Fruit rots on vine for want of seasonal workers
Abstract
“For God’s sake, they’re a nightmare,” she said. “It’s not their fault — most are good kids, but 99 per cent have never been on a farm.
“In New Zealand, the seasonal worker program has built hope into island communities,” Dr [Manjula Luthria] said. “It has brought a real pride of labour. It’s something we as outsiders in the aid community can never build. This scheme is the shortest wayto achieve the largest amount of development.”
Full Text
FRED Tassone is one of scores of operators of orchards, market gardens  and vineyards across the country who cannot find enough workers to pick  their produce. 
Despite more than 460,000 people being officially unemployed in  Australia, the chronic labour shortage in the horticulture industry has  reached the point where fruit has been left rotting on trees, and  vegetables are left in the ground. 
The federal Government is evaluating a recently completed trial of a  seasonal workers program in New Zealand, generally regarded as  successful by government and industry alike. Soon the sight of Pacific  Islanders in fields across Australia may be commonplace. 
A decision on a pilot of a program allowing Pacific Islanders short-term  visas of up to six months is expected in the next few weeks. Pacific  leaders have long advocated the freer movement of labour. 
Mr Tassone, who runs his table-grape operation Tassone’s Produce at  Robinvale, near Mildura in Victoria, said farmers across the district  were finding it hard to get workers. 
Like thousands of other farmers, he is hopeful the Government will  implement a seasonal workers program sooner rather than later. 
The mining boom in Western Australia has attracted many people who might  once have been prepared to do the hard physical work in the orchards  and vineyards. 
“It doesn’t matter whether the unemployment rate is 5 per cent or 50 per  cent, Australia’s unemployed don’t want to do our work,” Mr Tassone  said. 
“Unskilled workers can make up to $1200 a week, but Australians just don’t want to do it.” 
Jonathan Nathundriwa, 30, from Fiji, who works on a farm next to Mr  Tassone’s, said local unemployed people were not interested in the hard  physical work required. 
On the other hand, the Islanders would be delighted to earn a decent income, Mr Nathundriwa said. 
“My family back in Fiji are busting their chops for $10 a day,” he said. 
“I would love to be able to give them employment.” 
Gay Tripodi, who runs stone-fruit operation Murrawee Farms at Swan Hill, in Victoria, said backpackers were not a solution. 
“For God’s sake, they’re a nightmare,” she said. “It’s not their fault  — most are good kids, but 99 per cent have never been on a farm. 
“We need workers who can stay with us for the duration of the season, five to six months. 
“We can train them up and then they return to us the following year. We  have been really struggling. The situation is dramatic.” 
Horticulture Australia Council head Kris Newton, who would oversee a  pilot seasonal workers scheme, said there had been increasing farm  production, driven by increasing population. “On the other hand, you  have declining sources of seasonal labour,” she said. 
Average incomes on the Pacific islands are often less than $1000 ayear. 
Manjula Luthria, senior regional economist with the World Bank, said  large pools of unemployed youths across the Pacific were young, fit and  keen to work. 
She said islanders could return with savings of more than $5000, several times what they could earn in a year at home. 
“In New Zealand, the seasonal worker program has built hope into island  communities,” Dr Luthria said. “It has brought a real pride of labour.  It’s something we as outsiders in the aid community can never build.  This scheme is the shortest wayto achieve the largest amount of  development.” 
Australian Workers Union national secretary Paul Howse said the union  supported the proposal as long as the islander workers were paid the  same as Australians. 
Credit: John Stapleton 
