’s expense, to the place from
which the worker (disregarding
intervening employment) came to work
for the employer, or transport the
worker to the worker’s next certified H–
2A employer (but only if the worker can
provide documentation supporting such
employment), whichever the worker
prefers. For an H–2A worker coming
from outside of the U.S., the place from
which the worker (disregarding
intervening employment) came to work
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for the employer is the appropriate U.S.
consulate or port of entry;
(2) Reimburse the worker the full
amount of any deductions made from
the worker’s pay by the employer for
transportation and subsistence expenses
to the place of employment; and
(3) Pay the worker for any costs
incurred by the worker for
transportation and daily subsistence to
that employer’s place of employment.
Daily subsistence will be computed as
set forth in paragraph (h) of this section.
The amount of the transportation
payment will be no less (and is not
required to be more) than the most
economical and reasonable common
carrier transportation charges for the
distances involved.
(p) Deductions. The employer must
make all deductions from the worker’s
paycheck that are required by law. The
job offer must specify all deductions not
required by law which the employer
will make from the worker’s paycheck.
All deductions must be reasonable.
However, an employer subject to the
FLSA may not make deductions that
would violate the FLSA.
(q) Copy of work contract. The
employer must provide to the worker,
no later than on the day the work
commences, a copy of the work contract
between the employer and the worker.
The work contract must contain all of
the provisions required by paragraphs
(a) through (p) of this section. In the
absence of a separate, written work
contract entered into between the
employer and the worker, the job order,
as provided in 20 CFR part 653, Subpart
F, will be the work contract.
§ 655.105 Assurances and obligations of
H–2A employers.
An employer seeking to employ H–2A
workers must attest as part of the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification that it will abide by the
following conditions of this subpart:
(a) The job opportunity is and will
continue through the recruitment period
to be open to any qualified U.S. worker
regardless of race, color, national origin,
age, sex, religion, handicap, or
citizenship, and the employer has
conducted and will continue to conduct
the required recruitment, in accordance
with regulations, and has been
unsuccessful in locating sufficient
numbers of qualified U.S. applicants for
the job opportunity for which
certification is sought. Any U.S. workers
who applied or apply for the job were
or will be rejected only for lawful, jobrelated reasons, and those not rejected
on this basis have been or will be hired.
In addition, the employer attests that it
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will retain records of all rejections as
required by § 655.119.
(b) The employer is offering terms and
working conditions which are not less
favorable than those offered to the H–2A
worker(s) and are not less than the
minimum terms and conditions
required by this subpart.
(c) The specific job opportunity for
which the employer is requesting H–2A
certification is not vacant because the
former occupant is on strike or being
locked out in the course of a labor
dispute.
(d) The employer will continue to
cooperate with the SWA by accepting
referrals of all eligible U.S. workers who
apply (or on whose behalf an
application is made) for the job
opportunity until the end of the
recruitment period as specified in
§ 655.102(f)(3).
(e) During the period of employment
that is the subject of the labor
certification application, the employer
will:
(1) Comply with applicable Federal,
State and local employment-related
laws and regulations, including
employment-related health and safety
laws;
(2) Provide for or secure housing for
those workers who are not reasonably
able to return to their permanent
residence at the end of the work day,
without charge to the worker, that
complies with the applicable standards
as set forth in § 655.104(d);
(3) Where required, has timely
requested a preoccupancy inspection of
the housing and, if one has been
conducted, received certification;
(4) Provide insurance, without charge
to the worker, under a State workers’
compensation law or otherwise, that
meets the requirements of § 655.104(e);
and
(5) Provide transportation in
compliance with all applicable Federal,
State or local laws and regulations
between the worker’s living quarters
(i.e., housing provided by the employer
under § 655.104(d)) and the employer’s
worksite without cost to the worker.
(f) Upon the separation from
employment of H–2A worker(s)
employed under the labor certification
application, if such separation occurs
prior to the end date of the employment
specified in the application, the
employer will notify the Department
and DHS in writing (or any other
method specified by the Department or
DHS) of the separation from
employment not later than 2 work days
after such separation is discovered by
the employer. The procedures for
reporting abandonments and
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abscondments are outlined in
§ 655.104(n) of this subpart.
(g) The offered wage rate is the
highest of the AEWR in effect at the
time recruitment is initiated, the
prevailing hourly wage or piece rate, or
the Federal or State minimum wage, and
the employer will pay the offered wage
during the entire period of the approved
labor certification.
(h) The offered wage is not based on
commission, bonuses, or other
incentives, unless the employer
guarantees a wage paid on a weekly, biweekly, or monthly basis that equals or
exceeds the AEWR, prevailing hourly
wage or piece rate, or the legal Federal
or State minimum wage, whichever is
highest.
(i) The job opportunity is a full-time
temporary position, calculated to be at
least 30 hours per work week, the
qualifications for which do not
substantially deviate from the normal
and accepted qualifications required by
employers that do not use H–2A
workers in the same or comparable
occupations or crops.
(j) The employer has not laid off and
will not lay off any similarly employed
U.S. worker in the occupation that is the
subject of the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification in
the area of intended employment except
for lawful, job related reasons within 60
days of the date of need, or if the
employer has laid off such workers, it
has offered the job opportunity that is
the subject of the application to those
laid-off U.S. worker(s) and the U.S.
worker(s) either refused the job
opportunity or was rejected for the job
opportunity for lawful, job-related
reasons.
(k) The employer has not and will not
intimidate, threaten, restrain, coerce,
blacklist, or in any manner discriminate
against, and has not and will not cause
any person to intimidate, threaten,
restrain, coerce, blacklist, or in any
manner discriminate against, any person
who has with just cause:
(1) Filed a complaint under or related
to sec. 218 of the INA at 8 U.S.C. 1188,
or this subpart or any other Department
regulation promulgated under sec. 218
of the INA;
(2) Instituted or caused to be
instituted any proceeding under or
related to sec. 218 of the INA, or this
subpart or any other Department
regulation promulgated under sec. 218
of the INA;
(3) Testified or is about to testify in
any proceeding under or related to sec.
218 of the INA or this subpart or any
other Department regulation
promulgated under sec. 218 of the INA;
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(4) Consulted with an employee of a
legal assistance program or an attorney
on matters related to sec. 218 of the INA
or this subpart or any other Department
regulation promulgated under sec. 218
of the INA; or
(5) Exercised or asserted on behalf of
himself/herself or others any right or
protection afforded by sec. 218 of the
INA, or this subpart or any other
Department regulation promulgated
under sec. 218 of the INA.
(l) The employer shall not discharge
any person because of that person’s
taking any action listed in paragraphs
(k)(1) through (k)(5) of this section.
(m) All fees associated with
processing the temporary labor
certification will be paid in a timely
manner.
(n) The employer will inform H–2A
workers of the requirement that they
leave the U.S. at the end of the period
certified by the Department or
separation from the employer,
whichever is earlier, as required under
§ 655.111, unless the H–2A worker is
being sponsored by another subsequent
employer.
(o) The employer and its agents have
not sought or received payment of any
kind from the employee for any activity
related to obtaining labor certification,
including payment of the employer’s
attorneys’ fees, application fees, or
recruitment costs. For purposes of this
paragraph, payment includes, but is not
limited to, monetary payments, wage
concessions (including deductions from
wages, salary, or benefits), kickbacks,
bribes, tributes, in kind payments, and
free labor. This provision does not
prohibit employers or their agents from
receiving reimbursement for costs that
are the responsibility of the worker,
such as government required passport or
visa fees.
(p) The employer has contractually
forbidden any foreign labor contractor
or recruiter whom the employer engages
in international recruitment of H–2A
workers to seek or receive payments
from prospective employees, except as
provided for in DHS regulations at 8
CFR 214.2(h)(5)(xi)(A).
(q) The applicant is either a fixed-site
employer, an agent or recruiter, an H–
2ALC (as defined in these regulations),
or an association.
§ 655.106 Assurances and obligations of
H–2A Labor Contractors.
(a) The pre-filing activity
requirements set forth in § 655.102 are
modified as follows for H–2ALCs:
(1) The job order for an H–2ALC may
contain work locations in multiple areas
of intended employment, and may be
submitted to any one of the SWAs
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having jurisdiction over the anticipated
work areas. The SWA receiving the job
order shall promptly transmit, on behalf
of the employer, a copy of its active job
order to all States listed in the
application as anticipated worksites, as
well as those States, if any, designated
by the Secretary as traditional or
expected labor supply States for each
area in which the employer’s work is to
be performed. Each SWA shall keep the
H–2ALC’s job order posted until the end
of the recruitment period, as set forth in
§ 655.102(f)(3), for the area of intended
employment that is covered by the
SWA. SWAs in States that have been
designated as traditional or expected
labor supply States for more than one
area of intended of employment that are
listed on an application shall keep the
H–2ALC’s job order posted until the end
of the applicable recruitment period that
is last in time, and may make referrals
for job opportunities in any area of
intended employment that is still in an
active recruitment period, as defined by
§ 655.102(f)(3).
(2) The H–2ALC must conduct
separate positive recruitment under
§ 655.102(g) through (i) for each area of
intended employment in which the H–
2ALC intends to perform work, but need
not conduct separate recruitment for
each work location within a single area
of intended employment. The positive
recruitment for each area of intended
employment must list the name and
location of each fixed-site agricultural
business to which the H–2ALC expects
to provide H–2A workers, the expected
beginning and ending dates when the
H–2ALC will be providing the workers
to each fixed site, and a description of
the crops and activities the workers are
expected to perform at such fixed site.
Such positive recruitment must be
conducted pre-filing for the first area of
intended employment, but must be
started no more than 75 and no fewer
than 60 days before the listed arrival
date (or the amended date, if applicable)
for each subsequent area of intended
employment. For each area of intended
employment, the advertising that must
be placed in any applicable States
designated as traditional or expected
labor supply States must be placed at
the same time as the placement of other
positive recruitment for the area of
intended employment in accordance
with § 655.102(i)(2).
(3) The job order and the positive
recruitment in each area of intended
employment may require that workers
complete the remainder of the H–
2ALC’s itinerary.
(4) An H–2ALC who hires U.S.
workers during the course of its
itinerary, and accordingly releases one
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or more of its H–2A workers, is eligible
for the release from the three-quarters
guarantee with respect to the released
H–2A workers that is provided for in
§ 655.104(i)(4).
(5) An H–2ALC may amend its
application subsequent to submission in
accordance with § 655.107(d)(3) to
account for new or changed worksites or
areas of intended employment during
the course of the itinerary in the
following manner:
(i) If the additional worksite(s) are in
the same area(s) of intended
employment as represented on the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification, the H–2ALC is not
required to re-recruit in those areas of
intended employment if that
recruitment has been completed and if
the job duties at the new work sites are
similar to those already covered by the
application.
(ii) If the additional worksite(s) are
outside the area(s) of intended
employment represented on the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification, the H–2ALC must submit
in writing the new area(s) of intended
employment and explain the reasons for
the amendment of the labor certification
itinerary. The CO will order additional
recruitment in accordance with
§ 655.102(d).
(iii) For any additional worksite not
included on the original application that
necessitates a change in housing of H–
2A workers, the H–2ALC must secure
the statement of housing as described in
paragraph (b)(6) of this section and
obtain an inspection of such housing
from the SWA in the area of intended
employment.
(iv) Where additional recruitment is
required under paragraphs (a)(5)(i) or
(a)(5)(ii) of this section, the CO shall
allow it to take place on an expedited
basis, where possible, so as to allow the
amended dates of need to be met.
(6) Consistent with paragraph (a)(5) of
this section, no later than 30 days prior
to the commencement of employment in
each area of intended employment in
the itinerary of an H–2ALC, the SWA
having jurisdiction over that area of
intended employment must complete
the housing inspections for any
employer-provided housing to be used
by the employees of the H–2ALC.
(7) To satisfy the requirements of
§ 655.102(h), the H–2ALC must contact
all U.S employees that worked for the
H–2ALC during the previous season,
except those excluded by that section,
before filing its application, and must
advise those workers that a separate job
opportunity exists for each area of
intended employment that is covered by
the application. The employer may
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advise contacted employees that for any
given job opportunity, workers may be
required to complete the remainder of
the H–2ALC’s itinerary.
(b) In addition to the assurances and
obligations listed in § 655.105, H–2ALC
applicants are also required to:
(1) Provide the MSPA Farm Labor
Contractor (FLC) certificate of
registration number and expiration date
if required under MSPA at 29 U.S.C.
1801 et seq., to have such a certificate;
(2) Identify the farm labor contracting
activities the H–2ALC is authorized to
perform as an FLC under MSPA as
shown on the FLC certificate of
registration, if required under MSPA at
29 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., to have such a
certificate of registration;
(3) List the name and location of each
fixed-site agricultural business to which
the H–2A Labor Contractor expects to
provide H–2A workers, the expected
beginning and ending dates when the
H–2ALC will be providing the workers
to each fixed site, and a description of
the crops and activities the workers are
expected to perform at such fixed site;
(4) Provide proof of its ability to
discharge financial obligations under
the H–2A program by attesting that it
has obtained a surety bond as required
by 29 CFR 501.8, stating on the
application the name, address, phone
number, and contact person for the
surety, and providing the amount of the
bond (as calculated pursuant to 29 CFR
501.8) and any identifying designation
utilized by the surety for the bond;
(5) Attest that it has engaged in, or
will engage in within the timeframes
required by § 655.102 as modified by
§ 655.106(a), recruitment efforts in each
area of intended employment in which
it has listed a fixed-site agricultural
business; and
(6) Attest that it will be providing
housing and transportation that
complies with the applicable housing
standards in § 655.104(d) or that it has
obtained from each fixed-site
agricultural business that will provide
housing or transportation to the workers
a written statement stating that:
(i) All housing used by workers and
owned, operated or secured by the
fixed-site agricultural business complies
with the applicable housing standards
in § 655.104(d); and
(ii) All transportation between the
worksite and the workers’ living
quarters that is provided by the fixedsite agricultural business complies with
all applicable Federal, State, or local
laws and regulations and will provide,
at a minimum, the same vehicle safety
standards, driver licensure, and vehicle
insurance as required under 29 U.S.C.
1841 and 29 CFR part 500, subpart D,
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used to cover such transportation as
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§ 655.107
Processing of applications.
(a) Processing. (1) Upon receipt of the
application, the CO will promptly
review the application for completeness
and an absence of errors that would
prevent certification, and for
compliance with the criteria for
certification. The CO will make a
determination to certify, deny, or issue
a Notice of Deficiency prior to making
a Final Determination on the
application. Applications requesting
that zero job opportunities be certified
for H–2A employment because the
employer has been able to recruit a
sufficient number of U.S. workers must
comply with other requirements for H–
2A applications and must be supported
by a recruitment report, in which case
the application will be accepted but will
then be denied. Criteria for certification,
as used in this subpart, include, but are
not limited to, whether the employer
has established the need for the
agricultural services or labor to be
performed on a temporary or seasonal
basis; made all the assurances and met
all the obligations required by § 655.105,
and/or, if an H–2ALC, by § 655.106;
complied with the timeliness
requirements in § 655.102; and
complied with the recruitment
obligations required by §§ 655.102 and
655.103.
(2) Unless otherwise noted, any notice
or request sent by the CO or OFLC to an
applicant requiring a response shall be
sent by means normally assuring nextday delivery, to afford the applicant
sufficient time to respond. The
employer’s response shall be considered
filed with the Department when sent (by
mail, certified mail, or any other means
indicated to be acceptable by the CO) to
the Department, which may be
demonstrated, for example, by a
postmark.
(b) Notice of deficiencies. (1) If the CO
determines that the employer has made
all necessary attestations and
assurances, but the application fails to
comply with one or more of the criteria
for certification in paragraph (a) of this
section, the CO will promptly notify the
employer within 7 calendar days of the
CO’s receipt of the application.
(2) The notice will:
(i) State the reason(s) why the
application fails to meet the criteria for
temporary labor certification, citing the
relevant regulatory standard(s);
(ii) Offer the employer an opportunity
to submit a modified application within
5 business days from date of receipt,
stating the modification that is needed
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for the CO to accept the application for
consideration;
(iii) Except as provided for under
paragraph (b)(2)(iv) of this section, state
that the CO’s determination on whether
to grant or deny the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
will be made no later than 30 calendar
days before the date of need, provided
that the employer submits the requested
modification to the application within 5
business days and in a manner specified
by the CO;
(iv) Where the CO determines the
employer failed to comply with the
recruitment obligations required by
§§ 655.102 and 655.103, offer the
employer an opportunity to correct its
recruitment and conduct it on an
expedited schedule. The CO shall
specify the positive recruitment
requirements, request the employer
submit proof of corrected advertisement
and an initial recruitment report
meeting the requirements of
§ 655.102(k) no earlier than 48 hours
after the last corrected advertisement is
printed, and state that the CO’s
determination on whether to grant or
deny the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification will be made
within 5 business days of receiving the
required documentation, which may be
a date later than 30 days before the date
of need:
(v) Offer the employer an opportunity
to request an expedited administrative
review or a de novo administrative
hearing before an ALJ, of the Notice of
Deficiency. The notice will state that in
order to obtain such a review or hearing,
the employer, within 5 business days of
the receipt of the notice, must file by
facsimile or other means normally
assuring next day delivery, a written
request to the Chief Administrative Law
Judge of DOL and simultaneously serve
a copy on the CO. The notice will also
state that the employer may submit any
legal arguments that the employer
believes will rebut the basis of the CO’s
action; and
(vi) State that if the employer does not
comply with the requirements under
paragraphs (b)(2)(ii) and (iv) of this
section or request an expedited
administrative judicial review or a de
novo hearing before an ALJ within the
5 business days the CO will deny the
application in accordance with the labor
certification determination provisions in
§ 655.109.
(c) Submission of modified
applications. (1) If the CO notifies the
employer of any deficiencies within the
7 calendar day timeframe set forth in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the date
by which the CO’s Final Determination
is required by statute to be made will be
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postponed by 1 day for each day that
passes beyond the 5 business-day period
allowed under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of
this section to submit a modified
application.
(2) Where the employer submits a
modified application as required by the
CO, and the CO approves the modified
application, the CO will not deny the
application based solely on the fact that
it now does not meet the timeliness
requirements for filing applications.
(3) If the modified application is not
approved, the CO will deny the
application in accordance with the labor
certification determination provisions in
§ 655.109.
(d) Amendments to applications. (1)
Applications may be amended at any
time before the CO’s certification
determination to increase the number of
workers requested in the initial
application by not more than 20 percent
(50 percent for employers requesting
less than 10 workers) without requiring
an additional recruitment period for
U.S. workers. Requests for increases
above the percent prescribed, without
additional recruitment, may be
approved by the CO only when the
request is submitted in writing, the need
for additional workers could not have
been foreseen, and the crops or
commodities will be in jeopardy prior to
the expiration of an additional
recruitment period.
(2) Applications may be amended to
make minor changes in the total period
of employment, but only if a written
request is submitted to the CO and
approved in advance. In considering
whether to approve the request, the CO
will review the reason(s) for the request,
determine whether the reason(s) are on
the whole justified, and take into
account the effect(s) of a decision to
approve on the adequacy of the
underlying test of the domestic labor
market for the job opportunity. If a
request for a change in the start date of
the total period of employment is made
after workers have departed for the
employer’s place of work, the CO may
only approve the change if the request
is accompanied by a written assurance
signed and dated by the employer that
all such workers will be provided
housing and subsistence, without cost to
the workers, until work commences.
Upon acceptance of an amendment, the
CO will submit to the SWA any
necessary modification to the job order.
(3) Other amendments to the
application, including elements of the
job offer and the place of work, may be
approved by the CO if the CO
determines the proposed amendment(s)
are justified by a business reason and
will not prevent the CO from making the
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labor certification determination
required under § 655.109. Requested
amendments will be reviewed as
quickly as possible, taking into account
revised dates of need for work locations
associated with the amendment.
(e) Appeal procedures. With respect
to either a Notice of Deficiency issued
under paragraph (b) of this section, the
denial of a requested amendment under
paragraph (d) of this section, or a notice
of denial issued under § 655.109(e), if
the employer timely requests an
expedited administrative review or de
novo hearing before an ALJ, the
procedures set forth in § 655.115 will be
followed.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
§ 655.108
Offered wage rate.
(a) Highest wage. To comply with its
obligation under § 655.105(g), an
employer must offer a wage rate that is
the highest of the AEWR in effect at the
time recruitment for a position is begun,
the prevailing hourly wage or piece rate,
or the Federal or State minimum wage.
(b) Wage rate request. The employer
must request and obtain a wage rate
determination from the NPC, on a form
prescribed by ETA, before commencing
any recruitment under this subpart,
except where specifically exempted
from this requirement by these
regulations.
(c) Validity of wage rate. The
recruitment must begin within the
validity period of the wage
determination obtained from the NPC.
Recruitment for this purpose begins
when the job order is accepted by the
SWA for posting.
(d) Wage offer. The employer must
offer and advertise in its recruitment a
wage at least equal to the wage rate
required by paragraph (a) of this section.
(e) Adverse effect wage rate. The
AEWR will be based on published wage
data for the occupation, skill level, and
geographical area from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS), Occupational
Employment Statistics (OES) survey.
The NPC will obtain wage information
on the AEWR using the On-line Wage
Library (OWL) found on the Foreign
Labor Certification Data Center Web site
(https://www.flcdatacenter.com/). This
wage shall not be less than the July 24,
2009 Federal minimum wage of $7.25.
(f) Wage determination. The NPC
must enter the wage rate determination
on a form it uses, indicate the source,
and return the form with its
endorsement to the employer.
(g) Skill level. (1) Level I wage rates
are assigned to job offers for beginning
level employees who have a basic
understanding of the occupation. These
employees perform routine tasks that
require limited, if any, exercise of
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judgment. The tasks provide experience
and familiarization with the employer’s
methods, practices, and programs. The
employees may perform higher level
work for training and developmental
purposes. These employees work under
close supervision and receive specific
instructions on required tasks and
results expected. Their work is closely
monitored and reviewed for accuracy.
(2) Level II wage rates are assigned to
job offers for employees who have
attained, through education or
experience, a good understanding of the
occupation. These employees perform
moderately complex tasks that require
limited judgment. An indicator that the
job request warrants a wage
determination at Level II would be a
requirement for years of education
and/or experience that are generally
required as described in the O*NET Job
Zones.
(3) Level III wage rates are assigned to
job offers for employees who have a
sound understanding of the occupation
and have attained, either through
education or experience, special skills
or knowledge. These employees perform
tasks that require exercising judgment
and may coordinate the activities of
other staff. They may have supervisory
authority over those staff. A requirement
for years of experience or educational
degrees that are at the higher ranges
indicated in the O*NET Job Zones
would be an indicator that a Level III
wage should be considered. Frequently,
key words in the job title can be used
as indicators that an employer’s job offer
is for an experienced worker. Words
such as lead, senior, crew chief, or
journeyman would be indicators that a
Level III wage should be considered.
(4) Level IV wage rates are assigned to
job offers for employees who have
sufficient experience in the occupation
to plan and conduct work requiring
judgment and the independent
evaluation, selection, modification, and
application of standard procedures and
techniques. Such employees receive
only minimal guidance and their work
is reviewed only for application of
sound judgment and effectiveness in
meeting the establishment’s procedures
and expectations. They generally have
management and/or supervisory
responsibilities.
(h) Retention of documentation. An
employer filing an Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
must maintain documentation of its
wage determination from the NPC as
required in this subpart and be prepared
to submit this documentation with the
filing of its application. The
documentation required in this subpart
must be retained for a period of no less
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77223
than 3 years from the date of the
certification. There is no record
retention requirement for applications
(and supporting documentation) that are
denied.
§ 655.109 Labor certification
determinations.
(a) COs. The Administrator, OFLC is
the Department’s National CO. The
Administrator, OFLC, and the CO(s) in
the NPC(s) (by virtue of delegation from
the Administrator, OFLC), have the
authority to certify or deny applications
for temporary employment certification
under the H–2A nonimmigrant
classification. If the Administrator,
OFLC has directed that certain types of
temporary labor certification
applications or specific applications
under the H–2A nonimmigrant
classification be handled by the
National OFLC, the Director(s) of the
NPC(s) will refer such applications to
the Administrator, OFLC.
(b) Determination. No later than 30
calendar days before the date of need, as
identified in the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification,
except as provided for under
§ 655.107(c) for modified applications,
or applications not otherwise meeting
certification criteria by that date, the CO
will make a determination either to
grant or deny the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification.
The CO will grant the application if and
only if: the employer has met the
requirements of this subpart, including
the criteria for certification set forth in
§ 655.107(a), and thus the employment
of the H–2A workers will not adversely
affect the wages and working conditions
of similarly employed U.S. workers.
(c) Notification. The CO will notify
the employer in writing (either
electronically or by mail) of the labor
certification determination.
(d) Approved certification. If
temporary labor certification is granted,
the CO must send the certified
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification and a Final Determination
letter to the employer, or, if appropriate,
to the employer’s agent or attorney. The
Final Determination letter will notify
the employer to file the certified
application and any other
documentation required by USCIS with
the appropriate USCIS office and to
continue to cooperate with the SWA by
accepting all referrals of eligible U.S.
workers who apply (or on whose behalf
an application is made) for the job
opportunity until the end of the
recruitment period as set forth in
§ 655.102(f)(3). However, the employer
will not be required to accept referrals
of eligible U.S. workers once it has hired
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or extended employment offers to
eligible U.S. workers equal to the
number of H–2A workers sought.
(e) Denied certification. If temporary
labor certification is denied, the Final
Determination letter will be sent to the
employer by means normally assuring
next-day delivery. The Final
Determination Letter will:
(1) State the reasons certification is
denied, citing the relevant regulatory
standards and/or special procedures;
(2) If applicable, address the
availability of U.S. workers in the
occupation as well as the prevailing
benefits, wages, and working conditions
of similarly employed U.S. workers in
the occupation and/or any applicable
special procedures;
(3) Offer the applicant an opportunity
to request an expedited administrative
review, or a de novo administrative
hearing before an ALJ, of the denial. The
notice must state that in order to obtain
such a review or hearing, the employer,
within 7 calendar days of the date of the
notice, must file by facsimile (fax),
telegram, or other means normally
assuring next day delivery, a written
request to the Chief Administrative Law
Judge of DOL (giving the address) and
simultaneously serve a copy on the CO.
The notice will also state that the
employer may submit any legal
arguments which the employer believes
will rebut the basis of the CO’s action;
and
(4) State that if the employer does not
request an expedited administrative
judicial review or a de novo hearing
before an ALJ within the 7 calendar
days, the denial is final and the
Department will not further consider
that application for temporary alien
agricultural labor certification.
(f) Partial certification. The CO may,
to ensure compliance with all regulatory
requirements, issue a partial
certification, reducing either the period
of need or the number of H–2A workers
being requested or both for certification,
based upon information the CO receives
in the course of processing the
temporary labor certification
application, an audit, or otherwise. The
number of workers certified shall be
reduced by one for each referred U.S.
worker who is qualified, able, available
and willing. If a partial labor
certification is issued, the Final
Determination letter will:
(1) State the reasons for which either
the period of need and/or the number of
H–2A workers requested has been
reduced, citing the relevant regulatory
standards and/or special procedures;
(2) If applicable, address the
availability of U.S. workers in the
occupation;
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(3) Offer the applicant an opportunity
to request an expedited administrative
review, or a de novo administrative
hearing before an ALJ, of the decision.
The notice will state that in order to
obtain such a review or hearing, the
employer, within 7 calendar days of the
date of the notice, will file by facsimile
or other means normally assuring next
day delivery a written request to the
Chief Administrative Law Judge of DOL
(giving the address) and simultaneously
serve a copy on the CO. The notice will
also state that the employer may submit
any legal arguments which the employer
believes will rebut the basis of the CO’s
action; and
(4) State that if the employer does not
request an expedited administrative
judicial review or a de novo hearing
before an ALJ within the 7 calendar
days, the denial is final and the
Department will not further consider
that application for temporary alien
agricultural labor certification.
(g) Appeal procedures. If the
employer timely requests an expedited
administrative review or de novo
hearing before an ALJ under paragraph
(e)(3) or (f)(3) of this section, the
procedures at § 655.115 will be
followed.
(h) Payment of processing fees. A
determination by the CO to grant an
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification in whole or in part under
paragraph (d) or (f) of this section will
include a bill for the required fees. Each
employer of H–2A workers under the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification (except joint employer
associations, which shall not be
assessed a fee in addition to the fees
assessed to the members of the
association) must pay in a timely
manner a non-refundable fee upon
issuance of the certification granting the
application (in whole or in part), as
follows:
(1) Amount. The application fee for
each employer receiving a temporary
agricultural labor certification is $100
plus $10 for each H–2A worker certified
under the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification, provided that
the fee to an employer for each
temporary agricultural labor
certification received will be no greater
than $1,000. There is no additional fee
to the association filing the application.
The fees must be paid by check or
money order made payable to ‘‘United
States Department of Labor.’’ In the case
of H–2A employers that are members of
an agricultural association acting as a
joint employer applying on their behalf,
the aggregate fees for all employers of
H–2A workers under the application
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must be paid by one check or money
order.
(2) Timeliness. Fees received by the
CO no more than 30 days after the date
the temporary labor certification is
granted will be considered timely. Nonpayment of fees by the date that is 30
days after the issuance of the
certification will be considered a
substantial program violation and
subject to the procedures in § 655.115.
§ 655.110 Validity and scope of temporary
labor certifications.
(a) Validity period. A temporary labor
certification is valid for the duration of
the job opportunity for which
certification is granted to the employer.
Except as provided in paragraph and (d)
of this section, the validity period is that
time between the beginning and ending
dates of certified employment, as listed
on the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification. The
certification expires on the last day of
authorized employment.
(b) Scope of validity. Except as
provided in paragraphs (c) and (d) of
this section, a temporary labor
certification is valid only for the number
of H–2A workers, the area of intended
employment, the specific occupation
and duties, and the employer(s)
specified on the certified Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification (as originally filed or as
amended) and may not be transferred
from one employer to another.
(c) Scope of validity—associations. (1)
Certified applications. If an association
is requesting temporary labor
certification as a joint employer, the
certified Application for Temporary
Employment Certification will be
granted jointly to the association and to
each of the association’s employer
members named on the application.
Workers authorized by the temporary
labor certification may be transferred
among its certified employer members
to perform work for which the
temporary labor certification was
granted, provided the association
controls the assignment of such workers
and maintains a record of such
assignments. All temporary agricultural
labor certifications to associations may
be used for the certified job
opportunities of any of its employer
members named on the application. If
an association is requesting temporary
labor certification as a sole employer,
the certified Application for Temporary
Employment Certification is granted to
the association only.
(2) Ineligible employer-members.
Workers may not be transferred or
referred to an association’s employer
member if that employer member has
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been debarred from participation in the
H–2A program.
(d) Extensions on period of
employment. (1) Short-term extension.
An employer who seeks an extension of
2 weeks or less of the certified
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification must apply for such
extension to DHS. If DHS grants the
extension, the corresponding
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification will be deemed extended
for such period as is approved by DHS.
(2) Long-term extension. For
extensions beyond 2 weeks, an
employer may apply to the CO at any
time for an extension of the period of
employment on the certified
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification for reasons related to
weather conditions or other factors
beyond the control of the employer
(which may include unforeseen changes
in market conditions), provided that the
employer’s need for an extension is
supported in writing, with
documentation showing that the
extension is needed and that the need
could not have been reasonably foreseen
by the employer. The CO will grant or
deny the request for extension of the
period of employment on the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification based on the available
information, and will notify the
employer of the decision in writing. The
employer may appeal a denial for a
request of an extension in accordance
with the procedures contained in
§ 655.115. The CO will not grant an
extension where the total work contract
period under that application and
extensions would be 12 months or more,
except in extraordinary circumstances.
(e) Requests for determinations based
on nonavailability of able, willing,
available, eligible, and qualified U.S.
workers. (1) Standards for requests. If a
temporary labor certification has been
partially granted or denied based on the
CO’s determination that able, willing,
available, eligible, and qualified U.S.
workers are available, and, on or after 30
calendar days before the date of need,
some or all of those U.S. workers are, in
fact, no longer able, willing, eligible,
qualified, or available, the employer
may request a new temporary labor
certification determination from the CO.
Prior to making a new determination the
CO will promptly ascertain (which may
be through the SWA or other sources of
information on U.S. worker availability)
whether specific able, willing, eligible
and qualified replacement U.S. workers
are available or can be reasonably
expected to be present at the employer’s
establishment within 72 hours from the
date the employer’s request was
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received. The CO will expeditiously, but
in no case later than 72 hours after the
time a complete request (including the
signed statement included in paragraph
(e)(2) of this section) is received, make
a determination on the request. An
employer may appeal a denial of such
a determination in accordance with the
procedures contained in § 655.115.
(2) Unavailability of U.S. workers. The
employer’s request for a new
determination must be made directly to
the CO by telephone or electronic mail,
and must be confirmed by the employer
in writing as required by this paragraph.
If the employer telephonically or via
electronic mail requests the new
determination by asserting solely that
U.S. workers have become unavailable,
the employer must submit to the CO a
signed statement confirming such
assertion. If such signed statement is not
received by the CO within 72 hours of
the CO’s receipt of the request for a new
determination, the CO will deny the
request.
(3) Notification of determination. If
the CO determines that U.S. workers
have become unavailable and cannot
identify sufficient specific able, willing,
eligible, and qualified U.S. workers who
are or who are likely to be available, the
CO will grant the employer’s request for
a new determination. However, this
does not preclude an employer from
submitting subsequent requests for new
determinations, if warranted, based on
subsequent facts concerning purported
nonavailability of U.S. workers or
referred workers not being eligible
workers or not able, willing, or qualified
because of lawful job-related reasons.
§ 655.111
Required departure.
(a) Limit to worker’s stay. As defined
further in DHS regulations, a temporary
labor certification limits the authorized
period of stay for an H–2A worker. See
8 CFR 214.2(h). A foreign worker may
not remain beyond his or her authorized
period of stay, as established by DHS,
which is based upon the validity period
of the labor certification under which
the H–2A worker is employed, nor
beyond separation from employment
prior to completion of the H–2A
contract, absent an extension or change
of such worker’s status under DHS
regulations.
(b) Notice to worker. Upon
establishment of a program by DHS for
registration of departure, an employer
must notify any H–2A worker that when
the worker departs the U.S. by land at
the conclusion of employment as
provided in paragraph (a) of this
section, the worker must register such
departure at the place and in the
manner prescribed by DHS.
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§ 655.112
77225
Audits.
(a) Discretion. The Department will
conduct audits of temporary labor
certification applications for which
certification has been granted. The
applications selected for audit will be
chosen within the sole discretion of the
Department.
(b) Audit letter. Where an application
is selected for audit, the CO will issue
an audit letter to the employer/
applicant. The audit letter will:
(1) State the documentation that must
be submitted by the employer;
(2) Specify a date, no fewer than 14
days and no more than 30 days from the
date of the audit letter, by which the
required documentation must be
received by the CO; and
(3) Advise that failure to comply with
the audit process may result in a finding
by the CO to:
(i) Revoke the labor certification as
provided in § 655.117 and/or
(ii) Debar the employer from future
filings of H–2A temporary labor
certification applications as provided in
§ 655.118.
(c) Supplemental information request.
During the course of the audit
examination, the CO may request
supplemental information and/or
documentation from the employer in
order to complete the audit.
(d) Audit violations. If, as a result of
the audit, the CO determines the
employer failed to produce required
documentation, or determines that the
employer violated the standards set
forth in § 655.117(a) with respect to the
application, the employer’s labor
certification may be revoked under
§ 655.117 and/or the employer may be
referred for debarment under § 655.118.
The CO may determine to provide the
audit findings and underlying
documentation to DHS or another
appropriate enforcement agency. The
CO shall refer any findings that an
employer discouraged an eligible U.S.
worker from applying, or failed to hire,
discharged, or otherwise discriminated
against an eligible U.S. worker, to the
Department of Justice, Civil Rights
Division, Office of Special Counsel for
Unfair Immigration Related
Employment Practices.
§ 655.113 H–2A applications involving
fraud or willful misrepresentation.
(a) Referral for investigation. If the CO
discovers possible fraud or willful
misrepresentation involving an
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification the CO may refer the
matter to the DHS and the Department’s
Office of the Inspector General for
investigation.
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(b) Terminated processing. If a court
or the DHS determines that there was
fraud or willful misrepresentation
involving an Application for Temporary
Employment Certification, the
application will be deemed invalid. The
determination is not appealable. If a
certification has been granted, a finding
under this paragraph will be cause to
revoke the certification.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
§ 655.114 Setting meal charges; petition
for higher meal charges.
(a) Meal charges. Until a new amount
is set under this paragraph an employer
may charge workers up to $9.90 for
providing them with three meals per
day. The maximum charge allowed by
this paragraph (a) will be changed
annually by the same percentage as the
12 month percentage change for the
Consumer Price Index for all Urban
Consumers for Food between December
of the year just concluded and
December of the year prior to that. The
annual adjustments will be effective on
the date of their publication by the
Administrator, OFLC, as a Notice in the
Federal Register. When a charge or
deduction for the cost of meals would
bring the employee’s wage below the
minimum wage set by the FLSA at 29
U.S.C. 206 (FLSA), the charge or
deduction must meet the requirements
of 29 U.S.C. 203(m) of the FLSA,
including the recordkeeping
requirements found at 29 CFR 516.27.
(b) Filing petitions for higher meal
charges. The employer may file a
petition with the CO to charge more
than the applicable amount for meal
charges if the employer justifies the
charges and submits to the CO the
documentation required by paragraph
(b)(1) of this section.
(1) Required documentation.
Documentation submitted must include
the cost of goods and services directly
related to the preparation and serving of
meals, the number of workers fed, the
number of meals served and the number
of days meals were provided. The cost
of the following items may be included:
Food; kitchen supplies other than food,
such as lunch bags and soap; labor costs
that have a direct relation to food
service operations, such as wages of
cooks and dining hall supervisors; fuel,
water, electricity, and other utilities
used for the food service operation; and
other costs directly related to the food
service operation. Charges for
transportation, depreciation, overhead
and similar charges may not be
included. Receipts and other cost
records for a representative pay period
must be retained and must be available
for inspection by the CO for a period of
1 year.
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(2) Effective date for higher charge.
The employer may begin charging the
higher rate upon receipt of a favorable
decision from the CO unless the CO sets
a later effective date in the decision.
(c) Appeal. In the event the
employer’s petition for a higher meal
charge is denied in whole or in part, the
employer may appeal the denial.
Appeals will be filed with the Chief
Administrative Law Judge. ALJ’s will
hear such appeals according to the
procedures in 29 CFR part 18, except
that the appeal will not be considered
as a complaint to which an answer is
required. The decision of the ALJ is the
final decision of the Secretary.
§ 655.115 Administrative review and de
novo hearing before an administrative law
judge.
(a) Administrative review. (1)
Consideration. Whenever an employer
has requested an administrative review
before an ALJ of a decision by the CO:
Not to accept for consideration an
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification; to deny an Application for
Temporary Employment Certification; to
deny an amendment of an Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification; or to deny an extension of
an Application for Temporary
Employment Certification, the CO will
send a certified copy of the ETA case
file to the Chief Administrative Law
Judge by means normally assuring nextday delivery. The Chief Administrative
Law Judge will immediately assign an
ALJ (which may be a panel of such
persons designated by the Chief
Administrative Law Judge from BALCA
established by 20 CFR part 656, which
will hear and decide the appeal as set
forth in this section) to review the
record for legal sufficiency. The ALJ
may not remand the case and may not
receive evidence in addition to what the
CO used to make the determination.
(2) Decision. Within 5 business days
after receipt of the ETA case file the ALJ
will, on the basis of the written record
and after due consideration of any
written submissions (which may not
include new evidence) from the parties
involved or amici curiae, either affirm,
reverse, or modify the CO’s decision by
written decision. The decision of the
ALJ must specify the reasons for the
action taken and must be immediately
provided to the employer, the CO, the
Administrator, OFLC, and DHS by
means normally assuring next-day
delivery. The ALJ’s decision is the final
decision of the Secretary.
(b) De novo hearing. (1) Request for
hearing; conduct of hearing. Whenever
an employer has requested a de novo
hearing before an ALJ of a decision by
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the CO: Not to accept for consideration
an Application for Temporary
Employment Certification; to deny an
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification; to deny an amendment of
an Application for Temporary
Employment Certification; or to deny an
extension of an Application for
Temporary Employment Certification,
the CO will send a certified copy of the
ETA case file to the Chief
Administrative Law Judge by means
normally assuring next-day delivery.
The Chief Administrative Law Judge
will immediately assign an ALJ (which
may be a panel of such persons
designated by the Chief Administrative
Law Judge from BALCA established by
20 CFR part 656 of this chapter, but
which will hear and decide the appeal
as provided in this section) to conduct
the de novo hearing. The procedures in
29 CFR part 18 apply to such hearings,
except that:
(i) The appeal will not be considered
to be a complaint to which an answer
is required;
(ii) The ALJ will ensure that the
hearing is scheduled to take place
within 5 calendar days after the ALJ’s
receipt of the ETA case file, if the
employer so requests, and will allow for
the introduction of new evidence; and
(iii) The ALJ’s decision must be
rendered within 10 calendar days after
the hearing.
(2) Decision. After a de novo hearing,
the ALJ must affirm, reverse, or modify
the CO’s determination, and the ALJ’s
decision must be provided immediately
to the employer, CO, Administrator,
OFLC, and DHS by means normally
assuring next-day delivery. The ALJ’s
decision is the final decision of the
Secretary.
§ 655.116 Job Service Complaint System;
enforcement of work contracts.
(a) Complaints arising under this
subpart may be filed through the Job
Service Complaint System, as described
in 20 CFR part 658, Subpart E.
Complaints which involve worker
contracts must be referred by the SWA
to ESA for appropriate handling and
resolution, as described in 29 CFR part
501. As part of this process, ESA may
report the results of its investigation to
the Administrator, OFLC for
consideration of employer penalties or
such other action as may be appropriate.
(b) Complaints alleging that an
employer discouraged an eligible U.S.
worker from applying, failed to hire,
discharged, or otherwise discriminated
against an eligible U.S. worker, or
discovered violations involving the
same, may be referred to the U.S.
Department of Justice, Civil Rights
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Division, Office of Special Counsel for
Unfair Immigration Related
Employment Practices (OSC), in
addition to any activity, investigation,
and/or enforcement action taken by ETA
or an SWA. Likewise, if OSC becomes
aware of a violation of these regulations,
it may provide such information to the
appropriate SWA and the CO.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
§ 655.117 Revocation of approved labor
certifications.
(a) Basis for DOL revocation. The CO,
in consultation with the Administrator,
OFLC, may revoke a temporary
agricultural labor certification approved
under this subpart, if, after notice and
opportunity for a hearing (or failure to
file rebuttal evidence), it is found that
any of the following violations were
committed with respect to that
temporary agricultural labor
certification:
(1) The CO finds that issuance of the
temporary agricultural labor
certification was not justified due to a
willful misrepresentation on the
application;
(2) The CO finds that the employer:
(i) Willfully violated a material term
or condition of the approved temporary
agricultural labor certification or the H–
2A regulations, unless otherwise
provided under paragraphs (a)(2)(ii)
through (iv) of this section; or
(ii) Failed, after notification, to cure a
substantial violation of the applicable
housing standards set out in 20 CFR
655.104(d); or
(iii) Significantly failed to cooperate
with a DOL investigation or with a DOL
official performing an investigation,
inspection, or law enforcement function
under sec. 218 of the INA at 8 U.S.C.
1188, this subpart, or 29 CFR part 501
(ESA enforcement of contractual
obligations); or
(iv) Failed to comply with one or
more sanctions or remedies imposed by
the ESA for violation(s) of obligations
found by that agency, or with one or
more decisions or orders of the
Secretary or a court order secured by the
Secretary under sec. 218 of the INA at
8 U.S.C. 1188, this subpart, or 29 CFR
part 501 (ESA enforcement of
contractual obligations).
(3) The CO determines after a
recommendation is made by the WHD
ESA in accordance with 29 CFR 501.20,
which governs when a recommendation
of revocation may be made to ETA, that
the conduct complained of upon
examination meets the standards of
paragraph (a)(1) or (2) of this section; or
(4) If a court or the DHS, or, as a result
of an audit, the CO, determines that
there was fraud or willful
misrepresentation involving the
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Application for Temporary Employment
Certification.
(b) DOL procedures for revocation. (1)
The CO will send to the employer (and
his attorney or agent) a Notice of Intent
to Revoke by means normally ensuring
next-day delivery, which will contain a
detailed statement of the grounds for the
proposed revocation and the time
period allowed for the employer’s
rebuttal. The employer may submit
evidence in rebuttal within 14 calendar
days of the date the notice is issued. The
CO must consider all relevant evidence
presented in deciding whether to revoke
the temporary agricultural labor
certification.
(2) If rebuttal evidence is not timely
filed by the employer, the Notice of
Intent to Revoke will become the final
decision of the Secretary and take effect
immediately at the end of the 14-day
period.
(3) If, after reviewing the employer’s
timely filed rebuttal evidence, the CO
finds that the employer more likely than
not meets one or more of the bases for
revocation under § 655.117(a), the CO
will notify the employer, by means
normally ensuring next-day delivery,
within 14 calendar days after receiving
such timely filed rebuttal evidence, of
his/her final determination that the
temporary agricultural labor
certification should be revoked. The
CO’s notice will contain a detailed
statement of the bases for the decision,
and must offer the employer an
opportunity to request a hearing. The
notice must state that, to obtain such a
hearing, the employer must, within 10
calendar days of the date of the notice
file a written request to the Chief
Administrative Law Judge, United
States Department of Labor, 800 K
Street, NW., Suite 400–N, Washington,
DC 20001–8002, and simultaneously
serve a copy to the Administrator,
OFLC. The timely filing of a request for
a hearing will stay the revocation
pending the outcome of the hearing.
(c) Hearing. (1) Within 5 business
days of receipt of the request for a
hearing, the CO will send a certified
copy of the ETA case file to the Chief
Administrative Law Judge by means
normally assuring next-day delivery.
The Chief Administrative Law Judge
will immediately assign an ALJ to
conduct the hearing. The procedures in
29 CFR part 18 apply to such hearings,
except that:
(i) The request for a hearing will not
be considered to be a complaint to
which an answer is required;
(ii) The ALJ will ensure that the
hearing is scheduled to take place
within 15 calendar days after the ALJ’s
receipt of the ETA case file, if the
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77227
employer so requests, and will allow for
the introduction of new evidence; and
(iii) The ALJ’s decision must be
rendered within 20 calendar days after
the hearing.
(2) Decision. After the hearing, the
ALJ must affirm, reverse, or modify the
CO’s determination. The ALJ’s decision
must be provided immediately to the
employer, CO, Administrator, OFLC,
DHS, and DOS by means normally
assuring next-day delivery. The ALJ’s
decision is the final decision of the
Secretary.
(d) Employer’s obligations in the event
of revocation. If an employer’s
temporary agricultural labor
certification is revoked under this
section, and the workers have departed
the place of recruitment, the employer
will be responsible for:
(1) Reimbursement of actual inbound
transportation and subsistence
expenses, as if the worker meets the
requirements for payment under
§ 655.104(h)(1);
(2) The worker’s outbound
transportation expenses, as if the worker
meets the requirements for payment
under § 655.104(h)(2);
(3) Payment to the worker of the
amount due under the three-fourths
guarantee as required by § 655.104(i);
and
(4) Any other wages, benefits, and
working conditions due or owing to the
worker under these regulations.
§ 655.118
Debarment.
(a) The Administrator, OFLC may not
issue future labor certifications under
this subpart to an employer and any
successor in interest to the debarred
employer, subject to the time limits set
forth in paragraph (c) of this section, if:
(1) The Administrator, OFLC finds
that the employer substantially violated
a material term or condition of its
temporary labor certification with
respect to the employment of domestic
or nonimmigrant workers; and
(2) The Administrator, OFLC issues a
Notice of Intent to Debar no later than
2 years after the occurrence of the
violation.
(b) The Administrator, OFLC may not
issue future labor certifications under
this subpart to an employer represented
by an agent or attorney, subject to the
time limits set forth in paragraph (c) of
this section, if:
(1) The Administrator, OFLC finds
that the agent or attorney participated
in, had knowledge of, or had reason to
know of, an employer’s substantial
violation; and
(2) The Administrator, OFLC issues
the agent or attorney a Notice of Intent
to Debar no later than 2 years after the
occurrence of the violation.
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(c) No employer, attorney, or agent
may be debarred under this subpart for
more than 3 years.
(d) For the purposes of this section, a
substantial violation includes:
(1) A pattern or practice of acts of
commission or omission on the part of
the employer or the employer’s agent
which:
(i) Are significantly injurious to the
wages or benefits required to be offered
under the H–2A program, or working
conditions of a significant number of the
employer’s U.S. or H–2A workers; or
(ii) Reflect a significant failure to offer
employment to all qualified domestic
workers who applied for the job
opportunity for which certification was
being sought, except for lawful jobrelated reasons; or
(iii) Reflect a willful failure to comply
with the employer’s obligations to
recruit U.S. workers as set forth in this
subpart; or
(iv) Reflect a significant failure to
comply with the audit process in
violation of § 655.112; or
(v) Reflect the employment of an H–
2A worker outside the area of intended
employment, or in an activity/activities,
not listed in the job order (other than an
activity minor and incidental to the
activity/activities listed in the job
order), or after the period of
employment specified in the job order
and any approved extension;
(2) The employer’s persistent or
prolonged failure to pay the necessary
fee in a timely manner, following the
issuance of a deficiency notice to the
applicant and allowing for a reasonable
period for response;
(3) Fraud involving the Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification or a response to an audit;
(4) A significant failure to cooperate
with a DOL investigation or with a DOL
official performing an investigation,
inspection, or law enforcement function
under sec. 218 of the INA at 8 U.S.C.
1188, this subpart, or 29 CFR part 501
(ESA enforcement of contractual
obligations); or
(5) A significant failure to comply
with one or more sanctions or remedies
imposed by the ESA for violation(s) of
obligations found by that agency (if
applicable), or with one or more
decisions or orders of the Secretary or
a court order secured by the Secretary
under sec. 218 of the INA at 8 U.S.C.
1188, this subpart, or 29 CFR part 501
(ESA enforcement of contractual
obligations); or
(6) A single heinous act showing such
flagrant disregard for the law that future
compliance with program requirements
cannot reasonably be expected.
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(e) DOL procedures for debarment
under this section will be as follows:
(1) The Administrator, OFLC will
send to the employer, attorney, or agent
a Notice of Intent to Debar by means
normally ensuring next-day delivery,
which will contain a detailed statement
of the grounds for the proposed
debarment. The employer, attorney or
agent may submit evidence in rebuttal
within 14 calendar days of the date the
notice is issued. The Administrator,
OFLC must consider all relevant
evidence presented in deciding whether
to debar the employer, attorney, or
agent.
(2) If rebuttal evidence is not timely
filed by the employer, attorney, or agent,
the Notice of Intent to Debar will
become the final decision of the
Secretary and take effect immediately at
the end of the 14-day period.
(3) If, after reviewing the employer’s
timely filed rebuttal evidence, the
Administrator, OFLC determines that
the employer, attorney, or agent more
likely than not meets one or more of the
bases for debarment under § 655.118(d),
the Administrator, OFLC will notify the
employer, by means normally ensuring
next-day delivery, within 14 calendar
days after receiving such timely filed
rebuttal evidence, of his/her final
determination of debarment and of the
employer, attorney, or agent’s right to
appeal.
(4) The Notice of Debarment must be
in writing, must state the reason for the
debarment finding, including a detailed
explanation of the grounds for and the
duration of the debarment, and must
offer the employer, attorney, or agent an
opportunity to request a hearing. The
notice must state that, to obtain such a
hearing, the debarred party must, within
30 calendar days of the date of the
notice, file a written request to the Chief
Administrative Law Judge, United
States Department of Labor, 800 K
Street, NW., Suite 400–N, Washington,
DC 20001–8002, and simultaneously
serve a copy to the Administrator,
OFLC. The debarment will take effect 30
days from the date the Notice of
Debarment is issued unless a request for
a hearing is properly filed within 30
days from the date the Notice of
Debarment is issued. The timely filing
of the request for a hearing stays the
debarment pending the outcome of the
hearing.
(5)(i) Hearing. Within 10 days of
receipt of the request for a hearing, the
Administrator, OFLC will send a
certified copy of the ETA case file to the
Chief Administrative Law Judge by
means normally assuring next-day
delivery. The Chief Administrative Law
Judge will immediately assign an ALJ to
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conduct the hearing. The procedures in
29 CFR part 18 apply to such hearings,
except that the request for a hearing will
not be considered to be a complaint to
which an answer is required;
(ii) Decision. After the hearing, the
ALJ must affirm, reverse, or modify the
Administrator, OFLC ’s determination.
The ALJ’s decision must be provided
immediately to the employer,
Administrator, OFLC, DHS, and DOS by
means normally assuring next-day
delivery. The ALJ’s decision is the final
decision of the Secretary, unless either
party, within 30 calendar days of the
ALJ’s decision, seeks review of the
decision with the Administrative
Review Board (ARB).
(iii) Review by the ARB.
(A) Any party wishing review of the
decision of an ALJ must, within 30 days
of the decision of the ALJ, petition the
ARB to review the decision. Copies of
the petition must be served on all
parties and on the ALJ. The ARB must
decide whether to accept the petition
within 30 days of receipt. If the ARB
declines to accept the petition or if the
ARB does not issue a notice accepting
a petition within 30 days after the
receipt of a timely filing of the petition,
the decision of the ALJ shall be deemed
the final agency action. If a petition for
review is accepted, the decision of the
ALJ shall be stayed unless and until the
ARB issues an order affirming the
decision. The ARB must serve notice of
its decision to accept or not to accept
the petition upon the ALJ and upon all
parties to the proceeding in person or by
certified mail.
(B) Upon receipt of the ARB’s notice
to accept the petition, the Office of
Administrative Law Judges shall
promptly forward a copy of the
complete hearing record to the ARB.
(C) Where the ARB has determined to
review such decision and order, the
ARB shall notify each party of:
(1) The issue or issues raised;
(2) The form in which submissions
shall be made (i.e., briefs, oral argument,
etc.); and
(3) The time within which such
presentation shall be submitted.
(D) The ARB’s final decision must be
issued within 90 days from the notice
granting the petition and served upon
all parties and the ALJ, in person or by
certified mail. If the ARB fails to
provide a decision within 90 days from
the notice granting the petition, the
ALJ’s decision will be the final decision
of the Secretary.
(f) Debarment involving members of
associations. If the Administrator, OFLC
determines a substantial violation has
occurred, and if an individual
employer-member of an agricultural
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association acting as a joint employer is
determined to have committed the
violation, the debarment determination
will apply only to that member of the
association unless the Administrator,
OFLC determines that the association or
other association members participated
in the violation, in which case the
debarment will be invoked against the
complicit association or other
association members.
(g) Debarment involving agricultural
associations acting as joint employers. If
the Administrator, OFLC determines a
substantial violation has occurred, and
if an agricultural association acting as a
joint employer with its members is
found to have committed the violation,
the debarment determination will apply
only to the association, and will not be
applied to any individual employermember of the association unless the
Administrator, OFLC determines that
the member participated in the
violation, in which case the debarment
will be invoked against any complicit
association members as well. An
association debarred from the H–2A
temporary labor certification program
will not be permitted to continue to file
as a joint employer with its members
during the period of the debarment.
(h) Debarment involving agricultural
associations acting as sole employers. If
the Administrator, OFLC determines a
substantial violation has occurred, and
if an agricultural association acting as a
sole employer is determined to have
committed the violation, the debarment
determination will apply only to the
association and any successor in interest
to the debarred association.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
§ 655.119 Document retention
requirements.
(a) Entities required to retain
documents. All employers receiving a
certification of the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
for agricultural workers under this
subpart are required to retain the
documents and records as provided in
the regulations cited in paragraph (c) of
this section.
(b) Period of required retention.
Records and documents must be
retained for a period of 3 years from the
date of certification of the Application
for Temporary Employment
Certification.
(c) Documents and records to be
retained. (1) All applicants must retain
the following documentation:
(i) Proof of recruitment efforts
including:
(A) Job order placement as specified
in § 655.102(e)(1);
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(B) Advertising as specified in
§ 655.102(g)(3), or, if used, professional,
trade, or ethnic publications;
(C) Contact with former U.S. workers
as specified in § 655.102(h);
(D) Multi-state recruitment efforts (if
required under § 655.102(i)) as specified
in § 655.102(g)(3);
(ii) Substantiation of information
submitted in the recruitment report
prepared in accordance with
§ 655.102(k)(2), such as evidence of nonapplicability of contact of former
employees as specified in § 655.102(h);
(iii) The supplemental recruitment
report as specified in § 655.102(k) and
any supporting resumes and contact
information as specified in
§ 655.102(k)(3);
(iv) Proof of workers’ compensation
insurance or State law coverage as
specified in § 655.104(e);
(v) Records of each worker’s earnings
as specified in § 655.104(j);
(vi) The work contract or a copy of the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification as defined in 29 CFR
501.10 and specified in § 655.104(q);
(vii) The wage determination
provided by the NPC as specified in
§ 655.108;
(viii) Copy of the request for housing
inspection submitted to the SWA as
specified in § 655.104(d); and
(2) In addition to the documentation
specified in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section, H–2ALCs must also retain:
(i) Statements of compliance with the
housing and transportation obligations
for each fixed-site employer which
provided housing or transportation and
to which the H–2ALC provided workers
during the validity period of the
certification, unless such housing and
transportation obligations were met by
the H–2ALC itself, in which case proof
of compliance by the H–2ALC must be
retained, as specified in § 655.101(a)(5);
(ii) Proof of surety bond coverage
which includes the name, address, and
phone number of the surety, the bond
number of other identifying designation,
the amount of coverage, and the payee,
as specified in 29 CFR 501.8; and
(3) Associations filing must retain
documentation substantiating their
status as an employer or agent, as
specified in § 655.101(a)(1).
Subpart C—[Removed and Reserved]
■
5. Subpart C is removed and reserved.
TITLE 29—LABOR
■
6. Revise part 501 to read as follows:
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77229
PART 501—ENFORCEMENT OF
CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS FOR
TEMPORARY ALIEN AGRICULTURAL
WORKERS ADMITTED UNDER
SECTION 218 OF THE IMMIGRATION
AND NATIONALITY ACT
Subpart A—General Provisions
Sec.
501.0 Introduction.
501.1 Purpose and scope.
501.2 Coordination of intake between DOL
agencies.
501.3 Discrimination prohibited.
501.4 Waiver of rights prohibited.
501.5 Investigation authority of Secretary.
501.6 Cooperation with DOL officials.
501.7 Accuracy of information, statements,
data.
501.8 Surety bond.
501.10 Definitions.
Subpart B—Enforcement of Work Contracts
501.15 Enforcement.
501.16 Sanctions and Remedies—General.
501.17 Concurrent actions.
501.18 Representation of the Secretary.
501.19 Civil money penalty assessment.
501.20 Debarment and revocation.
501.21 Failure to cooperate with
investigations.
501.22 Civil money penalties—payment
and collection.
Subpart C—Administrative Proceedings
501.30 Applicability of procedures and
rules.
Procedures Relating to Hearing
501.31 Written notice of determination
required.
501.32 Contents of notice.
501.33 Request for hearing.
Rules of Practice
501.34 General.
501.35 Commencement of proceeding.
501.36 Caption of proceeding.
Referral for Hearing
501.37 Referral to Administrative Law
Judge.
501.38 Notice of docketing.
501.39 Service upon attorneys for the
Department of Labor—number of copies.
Procedures Before Administrative Law Judge
501.40 Consent findings and order.
Post-Hearing Procedures
501.41 Decision and order of
Administrative Law Judge.
Review of Administrative Law Judge’s
Decision
501.42 Procedures for initiating and
undertaking review.
501.43 Responsibility of the Office of
Administrative Law Judges.
501.44 Additional information, if required.
501.45 Final decision of the Administrative
Review Board.
Record
501.46 Retention of official record.
501.47 Certification.
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Authority: 8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a),
1184(c), and 1188.
Subpart A—General Provisions
§ 501.0
Introduction.
These regulations cover the
enforcement of all contractual obligation
provisions applicable to the
employment of H–2A workers under
sec. 218 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (INA), as amended by
the Immigration Reform and Control Act
of 1986 (IRCA). These regulations are
also applicable to the employment of
United States (U.S.) workers newly
hired by employers of H–2A workers in
the same occupations as the H–2A
workers during the period of time set
forth in the labor certification approved
by ETA as a condition for granting H–
2A certification, including any
extension thereof. Such U.S. workers
hired by H–2A employers are hereafter
referred to as engaged in corresponding
employment.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
§ 501.1
Purpose and scope.
(a) Statutory standard. Section 218(a)
of the INA provides that:
(1) A petition to import an alien as an
H–2A worker (as defined in the INA)
may not be approved by the Secretary of
the Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) unless the petitioner has applied
to the Secretary of the United States
Department of Labor (Secretary) for a
certification that:
(i) There are not sufficient workers
who are able, willing, and qualified, and
who will be available at the time and
place needed, to perform the labor or
services involved in the petition, and
(ii) The employment of the alien in
such labor or services will not adversely
affect the wages and working conditions
of workers in the U.S. similarly
employed.
(2) [Reserved]
(b) Role of the Employment and
Training Administration (ETA). The
issuance and denial of labor
certification under sec. 218 of the INA
has been delegated by the Secretary to
ETA, an agency within the U.S.
Department of Labor (the Department or
DOL). In general, matters concerning the
obligations of an employer of H–2A
workers related to the labor certification
process are administered and enforced
by ETA. Included within ETA’s
jurisdiction are issues such as whether
U.S. workers are available, whether
adequate recruitment has been
conducted, whether there is a strike or
lockout, the methodology for
establishing AEWR, whether workers’
compensation insurance has been
provided, whether employment was
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offered to U.S. workers as required by
sec. 218 of the INA and regulations at
20 CFR part 655, Subpart B, and other
similar matters. The regulations
pertaining to the issuance and denial of
labor certification for temporary alien
workers by the ETA are found in 20 CFR
part 655, Subpart B.
(c) Role of the Employment Standards
Administration (ESA), Wage and Hour
Division (WHD). (1) The Secretary is
authorized to take actions that assure
compliance with the terms and
conditions of employment under sec.
218 of the INA, the regulations at 20
CFR part 655, Subpart B, or these
regulations, including the assessment of
civil money penalties and seeking
injunctive relief and specific
performance of contractual obligations.
See 8 U.S.C. 1188(g)(2).
(2) Certain investigatory, inspection,
and law enforcement functions to carry
out the provisions of sec. 218 of the INA
have been delegated by the Secretary to
the ESA, WHD. In general, matters
concerning the obligations under a work
contract between an employer of H–2A
workers and the H–2A workers and U.S.
workers hired in corresponding
employment by H–2A employers are
enforced by ESA, including whether
employment was offered to U.S. workers
as required under sec. 218 of the INA or
20 CFR part 655, Subpart B, or whether
U.S. workers were laid off or displaced
in violation of program requirements.
Included within the enforcement
responsibility of WHD are such matters
as the payment of required wages,
transportation, meals, and housing
provided during the employment. The
WHD has the responsibility to carry out
investigations, inspections, and law
enforcement functions and in
appropriate instances impose penalties,
recommend revocation of existing
certification(s) or debarment from future
certifications, and seek injunctive relief
and specific performance of contractual
obligations, including recovery of
unpaid wages (either directly from the
employer or in the case of an H–2A
Labor Contractors (H–2ALC), from the
H–2ALC directly and/or from the
insurer who issued the surety bond to
the H–2ALC as required by 20 CFR part
655, Subpart B and 29 CFR 501.8).
(d) Effect of regulations. The
amendments to the INA made by Title
III of the IRCA apply to petitions and
applications filed on and after June 1,
1987. Accordingly, the enforcement
functions carried out by the WHD under
the INA and these regulations apply to
the employment of any H–2A worker
and any other U.S. workers hired by H–
2A employers in corresponding
employment as the result of any
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application filed with the Department
on and after June 1, 1987.
§ 501.2 Coordination of intake between
DOL agencies.
Complaints received by ETA or any
State Workforce Agency (SWA)
regarding contractual H–2A labor
standards between the employer and the
employee will be immediately
forwarded to the appropriate WHD
office for appropriate action under these
regulations.
§ 501.3
Discrimination prohibited.
(a) No person shall intimidate,
threaten, restrain, coerce, blacklist,
discharge, or in any manner
discriminate against any person who
has:
(1) Filed a complaint under or related
to sec. 218 of the INA or these
regulations;
(2) Instituted or caused to be
instituted any proceedings related to
sec. 218 of the INA or these regulations;
(3) Testified or is about to testify in
any proceeding under or related to sec.
218 of the INA or these regulations;
(4) Exercised or asserted on behalf of
himself or others any right or protection
afforded by sec. 218 of the INA or these
regulations; or
(5) Consulted with an employee of a
legal assistance program or an attorney
on matters related to sec. 218 of the
INA, or to this subpart or any other
Department regulation promulgated
pursuant to sec. 218 of the INA.
(b) Allegations of discrimination
against any person under paragraph (a)
of this section will be investigated by
the WHD. Where the WHD has
determined through investigation that
such allegations have been
substantiated, appropriate remedies may
be sought. The WHD may assess civil
money penalties, seek injunctive relief,
and/or seek additional remedies
necessary to make the employee whole
as a result of the discrimination, as
appropriate, and may recommend to
ETA debarment of any such violator
from future labor certification.
Complaints alleging discrimination
against U.S. workers and immigrants
based on citizenship or immigration
status may also be forwarded by the
WHD to the Department of Justice, Civil
Rights Division, Office of Special
Counsel for Immigration-Related Unfair
Employment Practices.
§ 501.4
Waiver of rights prohibited.
No person shall seek to have an H–2A
worker, or other U.S. worker hired in
corresponding employment by an H–2A
employer, waive any rights conferred
under sec. 218 of the INA, the
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regulations at 20 CFR part 655, Subpart
B, or under these regulations. Any
agreement by an employee purporting to
waive or modify any rights inuring to
said person under the INA or these
regulations shall be void as contrary to
public policy, except that a waiver or
modification of rights or obligations
hereunder in favor of the Secretary shall
be valid for purposes of enforcement of
the provisions of the INA or these
regulations. This does not prevent
agreements to settle private litigation.
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§ 501.5 Investigation authority of
Secretary.
(a) General. The Secretary, either
pursuant to a complaint or otherwise,
shall, as may be appropriate, investigate
and, in connection therewith, enter and
inspect such places (including housing)
and such vehicles, and such records
(and make transcriptions thereof),
question such persons and gather such
information as deemed necessary by the
Secretary to determine compliance with
contractual obligations under sec. 218 of
the INA or these regulations.
(b) Failure to cooperate with an
investigation. Where any employer (or
employer’s agent or attorney) using the
services of an H–2A worker does not
cooperate with an investigation
concerning the employment of H–2A
workers or U.S. workers hired in
corresponding employment, the WHD
shall report such occurrence to ETA and
may recommend that ETA revoke the
existing certification that is the basis for
the employment of the H–2A workers
giving rise to the investigation, and the
WHD may recommend to ETA the
debarment of the employer from future
certification for up to 3 years. In
addition, the WHD may take such action
as may be appropriate, including the
seeking of an injunction and/or
assessing civil money penalties, against
any person who has failed to permit the
WHD to make an investigation.
(c) Confidential investigation. The
Secretary shall conduct investigations in
a manner that protects the
confidentiality of any complainant or
other person who provides information
to the Secretary in good faith.
(d) Report of violations. Any person
may report a violation of the work
contract obligations of sec. 218 of the
INA or these regulations to the Secretary
by advising any local office of the SWA,
ETA, WHD, or any other authorized
representative of the Secretary. The
office or person receiving such a report
shall refer it to the appropriate office of
DOL, WHD for the geographic area in
which the reported violation is alleged
to have occurred.
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§ 501.6
Cooperation with DOL officials.
All persons must cooperate with any
official of the DOL assigned to perform
an investigation, inspection, or law
enforcement function pursuant to the
INA and these regulations during the
performance of such duties. The WHD
will take such action as it deems
appropriate, including seeking an
injunction to bar any failure to
cooperate with an investigation and/or
assessing a civil money penalty
therefore. In addition, the WHD will
report the matter to ETA, and the WHD
may recommend to ETA the debarment
of the employer from future certification
and/or recommend that the person’s
existing labor certification be revoked.
In addition, Federal statutes prohibiting
persons from interfering with a Federal
officer in the course of official duties are
found at 18 U.S.C. 111 and 18 U.S.C.
1114.
§ 501.7 Accuracy of information,
statements, data.
Information, statements and data
submitted in compliance with
provisions of the Act or these
regulations are subject to 18 U.S.C.
1001, which provides, with regard to
statements or entries generally, that
whoever, in any matter within the
jurisdiction of any department or agency
of the U.S. knowingly and willfully
falsifies, conceals or covers up by any
trick, scheme, or device a material fact,
or makes any false, fictitious or
fraudulent statements or
representations, or makes or uses any
false writing or document knowing the
same to contain any false, fictitious or
fraudulent statement or entry, shall be
fined not more than $10,000 or
imprisoned not more than 5 years, or
both.
§ 501.8
Surety bond.
(a) H–2ALCs shall obtain a surety
bond to assure compliance with the
provisions of this part and 20 CFR part
655, Subpart B for each labor
certification being sought. The H–2ALC
shall attest on the application for labor
certification that such a bond meeting
all the requirements of this section has
been obtained and shall provide on the
labor certification application form
information that fully identifies the
surety, including the name, address and
phone number of the surety, and which
identifies the bond by number or other
identifying designation.
(b) The bond shall be payable to the
Administrator, Wage and Hour Division,
United States Department of Labor. It
shall obligate the surety to pay any sums
to the Administrator, WHD, for wages
and benefits owed to H–2A and U.S.
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workers, based on a final decision
finding a violation or violations of this
part or 20 CFR part 655, Subpart B
relating to the labor certification the
bond is intended to cover. The aggregate
liability of the surety shall not exceed
the face amount of the bond. The bond
shall be written to cover liability
incurred during the term of the period
listed in the application for labor
certification made by the H–2ALC, and
shall be amended to cover any
extensions of the labor certification
requested by the H–2ALC. Surety bonds
may not be canceled or terminated
unless 30 days’ notice is provided by
the surety to the Administrator, WHD.
(c) The bond shall be in the amount
of $5,000 for a labor certification for
which a H–2ALC will employ fewer
than 25 employees, $10,000 for a labor
certification for which a H–2ALC will
employ 25 to 49 employees, and
$20,000 for a labor certification for
which a H–2ALC will employ 50 or
more employees. The amount of the
bond may be increased by the
Administrator, WHD after notice and an
opportunity for hearing when it is
shown based on objective criteria that
the amount of the bond is insufficient to
meet potential liabilities.
§ 501.10
Definitions.
(a) Definitions of terms used in this
part. For the purpose of this part:
Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) means
a person within the Department’s Office
of Administrative Law Judges appointed
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 3105, or a panel of
such persons designated by the Chief
Administrative Law Judge from the
Board of Alien Labor Certification
Appeals (BALCA) established by part
656 of this chapter, which will hear and
decide appeals as set forth at 20 CFR
655.115.
Administrator, WHD means the
Administrator of the Wage and Hour
Division (WHD), ESA and such
authorized representatives as may be
designated to perform any of the
functions of the Administrator, WHD
under this part.
Adverse effect wage rate (AEWR)
means the minimum wage rate that the
Administrator of the Office of Foreign
Labor Certification (OFLC) has
determined must be offered and paid to
every H–2A worker employed under the
DOL-approved Application for
Temporary Employment Certification in
a particular occupation and/or area, as
well as to U.S. workers hired by
employers into corresponding
employment during the H–2A
recruitment period, to ensure that the
wages of similarly employed U.S.
workers will not be adversely affected.
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Agent means a legal entity or person,
such as an association of agricultural
employers, or an attorney for an
association, that—
(1) Is authorized to act on behalf of
the employer for temporary agricultural
labor certification purposes;
(2) Is not itself an employer, or a joint
employer, as defined in this section,
with respect to a specific application;
and
(3) Is not under suspension,
debarment, expulsion, or disbarment
from practice before any court or the
Department, the Board of Immigration
Appeals, the immigration judges, or
DHS under 8 CFR 292.3, 1003.101.
Agricultural association means any
nonprofit or cooperative association of
farmers, growers, or ranchers (including
but not limited to processing
establishments, canneries, gins, packing
sheds, nurseries, or other fixed-site
agricultural employers), incorporated or
qualified under applicable State law,
that recruits, solicits, hires, employs,
furnishes, houses or transports any
worker that is subject to sec. 218 of the
INA. An agricultural association may act
as the agent of an employer for purposes
of filing an H–2A Application for
Temporary Employment Certification,
and may also act as the sole or joint
employer of H–2A workers.
Application for Temporary
Employment Certification means the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB)-approved form submitted by an
employer to secure a temporary
agricultural labor certification
determination from DOL. A complete
submission of the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification
includes the form and the initial
recruitment report.
Area of intended employment means
the geographic area within normal
commuting distance of the place
(worksite address) of the job
opportunity for which the certification
is sought. There is no rigid measure of
distance which constitutes a normal
commuting area, because there may be
widely varying factual circumstances
among different areas (e.g., average
commuting times, barriers to reaching
the worksite, quality of the regional
transportation network, etc.). If the
place of intended employment is within
a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA),
including a multistate MSA, any place
within the MSA is deemed to be within
normal commuting distance of the place
of intended employment. The borders of
MSAs are not controlling in the
identification of the normal commuting
area; a location outside of an MSA may
be within normal commuting distance
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of a location that is inside (e.g., near the
border of) the MSA.
Department of Homeland Security
(DHS) means the Federal agency having
control over certain immigration
functions that, through its sub-agency,
United States Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS), makes
the determination under the INA on
whether to grant visa petitions filed by
employers seeking H–2A workers to
perform temporary agricultural work in
the U.S.
DOL or Department means the United
States Department of Labor.
Eligible worker means an individual
who is not an unauthorized alien (as
defined in sec. 274A(h)(3) of the INA, 8
U.S.C. 1324a(h)(3)) with respect to the
employment in which the worker is
engaging.
Employee means employee as defined
under the general common law of
agency. Some of the factors relevant to
the determination of employee status
include: the hiring party’s right to
control the manner and means by which
the work is accomplished; the skill
required to perform the work; the source
of the instrumentalities and tools for
accomplishing the work; the location of
the work; the hiring party’s discretion
over when and how long to work; and
whether the work is part of the regular
business of the hiring party. Other
applicable factors may be considered
and no one factor is dispositive.
Employer means a person, firm,
corporation or other association or
organization that:
(1) Has a place of business (physical
location) in the U.S. and a means by
which it may be contacted for
employment;
(2) Has an employer relationship with
respect to H–2A employees or related
U.S. workers under this part; and
(3) Possesses, for purposes of filing an
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification, a valid Federal Employer
Identification Number (FEIN).
Employment Service (ES) refers to the
system of Federal and state entities
responsible for administration of the
labor certification process for temporary
and seasonal agricultural employment
of nonimmigrant foreign workers. This
includes the SWAs and OFLC,
including the National Processing
Centers (NPCs).
Employment Standards
Administration (ESA) means the agency
within DOL that includes the WHD, and
which is charged with carrying out
certain investigative and enforcement
functions of the Secretary under the
INA.
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Employment and Training
Administration (ETA) means the agency
within the DOL that includes OFLC.
Federal holiday means a legal public
holiday as defined at 5 U.S.C. 6103.
Fixed-site employer means any person
engaged in agriculture who meets the
definition of an employer as those terms
are defined in this part who owns or
operates a farm, ranch, processing
establishment, cannery, gin, packing
shed, nursery, or other similar fixed-site
location where agricultural activities are
performed and who recruits, solicits,
hires, employs, houses, or transports
any worker subject to sec. 218 of the
INA or these regulations as incident to
or in conjunction with the owner’s or
operator’s own agricultural operation.
For purposes of this part, person
includes any individual, partnership,
association, corporation, cooperative,
joint stock company, trust, or other
organization with legal rights and
duties.
H–2A Labor Contractor (H–2ALC)
means any person who meets the
definition of employer in this section
and is not a fixed-site employer, an
agricultural association, or an employee
of a fixed-site employer or agricultural
association, as those terms are used in
this part, who recruits, solicits, hires,
employs, furnishes, houses, or
transports any worker subject to sec. 218
of the INA or these regulations.
H–2A worker means any temporary
foreign worker who is lawfully present
in the U.S. to perform agricultural labor
or services of a temporary or seasonal
nature pursuant to sec.
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the INA, as
amended.
INA/Act means the Immigration and
Nationality Act, as amended, 8 U.S.C.
1101 et seq.
Job offer means the offer made by an
employer or potential employer of H–2A
workers to eligible workers describing
all the material terms and conditions of
employment, including those relating to
wages, working conditions, and other
benefits.
Job opportunity means a job opening
for temporary, full-time employment at
a place in the U.S. to which a U.S.
worker can be referred.
Joint employment means that where
two or more employers each have
sufficient definitional indicia of
employment to be considered the
employer of an employee, those
employers will be considered to jointly
employ that employee. Each employer
in a joint employment relationship to an
employee is considered a ‘‘joint
employer’’ of that employee.
Office of Foreign Labor Certification
(OFLC) means the organizational
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component of the ETA that provides
national leadership and policy guidance
and develops regulations and
procedures to carry out the
responsibilities of the Secretary under
the INA concerning the admission of
foreign workers to the U.S. to perform
work described in sec.
101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the INA, as
amended.
Positive recruitment means the active
participation of an employer or its
authorized hiring agent in recruiting
and interviewing qualified and eligible
individuals in the area where the
employer’s job opportunity is located
and any other State designated by the
Secretary as an area of traditional or
expected labor supply with respect to
the area where the employer’s job
opportunity is located, in an effort to fill
specific job openings with U.S. workers.
Prevailing means with respect to
practices engaged in by employers and
benefits other than wages provided by
employers, that:
(1) Fifty percent or more of employers
in an area and for an occupation engage
in the practice or offer the benefit; but
only if
(2) This 50 percent or more of
employers also employs in aggregate 50
percent or more of U.S. workers in the
occupation and area (including H–2A
and non-H–2A employers for purposes
of determinations concerning the
provision of family housing, frequency
of wage payments, and workers
supplying their own bedding, but nonH–2A employers only for
determinations concerning the
provision of advance transportation and
the utilization of H–2ALCs).
Prevailing hourly wage means the
hourly wage determined by the SWA to
be prevailing in the area in accordance
with State-based wage surveys.
Prevailing piece rate means that
amount that is typically paid to an
agricultural worker per piece (which
includes, but is not limited to, a load,
bin, pallet, bag, bushel, etc.) to be
determined by the SWA according to a
methodology published by the
Department. As is currently the case, the
unit of production will be required to be
clearly described; e.g., a field box of
oranges (11⁄2 bushels), a bushel of
potatoes, and Eastern apple box (11⁄2
metric bushels), a flat of strawberries
(twelve quarts), etc.
Representative means a person or
entity employed by, or duly authorized
to act on behalf of, the employer with
respect to activities entered into for,
and/or attestations made with respect
to, the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification.
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Secretary means the Secretary of the
United States Department of Labor or
the Secretary’s designee.
State Workforce Agency (SWA) means
the State government agency that
receives funds pursuant to the WagnerPeyser Act to administer the public
labor exchange delivered through the
State’s One-Stop delivery system in
accordance with the Wagner-Peyser Act,
29 U.S.C. 49, et seq. Separately, SWAs
receive ETA grants, administered by
OFLC, to assist them in performing
certain activities related to foreign labor
certification, including conducting
housing inspections.
Successor in interest means that, in
determining whether an employer is a
successor in interest, the factors used
under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
and the Vietnam Era Veterans’
Readjustment Assistance Act will be
considered. When considering whether
an employer is a successor for purposes
of this part, the primary consideration
will be the personal involvement of the
firm’s ownership, management,
supervisors, and others associated with
the firm in the violations resulting in a
debarment recommendation. Normally,
wholly new management or ownership
of the same business operation, one in
which the former management or owner
does not retain a direct or indirect
interest, will not be deemed to be a
successor in interest for purposes of
debarment. A determination of whether
or not a successor in interest exists is
based on the entire circumstances
viewed in their totality. The factors to
be considered include:
(1) Substantial continuity of the same
business operations;
(2) Use of the same facilities;
(3) Continuity of the work force;
(4) Similarity of jobs and working
conditions;
(5) Similarity of supervisory
personnel;
(6) Similarity in machinery,
equipment, and production methods;
(7) Similarity of products and
services; and
(8) The ability of the predecessor to
provide relief.
Temporary agricultural labor
certification means the certification
made by the Secretary with respect to an
employer seeking to file with DHS a visa
petition to employ one or more foreign
nationals as an H–2A worker, pursuant
to secs. 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a), 214(a) and
(c), and 218 of the INA that:
(1) There are not sufficient workers
who are able, willing, and qualified, and
who will be available at the time and
place needed, to perform the
agricultural labor or services involved in
the petition, and
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(2) The employment of the foreign
worker in such agricultural labor or
services will not adversely affect the
wages and working conditions of
workers in the U.S. similarly employed
as stated at 8 U.S.C.
1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a), 1184(a) and (c),
and 1188.
United States (U.S.), when used in a
geographic sense, means the continental
United States, Alaska, Hawaii, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and the
territories of Guam, the Virgin Islands,
and, as of the transition program
effective date, as defined in the
Consolidated Natural Resources Act of
2008, Public Law 110–229, Title VII, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands.
U.S. worker means a worker who is:
(1) A citizen or national of the U.S.,
or;
(2) An alien who is lawfully admitted
for permanent residence in the U.S., is
admitted as a refugee under sec. 207 of
the INA, is granted asylum under sec.
208 of the INA, or is an immigrant
otherwise authorized (by the INA or by
DHS) to be employed in the U.S.
Wages means all forms of cash
remuneration to a worker by an
employer in payment for personal
services.
Work contract means all the material
terms and conditions of employment
relating to wages, hours, working
conditions, and other benefits, required
by the applicable regulations in subpart
B of 20 CFR part 655, Labor Certification
for Temporary Agricultural Employment
of H–2A Aliens in the U.S. (H–2A
Workers), or these regulations, including
those terms and conditions attested to
by the H–2A employer, which contract
between the employer and the worker
may be in the form of a separate written
document. In the absence of a separate
written work contract incorporating the
required terms and conditions of
employment, agreed to by both the
employer and the worker, the work
contract at a minimum shall be the
terms of the job order, as provided in 20
CFR part 653, Subpart F, and covered
provisions of the work contract shall be
enforced in accordance with these
regulations.
(b) Definition of agricultural labor or
services of a temporary or seasonal
nature. For the purposes of this part,
agricultural labor or services of a
temporary or seasonal nature means the
following:
(1) Agricultural labor or services,
pursuant to sec. 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of
the INA (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a)),
is defined as:
(i) Agricultural labor as defined and
applied in sec. 3121(g) of the Internal
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Revenue Code of 1954 at 26 U.S.C.
3121(g);
(ii) Agriculture as defined and applied
in sec. 3(f) of the Fair Labor Standards
Act of 1938 (FLSA) at 29 U.S.C. 203(f)
(Work performed by H–2A workers, or
workers in corresponding employment,
that is not defined as agriculture in sec.
3(f) is subject to the provisions of the
FLSA as provided therein, including the
overtime provisions in sec. 7(a) at 29
U.S.C. 207(a));
(iii) The pressing of apples for cider
on a farm;
(iv) Logging employment; or
(v) Handling, planting, drying,
packing, packaging, processing,
freezing, grading, storing, or delivering
to storage or to market or to a carrier for
transportation to market, in its
unmanufactured state, any agricultural
or horticultural commodity while in the
employ of the operator of a farm where
no H–2B workers are employed to
perform the same work at the same
establishment; or
(vi) Other work typically performed
on a farm that is not specifically listed
on the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification and is minor
(i.e., less than 20 percent of the total
time worked on the job duties and
activities that are listed on the
Application for Temporary Employment
Certification) and incidental to the
agricultural labor or services for which
the H–2A worker was sought.
(2) An occupation included in either
of the statutory definitions cited in
paragraphs (b)(1)(i) and (ii) of this
section is agricultural labor or services,
notwithstanding the exclusion of that
occupation from the other statutory
definition.
(i) Agricultural labor for purposes of
paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section means
all services performed:
(A) On a farm, in the employ of any
person, in connection with cultivating
the soil, or in connection with raising or
harvesting any agricultural or
horticultural commodity, including the
raising, shearing, feeding, caring for,
training, and management of livestock,
bees, poultry, and furbearing animals
and wildlife;
(B) In the employ of the owner or
tenant or other operator of a farm, in
connection with the operation or
maintenance of such farm and its tools
and equipment, or in salvaging timber
or clearing land of brush and other
debris left by a hurricane, if the major
part of such service is performed on a
farm;
(C) In connection with the production
or harvesting of any commodity defined
as an agricultural commodity in sec.
15(g) of the Agricultural Marketing Act,
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as amended at 12 U.S.C. 1141j, or in
connection with the ginning of cotton,
or in connection with the operation or
maintenance of ditches, canals,
reservoirs, or waterways, not owned or
operated for profit, used exclusively for
supplying and storing water for farming
purposes;
(D)(1) In the employ of the operator of
a farm in handling, planting, drying,
packing, packaging, processing,
freezing, grading, storing, or delivering
to storage or to market or to a carrier for
transportation to market, in its
unmanufactured state, any agricultural
or horticultural commodity, but only if
such operator produced more than onehalf of the commodity with respect to
which such service is performed;
(2) In the employ of a group of
operators of farms (other than a
cooperative organization) in the
performance of service described in
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A) of this section, but
only if such operators produced all of
the commodity with respect to which
such service is performed. For purposes
of this paragraph, any unincorporated
group of operators will be deemed a
cooperative organization if the number
of operators comprising such group is
more than 20 at any time during the
calendar quarter in which such service
is performed;
(3) The provisions of paragraphs
(b)(2)(i)(D)(1) and (2) of this section do
not apply to services performed in
connection with commercial canning or
commercial freezing or in connection
with any agricultural or horticultural
commodity after its delivery to a
terminal market for distribution for
consumption; or
(4) On a farm operated for profit if
such service is not in the course of the
employer’s trade or business and is not
domestic service in a private home of
the employer.
(E) For the purposes of this section,
the term farm includes stock, dairy,
poultry, fruit, fur-bearing animals, and
truck farms, plantations, ranches,
nurseries, ranges, greenhouses or other
similar structures used primarily for the
raising of agricultural or horticultural
commodities, and orchards. See sec.
3121(g) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986 (26 U.S.C. 3121(g)).
(ii) Agriculture. For purposes of
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section
agriculture means farming in all its
branches and among other things
includes the cultivation and tillage of
the soil, dairying, the production,
cultivation, growing, and harvesting of
any agricultural or horticultural
commodities (including commodities as
defined as agricultural commodities in
12 U.S.C. 1141j(g)), the raising of
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livestock, bees, fur-bearing animals, or
poultry, and any practices (including
any forestry or lumbering operations)
performed by a farmer or on a farm as
an incident to or in conjunction with
such farming operations, including
preparation for market, delivery to
storage or to market or to carriers for
transportation to market. See sec. 29
U.S.C. 203(f), as amended.
(iii) Agricultural commodity. For
purposes of paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section, agricultural commodity
includes, in addition to other
agricultural commodities, crude gum
(oleoresin) from a living tree, and gum
spirits of turpentine and gum rosin as
processed by the original producer of
the crude gum (oleoresin) from which
derived. Gum spirits of turpentine
means spirits of turpentine made from
gum (oleoresin) from a living tree and
gum rosin means rosin remaining after
the distillation of gum spirits of
turpentine. See 12 U.S.C. 1141j(g) (sec.
15(g) of the Agricultural Marketing Act,
as amended), and 7 U.S.C. 92.
(3) Of a temporary or seasonal nature.
(i) On a seasonal or other temporary
basis. For the purposes of this part, of
a temporary or seasonal nature means
on a seasonal or other temporary basis,
as defined in the WHD’s regulation at 29
CFR 500.20 under the Migrant and
Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection
Act (MSPA).
(ii) MSPA definition. The definition of
on a seasonal or other temporary basis
found in MSPA is summarized as
follows:
(A) Labor is performed on a seasonal
basis where, ordinarily, the employment
pertains to or is of the kind exclusively
performed at certain seasons or periods
of the year and which, from its nature,
may not be continuous or carried on
throughout the year. A worker who
moves from one seasonal activity to
another, while employed in agriculture
or performing agricultural labor, is
employed on a seasonal basis even
though the worker may continue to be
employed during a major portion of the
year.
(B) A worker is employed on other
temporary basis where the worker is
employed for a limited time only or the
worker’s performance is contemplated
for a particular piece of work, usually of
short duration. Generally, employment
which is contemplated to continue
indefinitely is not temporary.
(C) On a seasonal or other temporary
basis does not include
(1) The employment of any foreman
or other supervisory employee who is
employed by a specific agricultural
employer or agricultural association
essentially on a year round basis; or
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(2) The employment of any worker
who is living at his or her permanent
place of residence, when that worker is
employed by a specific agricultural
employer or agricultural association on
essentially a year round basis to perform
a variety of tasks for his or her employer
and is not primarily employed to do
field work.
(iii) Temporary. For the purposes of
this part, the definition of temporary in
paragraph (b)(3) of this section refers to
any job opportunity covered by this part
where the employer needs a worker for
a position for a limited period of time,
including, but not limited, to a peakload
need, which is generally less than 1
year, unless the original temporary
agricultural labor certification is
extended pursuant to 20 CFR 655.110.
Subpart B—Enforcement of Work
Contracts
§ 501.15
Enforcement.
The investigation, inspections and
law enforcement functions to carry out
the provisions of sec. 218 of the INA, as
provided in these regulations for
enforcement by the WHD, pertain to the
employment of any H–2A worker and
any other U.S. worker hired in
corresponding employment by an H–2A
employer. Such enforcement includes
work contract provisions as defined in
§ 501.10(a). The work contract also
includes those employment benefits
which are required to be stated in the
job offer, as prescribed in 20 CFR
655.104.
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§ 501.16 Sanctions and remedies—
General.
Whenever the Secretary believes that
the H–2A provisions of the INA or these
regulations have been violated such
action shall be taken and such
proceedings instituted as deemed
appropriate, including (but not limited
to) the following:
(a) Institute appropriate
administrative proceedings, including:
The recovery of unpaid wages,
including wages owed to U.S. workers
as a result of a layoff or displacement
prohibited by these rules (either directly
from the employer, a successor in
interest, or in the case of an H–2ALC
also by claim against any surety who
issued a bond to the H–2ALC); the
enforcement of covered provisions of
the work contract as set forth in 29 CFR
501.10(a); the assessment of a civil
money penalty; reinstatement; or the
recommendation of debarment for up to
3 years.
(b) Petition any appropriate District
Court of the U.S. for temporary or
permanent injunctive relief, including
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the withholding of unpaid wages and/or
reinstatement, to restrain violation of
the H–2A provisions of the INA, 20 CFR
part 655, Subpart B, or these regulations
by any person.
(c) Petition any appropriate District
Court of the U.S. for specific
performance of covered contractual
obligations.
§ 501.17
Concurrent actions.
The taking of any one of the actions
referred to above shall not be a bar to
the concurrent taking of any other
action authorized by the H–2A
provisions of the Act and these
regulations, or the regulations of 20 CFR
part 655.
§ 501.18
Representation of the Secretary.
(a) Except as provided in 28 U.S.C.
518(a) relating to litigation before the
Supreme Court, the Solicitor of Labor
may appear for and represent the
Secretary in any civil litigation brought
under the Act.
(b) The Solicitor of Labor, through
authorized representatives, shall
represent the Administrator, WHD and
the Secretary in all administrative
hearings under the H–2A provisions of
the Act and these regulations.
§ 501.19
Civil money penalty assessment.
(a) A civil money penalty may be
assessed by the Administrator, WHD for
each violation of the work contract as
set forth in § 501.10(a) of these
regulations.
(b) In determining the amount of
penalty to be assessed for any violation
of the work contract as provided in the
H–2A provisions of the Act or these
regulations the Administrator, WHD
shall consider the type of violation
committed and other relevant factors.
The matters which may be considered
include, but are not limited to, the
following:
(1) Previous history of violation or
violations of the H–2A provisions of the
Act and these regulations;
(2) The number of H–2A employees,
corresponding U.S. employees or those
U.S. workers individually rejected for
employment affected by the violation or
violations;
(3) The gravity of the violation or
violations;
(4) Efforts made in good faith to
comply with the H–2A provisions of the
Act and these regulations;
(5) Explanation of person charged
with the violation or violations;
(6) Commitment to future compliance,
taking into account the public health,
interest or safety, and whether the
person has previously violated the H–
2A provisions of the Act;
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77235
(7) The extent to which the violator
achieved a financial gain due to the
violation, or the potential financial loss
or potential injury to the workers.
(c) A civil money penalty for violation
of the work contract will not exceed
$1,000 for each violation committed
(with each failure to pay a worker
properly or to honor the terms or
conditions of a worker’s employment
that is required by sec. 218 of the INA,
20 CFR 655, Subpart B, or these
regulations constituting a separate
violation), with the following
exceptions:
(1) For a willful failure to meet a
covered condition of the work contract,
or for willful discrimination, the civil
money penalty shall not exceed $5,000
for each such violation committed (with
each willful failure to honor the terms
or conditions of a worker’s employment
that are required by sec. 218 of the INA,
20 CFR 655, Subpart B, or these
regulations constituting a separate
violation);
(2) For a violation of a housing or
transportation safety and health
provision of the work contract that
proximately causes the death or serious
injury of any worker, the civil money
penalty shall not exceed $25,000 per
worker, unless the violation is a repeat
or willful violation, in which case the
penalty shall not exceed $50,000 per
worker, or unless the employer failed,
after notification, to cure the specific
violation, in which case the penalty
shall not exceed $100,000 per worker.
(3) For purposes of paragraph (c)(2) of
this section, the term serious injury
means:
(i) Permanent loss or substantial
impairment of one of the senses (sight,
hearing, taste, smell, tactile sensation);
(ii) Permanent loss or substantial
impairment of the function of a bodily
member, organ, or mental faculty,
including the loss of all or part of an
arm, leg, foot, hand or other body part;
or
(iii) Permanent paralysis or
substantial impairment that causes loss
of movement or mobility of an arm, leg,
foot, hand or other body part.
(d) A civil money penalty for failure
to cooperate with a WHD investigation
shall not exceed $5,000 per
investigation;
(e) For a willful layoff or
displacement of any similarly employed
U.S. worker in the occupation that is the
subject of the Application for
Temporary Employment Certification in
the area of intended employment within
60 days of the date of need other than
for a lawful, job-related reason, except
that such layoff shall be permitted
where all H–2A workers were laid off
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first, the civil penalty shall not exceed
$10,000 per violation per worker.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
§ 501.20
Debarment and revocation.
(a) The WHD shall recommend to the
Administrator, OFLC the debarment of
any employer and any successor in
interest to that employer (or the
employer’s attorney or agent if they are
a responsible party) if the WHD finds
that the employer substantially violated
a material term or condition of its
temporary labor certification for the
employment of domestic or
nonimmigrant workers.
(b) For purposes of this section, a
substantial violation includes:
(1) A pattern or practice of acts of
commission or omission on the part of
the employer or the employer’s agent
which:
(i) Are significantly injurious to the
wages, benefits required to be offered
under the H–2A program, or working
conditions of a significant number of the
employer’s U.S. or H–2A workers;
(ii) Reflect a significant failure to offer
employment to all qualified domestic
workers who applied for the job
opportunity for which certification was
being sought, except for lawful jobrelated reasons;
(iii) Reflect a willful failure to comply
with the employer’s obligations to
recruit U.S. workers as set forth in this
subpart; or
(iv) Reflect the employment of an H–
2A worker outside the area of intended
employment, or in an activity/activities,
not listed in the job order (other than an
activity minor and incidental to the
activity/activities listed in the job
order), or after the period of
employment specified in the job order
and any approved extension;
(2) A significant failure to cooperate
with a DOL investigation or with a DOL
official performing an investigation,
inspection, or law enforcement function
under sec. 218 of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1188, this subpart, or 29 CFR part 501
(ESA enforcement of contractual
obligations); or
(3) A significant failure to comply
with one or more sanctions or remedies
imposed by the ESA for violation(s) of
obligations found by that agency (if
applicable), or with one or more
decisions or orders of the Secretary or
a court order secured by the Secretary
under sec. 218 of the INA, 8 U.S.C.
1188, this subpart, or 29 CFR part 501
(ESA enforcement of contractual
obligations); or
(4) A single heinous act showing such
flagrant disregard for the law that future
compliance with program requirements
cannot reasonably be expected.
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(c) Procedures for Debarment
Recommendation. The WHD will send
to the employer a Notice of
Recommended Debarment. The Notice
of Recommended Debarment must be in
writing, must state the reason for the
debarment recommendation, including
a detailed explanation of the grounds for
and the duration of the recommended
debarment. The debarment
recommendation will be forwarded to
the Administrator, OFLC. The Notice of
Recommended Debarment shall be
issued no later than 2 years after the
occurrence of the violation.
(d) The WHD may recommend to the
Administrator, OFLC the revocation of a
temporary agricultural labor
certification if the WHD finds that the
employer:
(1) Willfully violated a material term
or condition of the approved temporary
agricultural labor certification, work
contract, or this part, unless otherwise
provided under paragraphs (d)(2)
through (4) of this section.
(2) Failed, after notification, to cure a
substantial violation of the applicable
housing standards set out in 20 CFR
655.104(d);
(3) Failed to cooperate with a DOL
investigation or with a DOL official
performing an investigation, inspection,
or law enforcement function under sec.
218 of the INA, 8 U.S.C. 1188, this
subpart, or 29 CFR part 501 (ESA
enforcement of contractual obligations);
or
(4) Failed to comply with one or more
sanctions or remedies imposed by the
ESA for violation(s) of obligations found
by that agency (if applicable), or with
one or more decisions or orders of the
Secretary or a court order Secured by
the Secretary under sec. 218 of the INA,
8 U.S.C. 1188, this subpart, or 29 CFR
part 501 (ESA enforcement of
contractual obligations).
(e) In considering a recommendation
made by the WHD to debar an employer
or to revoke a temporary agricultural
labor certification, the Administrator,
OFLC shall treat final agency
determinations that the employer has
committed a violation as res judicata
and shall not reconsider those
determinations.
§ 501.21 Failure to cooperate with
investigations.
No person shall refuse to cooperate
with any employee of the Secretary who
is exercising or attempting to exercise
this investigative or enforcement
authority. As stated in §§ 501.6 and
501.19 of this part, a civil money
penalty may be assessed for each failure
to cooperate with an investigation, and
other appropriate relief may be sought.
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In addition, the WHD shall report each
such occurrence to ETA, and ETA may
debar the employer from future
certification. The WHD may also
recommend to ETA that an existing
certification be revoked. The taking of
any one action shall not bar the taking
of any additional action.
§ 501.22 Civil money penalties—payment
and collection.
Where the assessment is directed in a
final order by the Administrator, WHD,
by an ALJ, or by the ARB, the amount
of the penalty is due within 30 days and
payable to the United States Department
of Labor. The person assessed such
penalty shall remit promptly the
amount thereof as finally determined, to
the Administrator, WHD by certified
check or by money order, made payable
to the order of Wage and Hour Division,
United States Department of Labor. The
remittance shall be delivered or mailed
to the WHD Regional Office for the area
in which the violations occurred.
Subpart C—Administrative
Proceedings
§ 501.30
rules.
Applicability of procedures and
The procedures and rules contained
herein prescribe the administrative
process that will be applied with respect
to a determination to impose an
assessment of civil money penalties,
and which may be applied to the
enforcement of covered provisions of
the work contract as set forth in
§ 501.10(a), including the collection of
unpaid wages due as a result of any
violation of the H–2A provisions of the
Act or of these regulations. Except with
respect to the imposition of civil money
penalties, the Secretary may, in the
Secretary’s discretion, seek enforcement
action in Federal court without resort to
any administrative proceedings.
Procedures Relating to Hearing
§ 501.31 Written notice of determination
required.
Whenever the Administrator, WHD
decides to assess a civil money penalty
or to proceed administratively to
enforce covered contractual obligations,
including the recovery of unpaid wages,
the person against whom such action is
taken shall be notified in writing of such
determination.
§ 501.32
Contents of notice.
The notice required by § 501.31 shall:
(a) Set forth the determination of the
Administrator, WHD including the
amount of any unpaid wages due or
actions necessary to fulfill a covered
contractual obligation, the amount of
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any civil money penalty assessment and
the reason or reasons therefore.
(b) Set forth the right to request a
hearing on such determination.
(c) Inform any affected person or
persons that in the absence of a timely
request for a hearing, the determination
of the Administrator, WHD shall
become final and unappealable.
(d) Set forth the time and method for
requesting a hearing, and the procedures
relating thereto, as set forth in § 501.33.
§ 501.35
§ 501.33
In the Matter of __, Respondent.
(b) For the purposes of such
administrative proceedings the
Administrator, WHD shall be identified
as plaintiff and the person requesting
such hearing shall be named as
respondent.
Request for hearing.
(a) Any person desiring review of a
determination referred to in § 501.32,
including judicial review, shall make a
written request for an administrative
hearing to the official who issued the
determination at the WHD address
appearing on the determination notice,
no later than 30 days after issuance of
the notice referred to in § 501.32.
(b) No particular form is prescribed
for any request for hearing permitted by
this part. However, any such request
shall:
(1) Be typewritten or legibly written;
(2) Specify the issue or issues stated
in the notice of determination giving
rise to such request;
(3) State the specific reason or reasons
why the person requesting the hearing
believes such determination is in error;
(4) Be signed by the person making
the request or by an authorized
representative of such person; and
(5) Include the address at which such
person or authorized representative
desires to receive further
communications relating thereto.
(c) The request for such hearing must
be received by the official who issued
the determination, at the WHD address
appearing on the determination notice,
within the time set forth in paragraph
(a) of this section. For the affected
person’s protection, if the request is by
mail, it should be by certified mail.
(d) The determination shall take effect
on the start date identified in the
determination, unless an administrative
appeal is properly filed. The timely
filing of an administrative appeal stays
the determination pending the outcome
of the appeal proceedings.
Commencement of proceeding.
Each administrative proceeding
permitted under the Act and these
regulations shall be commenced upon
receipt of a timely request for hearing
filed in accordance with § 501.33.
§ 501.36
Caption of proceeding.
(a) Each administrative proceeding
instituted under the Act and these
regulations shall be captioned in the
name of the person requesting such
hearing, and shall be styled as follows:
Referral for Hearing
§ 501.37
Judge.
Referral to Administrative Law
§ 501.34
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
Rules of Practice
(a) Upon receipt of a timely request
for a hearing filed pursuant to and in
accordance with § 501.33, the
Administrator, WHD, by the Associate
Solicitor for the Division of Fair Labor
Standards or by the Regional Solicitor
for the Region in which the action arose,
shall, by Order of Reference, promptly
refer a copy of the notice of
administrative determination
complained of, and the original or a
duplicate copy of the request for hearing
signed by the person requesting such
hearing or by the authorized
representative of such person, to the
Chief Administrative Law Judge, for a
determination in an administrative
proceeding as provided herein. The
notice of administrative determination
and request for hearing shall be filed of
record in the Office of the Chief
Administrative Law Judge and shall,
respectively, be given the effect of a
complaint and answer thereto for
purposes of the administrative
proceeding, subject to any amendment
that may be permitted under these
regulations or 29 CFR part 18.
(b) A copy of the Order of Reference,
together with a copy of these
regulations, shall be served by counsel
for the Administrator, WHD upon the
person requesting the hearing, in the
manner provided in 29 CFR 18.3.
§ 501.38
General.
Except as specifically provided in
these regulations, the Rules of Practice
and Procedure for Administrative
Hearings Before the Office of
Administrative Law Judges established
by the Secretary at 29 CFR part 18 shall
apply to administrative proceedings
described in this part.
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Notice of docketing.
Upon receipt of an Order of
Reference, the Chief Administrative Law
Judge shall appoint an ALJ to hear the
case. The ALJ shall promptly notify all
interested parties of the docketing of the
matter and shall set the time and place
of the hearing. The date of the hearing
shall be not more than 60 days from the
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77237
date on which the Order of Reference
was filed.
§ 501.39 Service upon attorneys for the
Department of Labor—number of copies.
Two copies of all pleadings and other
documents required for any
administrative proceeding provided
herein shall be served on the attorneys
for the DOL. One copy shall be served
on the Associate Solicitor, Division of
Fair Labor Standards, Office of the
Solicitor, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20210, and one copy on the Attorney
representing the Department in the
proceeding.
Procedures Before Administrative Law
Judge
§ 501.40
Consent findings and order.
(a) General. At any time after the
commencement of a proceeding under
this part, but prior to the reception of
evidence in any such proceeding, a
party may move to defer the receipt of
any evidence for a reasonable time to
permit negotiation of an agreement
containing consent findings and an
order disposing of the whole or any part
of the proceeding. The allowance of
such deferment and the duration thereof
shall be at the discretion of the ALJ,
after consideration of the nature of the
proceeding, the requirements of the
public interest, the representations of
the parties, and the probability of an
agreement being reached which will
result in a just disposition of the issues
involved.
(b) Content. Any agreement
containing consent findings and an
order disposing of a proceeding or any
part thereof shall also provide:
(1) That the order shall have the same
force and effect as an order made after
full hearing;
(2) That the entire record on which
any order may be based shall consist
solely of the notice of administrative
determination (or amended notice, if
one is filed), and the agreement;
(3) A waiver of any further procedural
steps before the ALJ; and
(4) A waiver of any right to challenge
or contest the validity of the findings
and order entered into in accordance
with the agreement.
(c) Submission. On or before the
expiration of the time granted for
negotiations, the parties or their
authorized representatives or their
counsel may:
(1) Submit the proposed agreement for
consideration by the ALJ; or
(2) Inform the ALJ that agreement
cannot be reached.
(d) Disposition. In the event an
agreement containing consent findings
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and an order is submitted within the
time allowed therefor, the ALJ, within
30 days thereafter, shall, if satisfied with
its form and substance, accept such
agreement by issuing a decision based
upon the agreed findings.
Post-Hearing Procedures
§ 501.41 Decision and order of
Administrative Law Judge.
(a) The ALJ shall prepare, within 60
days after completion of the hearing and
closing of the record, a decision on the
issues referred by the Administrator,
WHD.
(b) The decision of the ALJ shall
include a statement of findings and
conclusions, with reasons and basis
therefor, upon each material issue
presented on the record. The decision
shall also include an appropriate order
which may affirm, deny, reverse, or
modify, in whole or in part, the
determination of the Administrator,
WHD. The reason or reasons for such
order shall be stated in the decision.
(c) The decision shall be served on all
parties and the Administrative Review
Board (ARB) in person or by certified
mail.
(d) The decision concerning civil
money penalties and/or back wages
when served by the ALJ shall constitute
the final agency order unless the ARB,
as provided for in § 501.42, determines
to review the decision.
Review of Administrative Law Judge’s
Decision
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES_2
§ 501.42 Procedures for initiating and
undertaking review.
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§ 501.43 Responsibility of the Office of
Administrative Law Judges.
Upon receipt of the ARB’s Notice
pursuant to § 501.42 of these
regulations, the Office of ALJ shall
promptly forward a copy of the
complete hearing record to the ARB.
§ 501.44 Additional information, if
required.
Where the ARB has determined to
review such decision and order, the
ARB shall notify each party of:
(a) The issue or issues raised;
(b) The form in which submissions
shall be made (i.e., briefs, oral argument,
etc.); and
(c) The time within which such
presentation shall be submitted.
§ 501.45 Final decision of the
Administrative Review Board.
The ARB’s final decision shall be
issued within 90 days from the notice
granting the petition and served upon
all parties and the ALJ, in person or by
certified mail.
Record
(a) A respondent, the WHD, or any
other party wishing review, including
judicial review, of the decision of an
ALJ shall, within 30 days of the decision
of the ALJ, petition the ARB to review
the decision. Copies of the petition shall
be served on all parties and on the ALJ.
If the ARB does not issue a notice
accepting a petition for review of the
decision concerning civil money
penalties and/or back wages within 30
days after receipt of a timely filing of the
petition, or within 30 days of the date
of the decision if no petition has been
received, the decision of the ALJ shall
be deemed the final agency action. If the
ARB does not issue a notice accepting
a petition for review of the decision
concerning the debarment
recommendation within 30 days after
the receipt of a timely filing of the
petition, or if no petition has been
received by the ARB within 30 days of
the date of the decision, the decision of
the ALJ shall be deemed the final
agency action. If a petition for review is
accepted, the decision of the ALJ shall
VerDate Aug<31>2005
be inoperative unless and until the ARB
issues an order affirming the decision.
(b) Whenever the ARB, either on the
ARB’s own motion or by acceptance of
a party’s petition, determines to review
the decision of an ALJ, a notice of the
same shall be served upon the ALJ and
upon all parties to the proceeding in
person or by certified mail.
§ 501.46
Retention of official record.
The official record of every completed
administrative hearing provided by
these regulations shall be maintained
and filed under the custody and control
of the Chief Administrative Law Judge,
or, where the case has been the subject
of administrative review, the ARB.
§ 501.47
Certification.
Upon receipt of a complaint seeking
review of a decision issued pursuant to
this part filed in a U.S. District Court,
after the administrative remedies have
been exhausted, the Chief
Administrative Law Judge or, where the
case has been the subject of
administrative review, the ARB shall
promptly index, certify and file with the
appropriate U.S. District Court, a full,
true, and correct copy of the entire
record, including the transcript of
proceedings.
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PART 780—EXEMPTIONS
APPLICABLE TO AGRICULTURE,
PROCESSING OF AGRICULTURAL
COMMODITIES, AND RELATED
SUBJECTS UNDER THE FAIR LABOR
STANDARDS ACT
9. The authority citation for part 780
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: Sections 1–19, 52 Stat. 1060, as
amended; 29 U.S.C. 201–219.
10. Revise § 780.115 to read as
follows:
■
§ 780.115
Forest products.
Trees grown in forests and the lumber
derived therefrom are not agricultural or
horticultural commodities, for the
purpose of the FLSA. (See § 780.205
regarding production of Christmas
trees.) It follows that employment in the
production, cultivation, growing, and
harvesting of such trees or timber
products is not sufficient to bring an
employee within sec. 3(f) unless the
operation is performed by a farmer or on
a farm as an incident to or in
conjunction with his or its farming
operations. On the latter point, see
§§ 780.200 through 780.209 discussing
the question of when forestry or
lumbering operations are incident to or
in conjunction with farming operations
so as to constitute agriculture. For a
discussion of the exemption in sec.
13(b)(28) of the Act for certain forestry
and logging operations in which not
more than eight employees are
employed, see part 788 of this chapter.
■ 11. Revise § 780.201 to read as
follows:
§ 780.201 Meaning of forestry or lumbering
operations.
The term forestry or lumbering
operations refers to the cultivation and
management of forests, the felling and
trimming of timber, the cutting, hauling,
and transportation of timber, logs,
pulpwood, cordwood, lumber, and like
products, the sawing of logs into lumber
or the conversion of logs into ties, posts,
and similar products, and similar
operations. It also includes the piling,
stacking, and storing of all such
products. The gathering of wild plants
and of wild Christmas trees is included.
(See the related discussion in §§ 780.205
through 780.209 and in part 788 of this
chapter which considers the sec.
13(b)(28) exemption for forestry or
logging operations in which not more
than eight employees are employed.)
Wood working as such is not included
in forestry or lumbering operations. The
manufacture of charcoal under modern
methods is neither a forestry nor
lumbering operation and cannot be
regarded as agriculture.
E:\FR\FM\18DER2.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 244 / Thursday, December 18, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
12. Revise § 780.205 to read as
follows:
■
§ 780.205 Nursery activities generally and
Christmas tree production.
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(a) The employees of a nursery who
are engaged in the following activities
are employed in agriculture:
(1) Sowing seeds and otherwise
propagating fruit, nut, shade, vegetable,
and ornamental plants or trees, and
shrubs, vines, and flowers;
(2) Handling such plants from
propagating frames to the field;
(3) Planting, cultivating, watering,
spraying, fertilizing, pruning, bracing,
and feeding the growing crop.
(b) Trees produced through the
application of extensive agricultural or
horticulture techniques to be harvested
and sold for seasonal ornamental use as
Christmas trees are considered to be
agricultural or horticultural
commodities. Employees engaged in the
application of agricultural and
horticultural techniques to produce
Christmas trees as ornamental
horticultural commodities such as the
following are employed in agriculture:
(1) Planting seedlings in a nursery;
on-going treatment with fertilizer,
herbicides, and pesticides as necessary;
(2) After approximately three years,
re-planting in lineout beds;
(3) After two more seasons, lifting and
re-planting the small trees in cultivated
soil with continued treatment with
fertilizers, herbicides, and pesticides as
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indicated by testing to see if such
applications are necessary;
(4) Pruning or shearing yearly;
(5) Harvesting of the tree for seasonal
ornamental use, typically within 7 to 10
years of planting.
(c) Trees to be used as Christmas trees
which are gathered in the wild, such as
from forests or uncultivated land and
not produced through the application of
agricultural or horticultural techniques
are not agricultural or horticultural
commodities for purposes of sec. 3(f).
■ 13. Revise § 780.208 to read as
follows:
§ 780.208
Forestry activities.
Operations in a forest tree nursery
such as seeding new beds and growing
and transplanting forest seedlings are
not farming operations. For such
operations to fall within sec. 3(f), they
must qualify under the second part of
the definition dealing with incidental
practices. See § 780.201.
PART 788—FORESTRY OR LOGGING
OPERATIONS IN WHICH NOT MORE
THAN EIGHT EMPLOYEES ARE
EMPLOYED
■
14. Revise § 788.10 to read as follows:
§ 788.10 Preparing other forestry
products.
As used in the exemption, other
forestry products means plants of the
forest and the natural properties or
substances of such plants and trees.
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Included among these are decorative
greens such as holly, ferns, roots, stems,
leaves, Spanish moss, wild fruit, and
brush. Christmas trees are only included
where they are gathered in the wild
from forests or from uncultivated land
and not produced through the
application of extensive agricultural or
horticultural techniques. See 29 CFR
780.205 for further discussion.
Gathering and preparing such forestry
products as well as transporting them to
the mill, processing plant, railroad, or
other transportation terminal are among
the described operations. Preparing
such forestry products does not include
operations that change the natural
physical or chemical condition of the
products or that amount to extracting (as
distinguished from gathering) such as
shelling nuts, or that mash berries to
obtain juices.
Signed in Washington this 5th day of
December 2008.
Brent R. Orrell,
Deputy Assistant Secretary, Employment and
Training.
Victoria A. Lipnic,
Assistant Secretary, Employment Standards
Administration.
Alexander J. Passantino,
Acting Administrator, Wage and Hour
Division.
Note: The following appendix will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
BILLING CODE 4510–FP–P
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 244 / Thursday, December 18, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
[FR Doc. E8–29309 Filed 12–17–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–FP–C
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 244 (Thursday, December 18, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 77110-77262]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-29309]
[[Page 77109]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part II
Department of Labor
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Employment and Training Administration
20 CFR Part 655
Wage and Hour Division
29 CFR Parts 501, 780, and 788
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Temporary Agricultural Employment of H-2A Aliens in the United States;
Modernizing the Labor Certification Process and Enforcement; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 244 / Thursday, December 18, 2008 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 77110]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment and Training Administration
20 CFR Part 655
Wage and Hour Division
29 CFR Parts 501, 780, and 788
RIN 1205-AB55
Temporary Agricultural Employment of H-2A Aliens in the United
States; Modernizing the Labor Certification Process and Enforcement
AGENCY: Employment and Training Administration, and Wage and Hour
Division, Employment Standards Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Labor (DOL or Department) is amending its
regulations regarding the certification for the temporary employment of
nonimmigrant workers in agricultural occupations on a temporary or
seasonal basis, and the enforcement of the contractual obligations
applicable to employers of such nonimmigrant workers.
This final rule re-engineers the process by which employers obtain
a temporary labor certification from the Department for use in
petitioning the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to employ a
nonimmigrant worker in H-2A (agricultural temporary worker) status. The
final rule utilizes an attestation-based application process based on
pre-filing recruitment and eliminates duplicative H-2A activities
currently performed by State Workforce Agencies (SWAs) and the
Department. The rule also provides enhanced enforcement, including more
rigorous penalties, to complement the modernized certification process
and to appropriately protect workers.
DATES: This final rule is effective January 17, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information about 20 CFR
part 655, subpart B, contact William L. Carlson, Administrator, Office
of Foreign Labor Certification, Employment and Training Administration,
U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW., Room C-4312,
Washington, DC 20210. Telephone: (202) 693-3010 (this is not a toll-
free number). Individuals with hearing or speech impairments may access
the telephone number above via TTY by calling the toll-free Federal
Information Relay Service at 1-800-877-8339.
For further information regarding 29 CFR part 501, contact James
Kessler, Farm Labor Team Leader, Wage and Hour Division, Employment
Standards Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Room S-3510, Washington, DC 20210; Telephone (202) 693-
0070 (this is not a toll-free number). Individuals with hearing or
speech impairments may access the telephone number above via TTY by
calling the toll-free Federal Information Relay Service at 1-800-877-
8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background Leading to the NPRM
A. Statutory Standard and Current Department of Labor
Regulations
B. Overview of the Proposed Redesign of the System
C. Severability
II. Discussion of Comments on Proposed Rule
A. Revisions to 20 CFR Part 655 Subpart B
Section 655.93 Special Procedures
Section 655.100 Overview and Definitions
Section 655.101 Applications for Temporary Employment
Certification
Section 655.102 Required pre-filing activity
Section 655.103 Advertising requirements
Section 655.104 Contents of job offers
Section 655.105 Assurances and obligations of H-2A employers
Section 655.106 Assurances and obligations of H-2A labor
contractors
Section 655.107 Processing of applications
Section 655.108 Offered wage rate
Section 655.109 Labor certification determinations
Section 655.110 Validity and scope of temporary labor
certifications
Section 655.111 Required departure
Section 655.112 Audits
Section 655.113 H-2A Applications Involving Fraud or Willful
Misrepresentation
Section 655.114 Setting Meal Charges; Petition for Higher Meal
Charges
Section 655.115 Administrative Review and De Novo Hearing before
an Administrative Law Judge
Section 655.116 Job Service Complaint System; enforcement of
work contracts
Section 655.117 Revocation of H-2A certification approval
Section 655.118 Debarment
Timeline for Anticipated Training and Education Outreach
Initiative Transition
B. Revisions to 29 CFR Part 501
Section 501.0 Introduction
Section 501.1 Purpose and scope
Section 501.2 Coordination of intake between DOL agencies
Section 501.3 Discrimination
Section 501.4 Waiver of rights prohibited
Section 501.5 Investigation authority of Secretary
Section 501.6 Cooperation with DOL officials
Section 501.8 Surety bond
Section 501.10 Definitions
Section 501.15 Enforcement
Section 501.16 Sanctions and remedies
Section 501.19 Civil money penalty assessment
Section 501.20 Debarment and revocation
Section 501.21 Failure to cooperate with investigations
Section 501.30 Applicability of procedures and rules
Section 501.31 Written notice of determination required
Section 501.32 Contents of notice
Section 501.33 Requests for hearing
Section 501.42 Exhaustion of administrative remedies
C. Revisions to 29 CFR Parts 780 and 788
Section 780.115 Forest products
Section 780.201 Meaning of forestry or lumbering operations
Section 780.205 Nursery activities generally and Christmas tree
production
Section 780.208 Forestry activities
Section 788.10 Preparing other forestry products
III. Administrative Information
A. Executive Order 12866--Regulatory Planning and Review
B. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
D. Executive Order 13132--Federalism
E. Executive Order 13175--Indian Tribal Governments
F. Assessment of Federal Regulations and Policies on Families
G. Executive Order 12630--Protected Property Rights
H. Executive Order 12988--Civil Justice Reform
I. Plain Language
J. Executive Order 13211--Energy Supply
K. Paperwork Reduction Act
I. Background Leading to the NPRM
A. Statutory Standard and Current Department of Labor Regulations
The H-2A visa program provides a means for U.S. agricultural
employers to employ foreign workers on a temporary basis to perform
agricultural labor or services when U.S. labor is in short supply.
Section 101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act
(INA or the Act) (8 U.S.C. 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a)) defines an H-2A
worker as a nonimmigrant admitted to the U.S. on a temporary or
seasonal basis to perform agricultural labor or services. Section
214(c)(1) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1184(c)(1)) mandates that the Secretary
of DHS consult with the Secretary of the Department of Labor (the
Secretary) with respect to adjudication H-2A petitions, and, by cross-
referencing Section 218 of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1188), with determining
the availability of U.S. workers and the effect on wages and working
conditions. Section 218 also sets forth further details of the H-2A
application process and the requirements to be met by the agricultural
employer.
[[Page 77111]]
Although foreign agricultural labor has contributed to the growth
and success of America's agricultural sector since the 19th century,
the modern-day agricultural worker visa program originated with the
creation, in the INA (Pub. L. 82-144), of the ``H-2 program''--a
reference to the INA subparagraph that established the program. Today,
the H-2A nonimmigrant visa program authorizes the Secretary of DHS to
permit employers to hire foreign workers to come temporarily to the
U.S. and perform agricultural services or labor of a seasonal or
temporary nature, if the need for foreign labor is first certified by
the Secretary.
Section 218(a)(1) of the INA (8 U.S.C. 1188(a)(1)) states that a
petition to import H-2A workers may not be approved by the Secretary of
Homeland Security unless the petitioner has applied to the Secretary
for a certification that:
(a) There are not sufficient U.S. workers who are able, willing,
and qualified, and who will be available at the time and place needed
to perform the labor or services involved in the petition; and
(b) The employment of the alien in such labor or services will not
adversely affect the wages and working conditions of workers in the
United States similarly employed.
The INA specifies conditions under which the Secretary must deny
certification, and establishes specific timeframes within which
employers must file--and the Department must process and either reject
or certify--applications for H-2A labor certification. In addition, the
statute contains certain worker protections, including the provision of
workers' compensation insurance and housing as well as minimum
recruitment standards to which H-2A employers must adhere. See 8 U.S.C.
1188(b) and (c). The INA does not limit the number of foreign workers
who may be accorded H-2A status each year or the number of labor
certification applications the Department may process.
The Department has regulations at 20 CFR part 655, subpart B--
``Labor Certification Process for Temporary Agricultural Employment
Occupations in the United States (H-2A Workers),'' governing the H-2A
labor certification process, and at 29 CFR part 501 implementing its
enforcement responsibilities under the H-2A program. Regulations
relating to employer-provided housing for agricultural workers appear
at 20 CFR part 654, subpart E (Housing for Agricultural Workers), and
29 CFR 1910.142 (standards set by the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration); see also 20 CFR 651.10, and part 653, subparts B and
F.
The Department was charged with reviewing the efficiency and
effectiveness of its H-2A procedures in light of the increasing
presence of undocumented workers in agricultural occupations and
because of growing concern about the stability of the agricultural
industry given its difficulty in gaining access to a legal
workforce.\1\ The Department reviewed its administration of the program
and, in light of its extensive experience in both the processing of
applications and the enforcement of worker protections, proposed
measures to re-engineer the H-2A program in a Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking on February 13, 2008 (73 FR 8538) (NPRM or Proposed Rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Fact Sheet: Improving Border Security and Immigration Within
Existing Law, Office of the Press Secretary, The White House (August
10, 2007); see also Statement on Improving Border Security and
Immigration Within Existing Law, 43 Weekly Comp. Pres. Doc. (August
13, 2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Overview of the Proposed Redesign of the System
The NPRM described a pre-filing recruitment and attestation process
as part of a re-engineered H-2A program. The Department proposed a
process by which employers, as part of their application, would attest
under threat of penalties, including debarment from the program, that
they have complied with and will continue to comply with all applicable
program requirements. In addition, employers would not be required to
file extensive documentation with their applications but would be
required to maintain all supporting documentation for their application
for a period of 5 years in order to facilitate the Department's
enforcement of program requirements. The Department's proposal also
contained new and enhanced penalties and procedures for invoking those
penalties against employers as well as their attorneys or agents who
fail to perform obligations imposed under the H-2A program. The program
also eliminates duplicative administration and processing by the State
Workforce Agencies (SWAs) and the Department by requiring filing of the
application only with the Department's National Processing Center (NPC)
in Chicago, Illinois. This program would also enable the SWAs to better
perform their mandated functions in processing H-2A agricultural
clearance orders, by enhancing their ability to conduct housing
inspections well in advance of the employer's application date. The
SWAs would also continue to clear and post intrastate job orders,
circulate them through the Employment Service interstate clearance
system and refer potential U.S. workers to employers.
Finally, the Department proposed additional processes for
penalizing employers or their attorneys or agents who fail to perform
obligations required under the H-2A program, including provisions for
debarring employers, agents, and attorneys and revoking approved labor
certifications.
C. Severability
The Department declares that, to the extent that any portion of
this Final Rule is declared to be invalid by a court, it intends for
all other parts of the Final Rule that are capable of operating in the
absence of the specific portion that has been invalidated to remain in
effect. Thus, even if a court decision invalidating a portion of this
Final Rule resulted in a partial reversion to the current regulations
or to the statutory language itself, the Department intends that the
rest of the Final Rule would continue to operate, if at all possible,
in tandem with the reverted provisions.
II. Discussion of Comments on Proposed Rule
The Department received over 11,000 comments in response to the
proposed rule, the vast majority of them form letters or e-mails
repeating the same contentions. Commenters included individual farmers
and associations of farmers, agricultural associations, law firms,
farmworker advocates, community-based organizations, and individual
members of the public. The Department has reviewed these comments and
taken them into consideration in drafting this Final Rule.
We do not discuss here those provisions of the NPRM on which we
received no comments. Those provisions were adopted as proposed. We
have also made some editorial changes to the text of the proposed
regulations, for clarity and to improve readability. Those changes are
not intended to alter the meaning or intent of the regulations.
A. Revisions to 20 CFR Part 655 Subpart B
Section 655.93 Special Procedures
The Department proposed to revise the current regulation on special
procedures to clarify its authority to establish procedures that vary
from those procedures outlined in the regulations. We received numerous
comments about this revised language on special procedures.
[[Page 77112]]
Several commenters questioned the effect the proposed language
would have on special procedures currently in use. Section 655.93(b) of
the current regulations provides for special procedures, stating that:
``the Director has the authority to establish special procedures for
processing H-2A applications when employers can demonstrate upon
written application to and consultation with the Director that special
procedures are necessary.'' The proposed rule provides that ``the OFLC
Administrator has the authority to establish or to revise special
procedures in the form of variances for processing certain H-2A
applications when employers can demonstrate upon written application to
and consultation with the OFLC Administrator that special procedures
are necessary.''
Four associations of growers/producers specifically requested
clarification of the phrase ``in the form of variances.'' These
associations asked the Department to confirm that the proposed language
does not pose a threat to the continued use of the special procedures
for sheepherders currently in place. One association expressed concern
that this revised language would require hundreds of employers engaged
in the range production of livestock to annually document their need
for special procedures.
The addition of the phrase ``in the form of variances'' is intended
to clarify that special procedures differ from those processes set out
in the regulation, which otherwise apply to employers seeking to hire
H-2A workers. The special procedures for sheepherders, for example,
arise from decades of past practices and draw upon the unique nature of
the activity that cannot be completely addressed in the generally
applicable regulations. The establishment of special procedures
recognizes the peculiarities of an industry or activity, and provides a
means to comply with the underlying program requirements through an
altered process that adequately addresses the unique nature of the
industry or activity while meeting the statutory and regulatory
requirements of the program. The special procedures do not enable
industries and employers to evade their statutory or regulatory
responsibilities but rather establish a feasible and tailored means of
meeting them while recognizing the unique circumstances of that
industry. The language in Sec. 655.93(b) affirms the Department's
authority to develop and/or revise special procedures. The Department
does not intend to require any industry currently using special
procedures to seek ratification of their current practice, nor does the
Department intend to require annual or periodic justifications of an
industry's need for special procedures. The Department does reserve the
right to make appropriate changes to those procedures after
consultation with the industry involved.
Section 655.93(b) in the NPRM enables the Administrator/OFLC ``to
establish or revise special procedures in the form of variances for
processing certain H-2A applications when employers can demonstrate
upon written application to and consultation with the OFLC
Administrator that special procedures are necessary.'' In contrast, the
current rule states that the subpart permits the Administrator/OFLC to
``continue and * * * revise the special procedures previously in effect
for the handling of applications for sheepherders in the Western States
(and to adapt such procedures to occupations in the range production of
other livestock) and for custom combine crews.''
The Department received several comments about the proposed
language, universally expressing concern that the new language provides
the Department with broader authority for changing or revoking existing
special procedures without providing due process with respect to
altering the procedures. An association of growers/producers stated
that the proposed rule uses ``more ominous terms'' and gives the
impression that the Administrator/OFLC has unilateral authority to make
changes without safeguards, review, or democratic procedures. One
association of growers and producers expressed the view that the
revocation language gives the Department authority to revoke the
procedures without advance notice and opportunity for comment and is,
therefore, a violation of the Administrative Procedure Act.
A law firm that provides counsel to agricultural employers stated
that the new language does not adequately solidify the Department's
commitment to existing special procedures and recommended that the
Department amend the regulation to affirm its commitment to continuing
such long-standing special procedures by providing that any proposed
changes to the existing special procedures and policies can be made
only after publication in the Federal Register with at least a 120-day
period for public comment. The firm also commented that the proposal to
empower the Administrator/OFLC to revoke special procedures would
violate Section 218(c)(4) of the INA, which requires the Secretary of
Labor to issue regulations addressing the specific requirements of
housing for employees principally engaged in the range production of
livestock.
The Department has decided, following consideration of these
concerns, to retain the NPRM language in the final regulation, but has
added language similar to that in the current regulation, to enumerate
those special procedures currently in effect as examples of the use of
special procedures. It is our belief that this provision, as it now
reads, provides both the Department and employers using the H-2A
program essential flexibility regarding special procedures, thus
permitting the Department to be far more responsive to employers'
changing needs, crop mechanization, and similar concerns. In addition,
the language on special procedures in the Final Rule reaffirms the
Department's continuing commitment to use special procedures where
appropriate. The Department has no present intent to revoke any of the
special procedures that are already in place, nor does the language of
the final regulation give the Department any new power to do so. While
it is possible that at some time in the future the Department may need
to revoke or revise existing special procedures, that step would be
taken with the same level of deliberation and consultation that was
employed in the creation of those procedures. To strengthen our
commitment to continue the current consultative process, we have
changed the word ``may'' in the last sentence of paragraph (b) to
``will.'' The provision also provides the Department with the authority
to develop new procedures to meet employer needs and, additionally,
provides employers with the opportunity to request that the Department
consider additional procedures or revisions to existing special
procedures. Proposed paragraph (c) has been deleted as unnecessarily
duplicative of the language in paragraph (b).
Two associations of growers and producers requested that the
Department formulate special procedures for dairy workers, stating that
these requested special procedures should not be different from those
already established for sheepherders. The associations stated the
provisions for sheepherders have ``special relevance to the current
dairy situation'' and also stated the ``special procedures relieve the
sheepherding industry from having to make a showing of temporary or
seasonal employment.'' The longstanding special procedures that allow
sheepherders to participate in the
[[Page 77113]]
H-2A program have their origins in prior statutory provisions dating
back to the 1950s. The Department is unaware of any comparable
statutory history pertaining to the dairy industry. The Department
would, of course, consider a specific request from dairy producers or
their representatives for the development of special procedures that
would be applicable to eligible H-2A occupations (see further
discussion on this point in the discussion of the definition of
``agricultural labor or services'' below). The Department does not
believe, however, that it would be appropriate to speculatively address
the merits of a specific special procedures request in this regulation,
particularly before a request making a detailed case for the
appropriateness of such special procedures has been received.
An individual employer commented that those involved in discussing
and considering changes to the H-2A program should preserve the special
procedures for sheepherders and extend them to all occupations engaged
in the range production of other livestock (cattle and horses). A
private citizen provided suggestions for improving the handling of
certification for sheep shearers.
The Department has previously established special procedures for
open range production of livestock and sheep shearers and does not have
any plans to change those procedures at this time and does not believe
that it would be appropriate to address in this regulation the merits
of the commenters' general suggestions for revising these special
procedures. The Department would, of course, be willing to consider a
specific request from livestock producers or their representatives for
the revision or expansion of special procedures consistent with its
authority and this regulation.
Section 655.100--Overview and definitions
(a) Overview
The Department included a provision in the NPRM, similar to a
provision in the current regulation, which provides an overview of the
H-2A program. This overview provides the reader, especially readers
unfamiliar with the program, a general description of program
obligations, requirements, and processes.
Only two commenters identified concerns with the overview as
written. Both expressed concern with the proposed earlier time period
for the recruitment of U.S. workers. They questioned whether U.S.
workers who agreed to work on a date far in advance would then be
available to work for the entire contract period. The overview,
however, simply describes in broad-brush fashion the regulatory
provisions that are discussed in detail later in the NPRM, and in and
of itself has no legal effect. The concerns and observations expressed
by commenters will be addressed in the context of the relevant
regulatory provision to which they apply rather than in the overview.
The overview has also been edited for general clarity and to reflect
changes made throughout the regulatory text.
(b) Transition
The Department, due to past program experience, has decided to add
a transition period in order to provide an orderly and seamless
transition to the new system created by these regulatory revisions.
This will allow the Department to make necessary changes to program
operations, provide training to the NPC, SWAs and stakeholder groups,
and allow employers and their agents/representatives to become familiar
with the new system. Employers with a date of need for workers on or
after July 1, 2009 will be obligated to follow all of the new
procedures established by these regulations. Prior to that time, the
Department has created a hybrid system involving elements of the old
and the new regulations as delineated in the new Sec. 655.100(b).
Even though the NPRM put current and future users of H-2A workers
on some notice regarding what this Final Rule will require, the rule as
a whole implements several significant changes to the administration of
the program. Several commenters requested that the Department allow
employers some period of time to prepare and adjust their requests for
temporary agricultural workers. These regulations implement new
application forms, new processes, and new time periods for conducting
recruitment for domestic workers to which current and new users of the
program will need to become accustomed.
The Department is accordingly adopting a transition period after
the effective date of this Final Rule. The transition period
establishes procedures that will apply to any application for which the
first date of need for H-2A workers is no earlier than the effective
date of this rule and no later than June 30, 2009.
During this transition period, the Department will accept
applications in the following manner: An employer will complete and
submit Form ETA-9142, Application for Temporary Employment
Certification, in accordance with Sec. 655.107, no less than 45 days
prior to their date of need. The employer will simultaneously submit
Form ETA-790 Agricultural and Food Processing Clearance Order (job
order), with the Application for Temporary Employment Certification
(application) directly to the Chicago NPC. Activities that are required
to be conducted prior to filing an application under the Final Rule
will be conducted post-filing during this transition period, much as
they are under the current rule. The employer will also be expected to
make attestations in its application applicable to its future
recruitment activities, payment of the offered wage rate, etc.
Employers will not be required to complete an initial recruitment
report for submission with the application, but will be required to
complete a recruitment report for submission to the NPC prior to
certification, and will also be required to complete a final
recruitment report covering the entire recruitment period.
The employer will not separately request a wage determination from
the Chicago NPC. Upon receipt of Forms ETA-9142 and ETA-790, the
Chicago NPC will provide the employer with the minimum applicable wage
rate to be offered by the employer, and will process the application
and job order in a manner consistent with Sec. 655.107, issuing a
modification for any curable deficiencies within 7 calendar days. Once
the application and job order have been accepted, the Chicago NPC will
transmit a copy of the job order to the SWA(s) serving the area of
intended employment to initiate intrastate and interstate clearance,
request the SWA(s) schedule an inspection of the housing, and provide
instructions to the employer to commence positive recruitment in a
manner consistent with Sec. 655.102. The NPC will designate labor
supply States during this transition period on a case-by-case basis,
applying the basic information standard for such designations that is
set forth in Sec. 655.102(i).
This transition period process will apply only to applications
filed on or after the effective date of this regulation with dates of
need no earlier than the effective date and no later than June 30,
2009. Employers with a date of need on or after July 1, 2009 will be
expected to fully comply with all of the requirements of the Final
Rule. Moreover, after the Final Rule's effective date, the requirements
of the Final Rule will fully apply except for those modifications that
are expressly mentioned as transition period procedures in Sec.
655.100(b); all other
[[Page 77114]]
provisions of the Final Rule will apply on the effective date of the
Final Rule.
These transition period procedures are designed to ensure that
employers seeking to utilize the program immediately after its
effective date, especially those with needs early in the planting
season, will not be prejudiced by the new pre-filing requirements
regarding wage determinations and recruitment, which might otherwise
substantially impact employers' application timing. Because the
Department's seasonal H-2A workload begins to peak in January of each
year, however, the Department deems it essential to the smooth and
continuous operation of the H-2A program throughout calendar year 2009
to make the rule effective as early in the year as possible.
(c) Definitions 655.100
Definition of ``agent,'' ``attorney,'' and ``representative''
The Department did not propose any changes to the definition of
``agent'' from existing regulations but added definitions for
``attorney'' and ``representative'' in the proposed rule. A major trade
association commented that the definitions of, and references to, the
terms ``agent,'' ``attorney'' and ``representative'' are confusing. The
association found the definitions of agent and representative to be
duplicative and the distinctions between these two terms, both of which
encompass the authority to act on behalf of an employer, unclear. The
association also commented that the definition of ``attorney'' is self-
evident and appears to be a vehicle for permitting attorneys to act as
``agents'' or ``representatives.'' Further, according to the commenter,
the term ``representative'' is also problematic and the Department
should consider revising it or eliminating it entirely. The association
believes the main purpose of the definition is to deem the person who
makes the attestations on behalf of the employer a ``representative,''
but the association believes it is not clear whether the intent of the
definition of ``representative'' is to also make the representative
liable for any misrepresentations made in an attestation on behalf of
an employer. The association recommended the proposed rule should
clarify the intent of the definition of ``representative'' and also
under what circumstances an agent will be liable for activities
undertaken on behalf of an employer. The association recommended a
clear set of standards for liability and suggested such standards
should not deviate from the current standards where agents, attorneys,
and representatives (under the proposed rule) are not liable if they
perform the administrative tasks necessary to file labor certification
applications and petitions for visas and do not make attestations that
are factually based. In addition, the association recommended that the
agents, attorneys, or representatives should not be liable for program
violations by the employer.
The Department understands the need for clarity in determining who
qualifies as a representative before the Department and what
responsibilities and liabilities attach to that role and has
accordingly simplified the definition of a representative. Although the
Department does distinguish between the different roles of attorneys
and agents, both groups are held to the same standards of ethics and
honesty under the Department's rules. Under the rules, attorneys can
function as agents, and either attorneys or agents can function as a
representative of the employer. The Department has, in addition,
replaced the word ``official'' with ``person or entity'' to parallel
the definition of agent.
However, the Department disagrees with the commenter's
interpretation of the extent to which an agent or attorney can be held
accountable by the Department for their own and their clients' conduct
in filing an application for an employer. While agents and attorneys
are of course not strictly liable for all misconduct engaged in by
their clients, they do undertake a significant duty in attestations to
the Department regarding their employer-clients' obligations. They are,
therefore, responsible for exercising reasonable due diligence in
ensuring that employers understand their responsibilities under the
program and are prepared to execute those obligations. Agents and
attorneys do not themselves make the factual attestations and are not
required to have personal knowledge that the attestations they submit
are accurate. They are, however, required to inform the employers they
represent of the employers' obligations under the program, including
the employers' liability for making false attestations, and the
prohibition on submitting applications containing attestations they
know or should know are false. The debarment provisions at Sec.
655.118 of the final regulations have accordingly been clarified to
state that agents and attorneys can be held liable for their employer-
clients' misconduct when they ``participated in, had knowledge of, or
had reason to know of, the employer's substantial violation.''
The same association also questioned why the Department is
``singling out attorneys'' in the definition of ``representative'' by
requiring an attorney who acts as an employer's representative and
interviews and/or considers U.S. workers for the job offered to the
foreign worker(s) to also be the person who normally considers
applicants for job opportunities not involving labor certifications.
The association found no apparent rationale justifying why the
Department should dictate who and under what circumstances an attorney
or any other person should interview U.S. job applicants. It further
recommended that the rule eliminate the reference to attorneys or, at a
minimum, clarify that the rule does not reach attorneys who merely
advise and guide employers through the H-2A program. The Department has
accordingly clarified the definition of representative by deleting the
sentence limiting the role attorneys can play in interviewing and
considering workers, primarily because, unlike other labor
certification programs administered by the Department, the relatively
simple job qualifications that apply to most agricultural job
opportunities render it unlikely that U.S. workers would be discouraged
from applying for those jobs by the prospect of being interviewed by an
attorney.
A specialty bar association urged that the definition of ``agent''
be changed in order to prevent abuses related to foreign nationals
paying recruiters' fees. The association suggested that the Department
limit representation of employers to that recognized by DHS: attorneys
duly licensed and in good standing; law students and law graduates not
yet licensed who are working under the direct supervision of an
attorney licensed in the United States or a certified representative; a
reputable individual of good moral character who is assisting without
direct or indirect remuneration and who has a pre-existing relationship
with the person or entity being represented; and accredited
representatives, who are persons representing a nonprofit organization
which has been accredited by the Board of Immigration Appeals.
The Department acknowledges that its allowance of agents who are
not attorneys and who do not fit into the categories recognized by DHS
creates a difference of practices between the two agencies. However,
the Department has for decades permitted agents who do not meet DHS's
criteria to appear before it. Agents who are not attorneys have
adequately represented claimants before the Department in a wide
variety of
[[Page 77115]]
activities since long before the development of the H-2A program. To
change such a long-standing practice in the context of this rulemaking
would represent a major change in policy that the Department is not
prepared to make at this time. The Department has, however, added
language to the definition of both ``agent'' and ``attorney'' to
clarify that individuals who have been debarred by the Department under
Sec. 655.118 cannot function as attorneys or agents during the period
of their debarment.
Definition of ``adverse effect wage rate''
The Department proposed a revised definition of ``adverse effect
wage rate,'' limiting its application to only H-2A workers. A law firm
commented that the proposed definition of ``adverse effect wage rate''
appears to apply only to H-2A workers and not to U.S. workers who are
employed in ``corresponding employment.'' The Department has clarified
the definition to make clear that those hired into corresponding
employment during the recruitment period will also receive the highest
of the AEWR, prevailing wage, or minimum wage, as applicable. The firm
also requested the same revision to 29 CFR Part 501 regulations. The
Department believes that this requirement is adequately explained in
the text of the regulations at Sec. 655.104(l) and Sec. 655.105(g).
Definition of ``agricultural association''
The Department added a definition for ``agricultural association''
in the proposed regulation. A major trade association commented that
the proposed definition does not acknowledge that associations may be
joint employers and suggests that the definition could cause confusion
because other sections of the proposed regulation acknowledge that
associations may have joint employer status. The association
recommended the definition clarify that agricultural associations may
serve as agents or joint employers and define the circumstances under
which joint employer arrangements may be utilized. A professional
association further commented that associations should not be exempt
from Farm Labor Contractor provisions if the associations are
performing the same activities as Farm Labor Contractors.
The Department agrees that agricultural associations play a vital
role in the H-2A program and seeks to minimize potential confusion
about their role and responsibilities. The regulation has been revised
to clarify that agricultural associations may indeed serve as sole
employers, joint employers, or as agents. The definition of ``H-2A
Labor Contractors'' has also been revised to clearly differentiate
labor contractors from agricultural associations and that an
agricultural association that meets the definition in this part is not
subject to the requirements attaching to H-2A Labor Contractors.
Finally, the regulation has been clarified by specifying that
``processing establishments, canneries, gins, packing sheds, nurseries,
or other fixed-site agricultural employers'' can all be encompassed by
agricultural associations.
Definition of Application for Temporary Employment Certification
The Department has added to the Final Rule a definition of
Application for Temporary Labor Certification. An Application for
Temporary Labor Certification is an Office of Management and Budget
(OMB)-approved form that an employer submits to DOL to secure a
temporary agricultural labor certification. A complete submission is
required to include an initial recruitment report.
Definition of ``date of need''
The Department slightly modified the definition of ``date of need''
to clarify that the applicable date is the one that is specified in the
employer's Application for Temporary Employment Certification.
Definition of ``employ'' and ``employer''
In the NPRM, the Department added a definition for ``employ'' and
made revisions to the existing definition of ``employer.'' A trade
association suggested that the Department eliminate the definition of
``employ'' but retain the definition of ``employer,'' stating that the
definition of ``employ'' adds nothing to clarify status or legal
obligations under the H-2A program. The association believes the status
of an employer under the H-2A program is defined by the labor
certification and visa petition processes and that the incorporation of
the broad FLSA and MSPA definitions of ``employ'' insinuate broad legal
concepts that add unnecessary confusion. The association further
recommended that the Department eliminate the fourth criterion related
to joint employment status in its proposed definition of ``employer''
and, instead, provide a separate definition of joint employer
associations and the respective liabilities of the association and its
joint employer members.
The Department agrees with these comments and has, accordingly,
removed the definition of ``employ'' as superfluous and created a
separate definition of ``joint employment'' (using that portion of the
definition of employer which discussed joint employers) to eliminate
any confusion between the two terms. The definition of ``employer'' has
also been revised. First, the Final Rule clarifies the proposal's
statement that an employer must have a ``location'' within the U.S. to
more specifically state that it must have a ``place of business
(physical location) within the U.S.'' Second, out of recognition that
some H-2A program users, such as H-2ALCs, are itinerant by nature, and
that SWA referrals may thus occasionally need to be made to non-fixed
locations, the Final Rule states that an employer must have ``a means
by which it may be contacted for employment'' rather than a specific
location ``to which U.S. workers may be referred.'' Finally, the Final
Rule clarifies that an employer must have an employment relationship
``with respect to H-2A employees or related U.S. workers under this
subpart'' rather than less specifically referring to ``employees under
this subpart,'' and deletes the references to specific indicia of an
employment relationship because the applicable criteria are spelled out
in greater detail in the definition of ``employee.'' The definition of
``joint employer'' is modified slightly from the concept that appeared
in the NPRM to clarify that the two or more employers must each have
sufficient indicia of employment to be considered the employer of the
employee in order to meet the test for joint employment.
Definition of ``farm labor contracting activity'' and ``Farm Labor
Contractor (FLC)''
The Department proposed adding definitions for ``farm labor
contracting activity'' and ``Farm Labor Contractor (FLC)'' to this
section. In the Final Rule, the Department has eliminated the
definition for ``farm labor contracting activity'' and revised the
definition for ``Farm Labor Contractor.'' The revised definition is now
contained under the heading ``H-2A Labor Contractor.''
A law firm commented that neither agents nor attorneys should be
required to register as H-2A Labor Contractors. The commenter did not
specifically address why it believed agents and attorneys would be
required to register under the proposed definitions, so the Department
is unable to respond to this point. As a general matter, however, an
agent or attorney, if performing labor contracting activities as they
appear in the revised definition of an H-2A Labor Contractor, would be
required to register
[[Page 77116]]
as, and would be held to the standards of, an H-2A Labor Contractor.
A group of farmworker advocacy organizations commented that the
definition proposed for Farm Labor Contractor (H-2A Labor Contractor)
would exclude recruiters of foreign temporary workers from the scope of
the rule, making enforcement impossible. This organization pointed out
that under the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act
(MSPA), H-2A workers are not migrant or seasonal agricultural workers
and, therefore, a contractor recruiting workers to become H-2A visa
holders would not fit within the proposed regulatory definition. The
organization also commented that the reference to ``fixed-site''
employers in the ``farm labor contracting activity'' definition could
present problems in some employment situations, such as employment for
a custom harvester, where the employer would not have a fixed site. An
association of growers/producers suggested the MSPA definitions for
``farm labor contracting activity'' and ``Farm Labor Contractor''
should be used.
In response to the comments, the Department has deleted the
definition of ``agricultural employer'' and included a separate
definition for ``fixed-site employer.'' The Department also deleted the
definition of ``Farm Labor Contractor'' in the final regulation and
replaced it with a new definition for ``H-2A Labor Contractor.'' This
will differentiate the two terms since the definition of an ``H-2A
Labor Contractor'' does not match the definition of a ``Farm Labor
Contractor'' as used in MSPA, and the operational differences between
the H-2A program and MSPA do not allow perfect parallels to be drawn
between the two statutory schemes. The definition of ``farm labor
contracting activity'' has been deleted as redundant since the
activities have been made part of the definitions of ``fixed-site
employer'' and ``H-2A Labor Contractor.''
Definition of ``joint employment''
The Department included in its definition of ``employment'' a
reference to what would constitute ``joint employment'' for purposes of
the H-2A program. The Department received one comment suggesting the
inclusion of the definition of ``joint employment'' within the
definition of ``employment'' was confusing. The Department has
accordingly removed the last phrase from the proposed definition of
``employer'' and provided a separate definition for ``joint
employment.''
Definition of ``prevailing''
The Department proposed a revision to the definition of
``prevailing'' to include, ``with respect to certain benefits other
than wages provided by employers and certain practices engaged in by
employers, that practice or benefit which is most commonly provided by
employers (including H-2A and non-H-2A employers) for the occupation in
the area of intended employment.'' This represented a change from the
current rule, which does not refer to ``commonly provided'' practices
or benefits but instead uses a percentage test (50 percent or more of
employers in an area and for an occupation must engage in the practice
or offer the benefit for it to be considered ``prevailing,'' and the 50
percent or more of employers must also employ in aggregate 50 percent
or more of U.S. workers in the occupation and area''). The Department
received comments on the change, specifically inquiring whether the
SWAs would continue to conduct prevailing wage and practice surveys,
and requesting that if the Department intends to no longer require SWAs
to conduct prevailing wage and practice surveys, the change should be
discussed in the preamble.
The Department has determined that, to provide greater clarity and
for ease of administration, the definition of ``prevailing'' will
revert to the definition in the current regulation that requires that
50 percent or more of employers in an area and for an occupation engage
in the practice or offer the benefit and that the 50 percent or more of
the employers in an area must also employ in aggregate 50 percent or
more of U.S. workers in the occupation and area.
The Department notes it does not intend to change the provision on
prevailing wage surveys currently undertaken by SWAs. The Department
has included specific definitions for the terms ``prevailing piece
rate'' and ``prevailing hourly rate,'' the two kinds of wage surveys
that have traditionally been undertaken by SWAs, and has included
express references to both types of surveys throughout the rule.
Definition of ``strike''
The Department has been added to the Final Rule a definition for
the term strike. The definition conforms to the changes explained in
the discussion of Sec. 655.105(c), and clarifies that the Department
will evaluate whether job opportunities are vacant because of a strike,
lockout, or work stoppage on an individualized, position-by-position
basis.
Definition of ``successor in interest''
The Department's proposal included a debarment provision allowing
for debarment of a successor in interest to ensure that violators are
not able to re-incorporate to circumvent the effect of the debarment
provisions. A national agricultural association commented that this
provision as drafted could result in an innocent third party buying the
farm of a debarred farmer and being subject to debarment, even though
the successor is free of any wrongdoing, and thus the rule would place
roadblocks on the sale of assets to innocent parties.
The Department agrees with this commenter. We have addressed this
issue by including a definition of ``successor in interest'' to make
clear that the Department will consider the facts of each case to
determine whether the successor and its agents were personally involved
in the violations that led to debarment in determining whether the
successor constitutes a ``successor in interest'' for purposes of the
rule.
Definition of ``United States''
The Consolidated Natural Resources Act of 2008, Public Law 110-229,
Title VII (CNRA), applies the INA to the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands (CNMI) at the completion of the transition period as
provided in the CNRA, which at the earliest, would be December 31,
2014. Accordingly, the H-2A program will not apply to the CNMI until
such time. However, the CNRA amends the definition of ``United States''
in the INA to include the CNMI. It should be noted that the amendment
to the INA of the definition of ``United States'' does not take effect
until the beginning of the transition period which could be as early as
June 1, 2009, but may be delayed up to 180 days. Accordingly, the
Department has included CNMI in the definition of ``United States''
with the following qualification: ``as of the transition program
effective date, as defined in the Consolidated Natural Resources Act of
2008, Public Law 110-229, Title VII.'' The Department will publish a
notice in the Federal Register at such time that its regulations
regarding the foreign labor programs described in the INA, including
the H-2A program, will apply to the Commonwealth.
Definition of ``Within [number and type] days''
The Department has added to the Final Rule a definition of the term
within [number and type] days. The definition clarifies how the
Department will calculate timing for meeting filing
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deadlines under the rule where that term, in some formulation, appears.
The definition specifies that a period of time described by the term
``within [number and type] days'' will begin to run on the first
business day after the Department sends a notice to the employer by
means normally assuring next-day delivery, and will end on the day that
the employer sends whatever communication is required by the rules back
to the Department, as evidenced by a postal mark or other similar
receipt.
Definition of ``Work contract''
The Department has added to the Final Rule a definition of the term
work contract. The definition was borrowed from the definition section
of 29 CFR part 501 of the NPRM, with minor modifications made for
purposes of clarification.
d. Definition of ``agricultural labor or services''
The Department proposed changes to the definition of ``agricultural
labor or services'' to clarify, as in the current regulation, that an
activity that meets either the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) or the Fair
Labor Standards Act (FLSA) definition of agriculture is considered
agricultural labor or services for H-2A program purposes and, more
significantly, to remove limitations on the performance of certain
traditional agricultural activities which, when performed for more than
one farmer, are not considered agricultural labor or services under the
IRC or the FLSA, including packing and processing.
The Department received several comments supporting these changes,
with some specific suggestions for additional changes. A major trade
association complimented the Department on providing ``bright line''
definitional guidance regarding the activities that constitute
agricultural work to be covered by the H-2A program as distinct from
the H-2B program. A number of these commenters mentioned that the
Department's inclusion of packing and processing activities in work
considered as agricultural provides an option for obtaining legal
workers, especially in light of the numerical limitations on H-2B
visas. One association of growers/producers supported the expansion of
the current definition to include packing and processing but suggested
that agricultural employers who have previously used the H-2B program
for packing or processing operations be allowed to continue using the
H-2B program. Another association of growers/producers suggested that
the definition be changed to allow product that is moving from on-farm
production directly to the end consumer be included as permissible work
for H-2A workers, and suggested that the definition provide that it is
a permissible activity for H-2A workers to work on production of a
purchased crop when the crop is purchased by a farm because of weather
damage to that farm's crops in a particular year.
The Department appreciates the general support for the proposed
changes and has retained them in the final regulation. Regarding
packing and processing activities, the proposed definition includes as
agricultural activities ``handling, planting, drying, packing,
packaging, processing, freezing, grading, storing or delivering to
storage or to market or to a carrier for transportation to market, in
its unmanufactured state, any agricultural or horticultural commodity
while in the employ of the operator of a farm.'' In response to the
request to allow employers who have used the H-2B program for packing
or processing operations to continue using the H-2B program, the
Department has revised the definition to clarify that while the
Department cannot permit H-2A workers and H-2B workers to
simultaneously perform the same work at the same establishment, the
distinctions between establishments at which operations of this nature
should be performed by H-2A workers and those at which the operations
should be performed by H-2B workers are too fine for the Department to
reasonably distinguish between them with sufficient precision to
establish a bright line test. The Department will therefore defer to
operators as to whether the ``handling, planting, drying, packing,
packaging, processing, freezing, grading, storing or delivering''
operations at their particular establishment are more properly governed
by the H-2A or the H-2B program, but will not accept applications for
both kinds of workers to simultaneously perform the same work at the
same establishment.
The Department agrees with the comment that H-2A workers should be
permitted to work in the production of a purchased crop, as well as
work in processing or packing a farm product that is moving from on-
farm production directly to the end consumer. Moreover, the Department
believes such activities are permitted by the definition in the
proposed rule and therefore the provision requires no additional
language in the Final Rule.
The Department has clarified the Final Rule to reflect existing
law, which provides that work performed by H-2A workers, or workers in
corresponding employment, which is not defined as agriculture under
Section 3(f) of the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. 203(f), is
subject to the provisions of the FLSA as provided therein, including
the overtime provisions in Section 7(a)(29 U.S.C. 207(a)).
Incidental Activities
The Department also proposed clarifications to reflect that work
activity of the type typically performed on a farm and incident to the
agricultural labor or services for which an H-2A labor certification
was approved may be performed by an H-2A worker. A number of
commenters, including a professional association, a major trade
association, and several associations of growers/producers supported
this change, stating that it was positive and would provide more
flexibility for employers. A major trade association commented this
change would allow employers to include duties in H-2A certified job
opportunities that reflect the actual duties performed by farm workers
and further commented that, ``[p]resumably the provision will cover a
farm worker who engages in incidental employment in the farm's roadside
retail stand, a farm worker who assists in managing `pick your own'
activities, and a farm worker who occasionally drives a tractor pulling
a hay wagon for a hay ride, to cite a few examples of incidental
activities customarily performed by farm workers that have been
disallowed in the past.'' This commenter's understanding of the
Department's interpretation is correct.
One association of growers/producers commented that allowing H-2A
workers to perform duties typically performed on a farm benefits the
employee as well as the employer. A trade association commented that
being able to use workers in other jobs not listed on the contract is
needed, particularly when weather prevents field work.
The Department has revised the wording in the definition of
``agricultural labor or services'' provided in Sec. 655.100(d)(1)(vi)
to provide additional clarity for employers. The definition now reads:
``Other work typically performed on a farm that is not specifically
listed on the Application for Temporary Employment Certification and is
minor (i.e., less than 20 percent of the total time worked on the job
duties that are listed on the Application for Temporary Employment
Certification) and incidental to the agricultural labor or services for
which the H-2A worker was sought.'' The Department recognizes that, due
to the unpredictable nature of weather
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conditions and agricultural work itself, employers need some
flexibility in assigning tasks, and that it would be difficult if not
impossible to list all potential minor and incidental job
responsibilities of H-2A workers on the Application for Temporary
Employment Certification. The proposed amendment of the definition is
intended to recognize the reality of working conditions at agricultural
establishments and ensure that an H-2A worker's performance of minor
and incidental activity does not violate the terms and conditions of
the worker's H-2A visa status. The further revision to the definition
will assist employers in determining whether activities or work not
included on the Application for Temporary Employment Certification can
reasonably be considered as minor and incidental.
Inclusion of Other Occupations
The Department proposed to include logging employment in its
definition of ``agricultural labor or services'' for purposes of the H-
2A program. Two commenters voiced their support for this inclusion; we
received no comments in opposition. The Department also sought comments
as to whether there are other occupations that should be included
within the definition of agriculture used in the H-2A program. The
Department received several suggestions of other industries that should
be considered, including livestock and dairy producers, fisheries,
nurseries, greenhouses, landscapers, poultry producers, wine
businesses, equine businesses, turf grass growers, mushroom producers,
maple syrup producers, and employers engaging in seasonal food
processing as well as growers who operate processing and packing
plants.
Of those requesting expansion of the definition to include other
occupations, representatives of the dairy industry submitted the most
comments. A major trade association and a number of associations of
growers/producers commented that the dairy industry is unable to use
the H-2A agricultural worker visa program and that this exclusion is
unfair. They stated dairy farmers need and deserve the same access to
legal foreign workers as other sectors of the agricultural industry.
The association suggested that H-2A visas for dairy workers should last
at least three years rather than one. Two trade association commenters
stated they understood the importance under the statutory definition of
H-2A workers needing to be temporary or seasonal, but not why the jobs
themselves needed to be temporary or seasonal. A farm bureau provided
comments suggesting dairy and livestock operations should be allowed to
designate seasonal jobs within their operations for which H-2A workers
could be employed. This association commented that current worker
patterns suggest typical milkers stay in their positions for 9 to 10
months and then voluntarily leave, but return to seek a job after 2 to
3 months.
The Department also received comments from an association of
growers/producers and from two individual employers requesting that
reforestation work be considered as agricultural labor. These
commenters assert that there are reforestation activities including
planting, weed control, herbicide application and other unskilled tasks
related to preparing the site and cultivating the soil and that workers
who perform these tasks deserve consideration for eligibility for H-2A
visas, as do workers who perform the same or similar tasks in
cultivating other agricultural and horticultural commodities on many of
the same farms. These commenters also pointed out that workers
performing reforestation tasks for farmers or on farms are clearly
agricultural employees under the FLSA and, additionally, believed the
Internal Revenue Code supports their position for considering
reforestation work performed on a farm or for a farmer as agricultural
labor or services.
Following review of the comments discussed above, the Department
has decided the definition of agriculture should not be further
expanded at this time and no additional activities have been selected
for inclusion as agricultural activities beyond those included in the
NPRM. In most cases where there was the suggestion for the inclusion of
a particular industry or activity in the definition of agriculture
there was not strong support for the inclusion by representatives of
that industry, as indicated by the number and source of the comments
received. For example, one commenter supported adding maple syrup
harvesting and ancillary activities to the definition of agricultural
labor. The suggestion did not come from someone actually involved in
the maple syrup industry, however, but rather from a State Workforce
Agency. While the Department appreciates the input of such commenters,
it would be inappropriate to impose on those industries (most of which
currently qualify for the H-2B program rather than the H-2A program)
cha