More than 130 migrant agriculture workers from Mexico and the Caribbean have gone home cheated of thousands of dollars after the Ontario farm operation they worked at filed an intention to obtain creditor protection. Workers had not been paid since early November after the owner departed for California. He has yet to return.
The workers from Mexico, Jamaica, Barbados and Trinidad were employed at the Ghesquiere Plant Farm near Simcoe, Ontario. They were contracted to Ghesquiere under the federal government's Canadian Seasonal Agriculture Workers Program (CSAWP).
"This is a very bad situation," said Francis Gibson, a longtime CSAWP worker from Barbados who only worked for the first time at Ghesquiere this season. "What I don't understand is how a farm that was known to have money problems can be part of the program? We came here and worked hard to work put money in the farmer's pocket. But now we're going home and our pockets are empty."
More than 22,000 migrant agriculture workers come to Canada each season under the CSAWP but once workers arrive the CSAWP provides little protection or follow-up regarding housing or workplace issues. It is unlikely that any of the workers will see the money they are owed.
The case was the same for more than 200 migrant workers at Rol-Land Farms in Cambridge, Ontario - an industrial-scale mushroom growing facility, where in 2008 the migrant workers were fired without notice a week before Christmas and repatriated the next day after the employer filed for creditor protection.
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