News and Music Discovery
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

One U.S. visa program is growing rapidly. No one is happy with it.

Farmworkers harvest strawberries in a field on Farmworkers Day on March 31, 2026 near Oxnard, Calif.
Mario Tama
/
Getty Images
Farmworkers harvest strawberries in a field on Farmworkers Day on March 31, 2026 near Oxnard, Calif.

The Trump administration is focused on an immigration crackdown. But agriculture employers and some moderate Republicans want to start negotiating at least one aspect of legal immigration: expanding a visa program that brings foreign workers to America's farms.

Dozens of farmers — including dairymen and blueberry, apple and peach growers — and lobbying powerhouses like the American Farm Bureau Federation took to Washington this month to advocate for their labor needs. At the center of discussions is a bill introduced by House Agriculture Committee Chairman Glenn "GT" Thompson that would expand access to the H-2A visa for seasonal agricultural labor.

"While this may not be in our jurisdiction, it is certainly in the interest of the farmers and ranchers, and foresters that we represent," Thompson, R-Pa., told reporters and gathered farmers. He nodded to the fact that the House Judiciary Committee, not his, must approve any bill related to immigration and visas.

The H-2A visa program provides workers, primarily from Mexico, for farms that need someone to pick, fertilize and prune crops on a seasonal and temporary basis. Historically, farms with year-round needs such as dairies have been excluded from the program. But use of H-2A visas has jumped more than 500% since 2012 — from 62,743 to nearly 400,000 in 2025, in part because other programs have strict caps and other limits.

Despite its growing popularity and farmers' reliance on the program, employers, labor advocates and both political parties agree that it is far from perfect. But there are strong ideological and practical differences on what needs to be changed.

Labor organizations and conservatives are skeptical of any program that expands the use of foreign labor. Labor groups have long criticized the H-2A program for the potential of workplace abuses; and conservatives take issue with any program that could grandfather in workers currently working in the U.S. illegally.

Farmers and other businesses warn of immediate consequences to their labor supply without expanding the program, given the administration's deportations and continued record-low crossings at the southern border.

"Now that the administration has secured the border, it's time to address the rest of our immigration system," said Martin Durban, senior vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, citing a Congressional Budget Office report that predicts a drop in the working-age population. "You can't grow the economy with a shrinking workforce."

Farmers argue that if the administration continues to push for mass deportations, they need a legal pathway to get workers. An estimated half of all crop farmworkers are working without authorization, according to the latest estimates from the Agriculture Department.

The administration acknowledges challenges between strict immigration enforcement and farm labor supply. The Labor Department last year warned that increasing resources for immigration enforcement risks supply chain disruptions and food supply problems.

"Unless the Department acts immediately to provide a source of stable and lawful labor, this threat will grow as the tools Congress provided… to enhance enforcement of the nation's immigration laws are deployed," it wrote in a related Federal Register notice.

H-2A program grows as farmers ask for changes

First established in the 1980's, the H-2A program allows agricultural employers to request foreign farmworkers on a temporary and seasonal basis, provided they cannot find enough workers in the U.S., among other requirements.

Florida is the top state for use of H-2A visas, followed by Georgia, California, Washington and North Carolina. Those states make up just over half of all H-2A visa certifications.

"We estimate using about 55,000 guest workers this past year, not because the program works well, but because growers have no other choice," said Mike Joyner, president of the Florida Fruit and Vegetable Association.

Loading...

But growers are unhappy with the program's provisions, such as wages that regularly increase and other costs, including responsibilities to pay for housing, transportation and medical care for each worker.

The Labor Department last fall issued a rule that would take housing costs out of workers' paychecks and change the way wages are calculated – effectively lowering guest workers' pay and making the program cheaper for farmers.

But farmers say more changes are needed — which is impossible without action from Congress.

Dairy, cattle and pork producers want access to the visa program. And some said they would like their current workers, who may be working illegally, to be able to access the visa.

For those who don't have access to visas, like in the dairy industry, more than half of workers are undocumented, according to some estimates. State-level estimates in places like Idaho and Wisconsin are even higher.

Last month, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services issued a memo clarifying that some dairies could access H-2A visas if they proved "seasonal" labor needs. This caught the attention of the dairy industry, which is among the groups advocating for an expansion of the visas.

"A lot of us are still trying to figure out exactly what that meant," said Cricket Jacquier, a dairy farmer in Connecticut and National Milk Board of Directors member, about the memo. "For me, it really raised dairy to the top and recognizes that there's a serious problem in the dairy industry and they want to do something about that."

Jacquier and other farmers said they want any changes or clarifications codified into law. Others, like Sydney Allison, who runs Wild Goose Farms in Florida, want workers for longer and more predictability in wage costs.

"We couldn't get the labor and so we were pushed to use this program," she said. Labor accounts for up to half of the production cost for blueberries she sells across the eastern seaboard.

She credits the H-2A program as the reason her farm exists, but warns it's not enough.

"We can't continue to expand. We honestly will probably shrink," she said.

The bill introduced by Thompson would remove the seasonal requirements of the visa while keeping it temporary, at a maximum 350 days a year. It would ensure other sectors like forestry, aquaculture and livestock would get access to the program. And it would provide a process for existing unauthorized workers to access the H-2A program. The bill does not provide any pathway to legalization.

Opposition to H-2A expansion comes from all sides

From the other side, labor groups representing farmworkers and supporters of the president's hardline immigration agenda oppose any H-2A expansion.

Teresa Romero, president of the United Farm Workers (UFW) union, said her group would not support a measure without a pathway to legalization for those already in the U.S.

"We have workers who are legal residents. We have workers who are citizens, and we have workers who are undocumented workers. And many of these workers who are citizens are being harmed by these changes," Romero said. "[Employers] preferred to bring these workers, pay them less, have more control over them, and displace the workforce that is here right now."

UFW has many members in some of the states that have seen highest use of H-2A visas, such as California and Washington. Romero and other labor groups also worry the H-2A program doesn't do enough to protect workers. Workers who come on these visas are tied to a specific employer, making them particularly vulnerable to exploitation.

The AFL-CIO, the largest labor organization, also opposes any expansion.

"We have long-standing positions in support of reform rather than expansion of our work visa programs," said Shannon Lederer, immigration policy director at the national AFL-CIO. "Systems that create an underclass of workers who can't exercise their rights are bad for all workers."

Simon Hankinson, senior research fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, agrees with agriculture employers that the current system is too complicated.

"It kind of is the worst of both worlds for employers who are trying to do the right thing, and I suppose for employees who are trying to do the right thing as well," Hankinson said. But he also opposes expanding access.

"Because the visa is essentially uncapped, that's going to create competition against American workers and drive wages down in a huge variety of sectors that I don't think would be popular on the left as well as on the right," he said.

But Hankison and others on the right diverge from labor groups on offering workers a path to some form of legal status.

"It wasn't just 'close the border,' but we also have to deport the people who were ordered deported," Hankinson said, in reference to President Trump's promises.

Path forward in Washington is complicated

Thompson and other Republican members of Congress hope to start a new conversation around changes to popular visa programs that serve businesses, after 18 months of an administration that has prioritized border security.

"Since the president has closed the border, I think we can get this done," said Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho, during a press conference unveiling Thompson's bill.

Several times last year, Trump vowed to support a visa solution for farms to get enough workers. While farms themselves have not been a primary target of immigration enforcement, few policy proposals to secure the workforce have come to fruition.

When asked about efforts in Congress to expand access, White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said: "We do not get ahead of the president on pending legislation."

Thompson's legislation faces a thorny path through Congress.

Reps. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, and Jamie Raskin, D-Md., the leaders of the House Judiciary Committee, did not respond to questions about whether their committee would hold a hearing or a vote on the bill.

And senators haven't acted on a companion measure, waiting to see the political reaction to the House version.

Thompson hopes to bring others on board with the measure, which currently has 50 cosponsors, including four Democrats. Proponents of the bill argue, though, that farm state Republicans could broker a negotiation if Republicans move forward with other border security and enforcement bills.

Conservatives in the House want to see a vote on a bill known as H.R. 2, which would increase border and immigration enforcement. But that measure is likely to see little movement unless moderates and conservatives in agriculture and Latino-heavy districts see efforts to include their demands, such as improving visa programs they say are vital to all Americans' food supply.

"92% of all planted acres are represented by Republicans," Thompson said. "Now, I will say 100% of all constituents eat."

Copyright 2026 NPR

Ximena Bustillo
Ximena Bustillo is a multi-platform reporter at NPR covering politics out of the White House and Congress on air and in print.