Here is the recipe that the U.S. Department of Labor used to create the Adverse Effect Wage Rate (AEWR) Methodology for the Temporary Employment of H-2A Nonimmigrants in Non-Range Occupations in the United States final rule. Step one: Copy the proposed rule of the same name released on Dec. 1, 2021. Step two: Paste. Step three: Sprinkle in some references to having received comments from a range of stakeholders from the public, private and nonprofit sectors, but fail to incorporate any of the suggestions. Step four: Add a dash of “it’s not our job” in response to some of the comments received. Step five: Publish the final rule, which “is adopting the methodology proposed in the 2021 AEWR NPRM without change,” in the Federal Register on Feb. 28, 2023. Barring any last-minute change of heart or legal action, this new wage regime goes into effect today, Thursday, March 30.
An Overview of the Final AEWR Rule
On the surface, understanding the new AEWR calculation is relatively easy. The wage for the majority of positions, defined by six Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) codes, will continue to be determined by the Farm Labor Survey (FLS) conducted by USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service. All other positions will be paid according to the Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey conducted by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. But as with most things, the devil is in the details; unfortunately for the farmers who will have to try to implement the new AEWR final rule, there are devils around every corner.
First, the “easy” part – that which stays the same. The FLS is conducted four times per year and results in semiannual reports. The second report of the year, typically released in November, includes an annualized weighted-average combined hourly wage rate for field and livestock workers. This wage rate is what the current AEWR for all H-2A employees is based upon and what the majority of positions will continue to be based upon. The six job categories (with their corresponding SOC codes) that will continue to use this AEWR include: graders and sorters (45-2041); agricultural equipment operators (45-2091); farmworkers: crop, nursery, and greenhouse (45-2092); farmworkers: farm, ranch, and aquacultural animals (45-2093); agricultural workers, all others (45-2099); and packers and packagers (53-7064).
Now to the harder part. Any position that is determined to fall outside of the six classifications listed above will now be subject to an individual AEWR based on the OEWS. If there is a state-specific wage rate for that SOC in the OEWS, the AEWR will be based on that wage. If there is no state-level OEWS for that SOC, the AEWR will be based on the national wage rate for the SOC in the OEWS. This, of course, means that for some positions, the wage rate will no longer be state/regional specific.
How big of a deal is this bifurcated methodology? In the final rule, DOL contends that 98% of H-2A positions will continue to be paid under the previous methodology, i.e., the single-rate AEWR within the field and livestock workers (combined) category determined by the FLS. However, they are basing this assumption on a review of previous years of H-2A position determinations – before the new, and more complex, rules applied. This is an important distinction because the final rule stipulates that “for agricultural labor or services to be performed by H-2A workers that cannot be encompassed within a single SOC code, the Department proposed to determine the AEWR using the SOC code assigned to the employer’s job opportunity with the highest applicable AEWR.” This likely means that under the new rules, a much larger share of positions will no longer be classified as falling within the field and livestock workers (combined) category. DOL fails to recognize this reality with their assessment that only 2% of positions will be subject to SOC-specific AEWRs.
A personal favorite example from the final rule of how this might play out on the farm:
“An H-2A job opportunity that requires a worker to perform hand-harvest work and to pick-up farmworkers, according to a regular schedule, from employer-provided housing or a centralized pick-up point, in a van used only for passenger transport, on public roads ( e.g., from a motel to the farm), and drive them to the place(s) of employment to perform hand-harvest work, may be assigned SOC code 53-3053 (Shuttle Drivers and Chauffeurs), in addition to SOC code 45-2092 (Farmworkers and Laborers, Crop, Nursery, and Greenhouse). SOC codes 53-3053 and 45-2092 are subject to different AEWR determinations.” SOC code 45-2092 is subject to the AEWR determination within the field and livestock workers (combined) category; 53-3053 is subject to the SOC-specific AEWR determination. “When determining the employer's H-2A wage obligation, and the higher of the two AEWRs (i.e., the AEWR applicable to SOC code 53-3053 and the AEWR applicable to SOC code 45-2092) is the single AEWR for evaluating the employer's wage obligations for all of the work performed for this job opportunity.”
To put this change in a real-world perspective, in the state of New York in 2021 the state wage rate for chauffeurs (53-3053) was $19.52 an hour. The AEWR for field and livestock workers (combined) category in New York in 2021 was $14.99 an hour. Even though the worker will spend most of their time performing hand-harvest work, the new rule would require the New York farm employer to pay an additional 30% for that employee (assuming a 40-hour work week).
Perhaps you’re not an employer, so this small example doesn’t resonate. We modelled a limited version of what these two changes (bifurcated AEWR methodology and revised SOC determinations) could mean on two farms. The small farm employs 10 H-2A employees, the large farm employees 70 H-2A employees. Under the previous rule all of the employees on each farm were paid equally, the AEWR for field and livestock workers (combined) category. Under the new rule, however, it is likely that this would change. We assumed that on the small farm (10 employees) that eight employees would continue to be classified as farmworkers - crop, nursery and greenhouse (45-2092) and be paid the combined rate, but that one worker would now be classified as a first-line supervisors of farm workers (45-1011) and one worker would now be classified as a light truck driver (53-3033). On the large farm we made similar changes but adjusted for size. On the large farm 60 employees would continue to be classified as farmworkers - crop, nursery and greenhouse (45-2092) and be paid the combined rate, but three workers would now be classified as first-line supervisors of farm workers (45-1011) and three workers would now be classified as light truck drivers (53-3033). How big of a deal could this possibly be?
Source: fb.org
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Categories: New York, Government & Policy