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Employees and Income, Regulations

The Farmer’s Apprentice, Part 2

If a farmer wants to pay subminimum wages to an apprentice, she has to apply for a special certificate. One look at the requirements to receive the certificate and most farmers will close the book on apprenticeships. The new agriculture- local, organic, urban, or whatever your flavor- simply isn’t right for this employee alternative, yet. (Originally written for the National Young Farmers’ Coalition)

What’s the problem?

A farmer decides to check the law on apprenticeships. After reading statutes, she decides the paperwork is worth it if she can manage her labor costs by providing her employees with a good educational experience. Then she reads that apprentices must be paid minimum wage. She thinks, “What?! What do I have to do to provide education to my employees in exchange for a lower wage?”

Where does the law come in?

Not only does a farmer wishing to have an apprentice program have to register the position with the federal government, he has to pay minimum wage. If the farmer can show that subminimum wages are necessary to avoid curtailment of employment opportunities and that there is a shortage of experienced workers, he may receive a special certificate to pay less.

Details, please:

My earlier blog post talks about apprenticeships from a legal perspective. Here’s the summary, straight from the statutes: “Apprentice means a worker who is employed to learn a skilled trade through a registered apprenticeship program. Training is provided through structured on-the-job training combined with supplemental related theoretical and technical instruction.” The catch is that having an apprentice doesn’t get the employer out of paying minimum wage. Only a “special certificate” will exempt a farm from paying minimum wage to its apprentices.

A certificate is only available if a farmer asks for one specifically and the government approves the request based on an individual review of the farmer’s application. To convince the authority that a farmer deserves a special certificate, he’d first have to show that subminimum wages are essential to “avoid curtailment of employment opportunities.” Personally, I’m having a hard time figuring out when paying less than would accomplish that. But don’t blame me- those aren’t my words! What do you think it means? If that ambiguity isn’t enough, there’s more. If the farmer wants to pay subminimum wage for more than 6 weeks of fulltime work, he needs to show that extraordinary circumstances justify an extension. After some solid research, I can’t find a better explanation of what these phrases mean legally.

Even if a farmer could show extraordinary circumstances exist, she also needs to show that there is currently an inadequate supply of experienced workers. She has to show that all the farmer’s current workers are offered full-time employment at regular wages when they conclude their apprenticeship and she still can’t find enough workers. Here’s where things really go awry for the farm employer. We can probably agree that most farm employees are not offered a regularly paid position at the conclusion of their educational time with the farm.

The requirements for an apprenticeship are stiff and for good reason. Earlier, I mentioned how apprenticeships are geared towards industries where the learning is accomplished through doing. The second goal of apprenticeship programs is to create a steady supply of technically qualified workers. Here, farmwork diverges from plumbing or brick laying. The plumber’s union might want more and more young plumbers because they enter the workforce as private contractors employed at a prevailing wage. It’s just not like that with farmers. Simply put, the apprenticeship is not a way to make hiring help more affordable as many farmers hope it might be.

It’s very possible the many elements of the new agricultural community, including urban and local food industries, and could grow to the point where there is a job available for every apprentice who completes their training. We can dream, right? Some programs like CRAFT are helping move us in that direction by joining up with farmers to provide great educational programming. These steps move us in that direction. For now, farmers need another solution besides apprenticeships to manage labor costs and support beginning farmers. We’ll continue to explore options in the next few weeks!

What do you think?

  • What justifies subminimum wages and how difficult should it be for the employer to earn an exception? Are these requirements too steep?
  • Do you disagree that farm apprentices find regular employment quickly and there is a labor shortage?
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Discussion

3 Responses to “The Farmer’s Apprentice, Part 2”

  1. Hello Rachel,

    I am surprised by this post. Are these statutes national or state-specific? The fact is, the internship program I worked at in New Mexico, which taught me most everything I know about farming at this time, is exactly what you are saying is illegal here: below minimum wage pay (I think we worked it out that it was about $6.50 an hour, plus a lot of free food and other non-monetary perks) in return for education. I guarantee they did not get any kind of the exemptions you mentioned above, there is more than enough cheap farm labor to be gotten in this area if they had wanted/were forced to go that route. And it’s not like this internship is a secret or ‘under the radar’…the farm is involved in the local agricultural community and is in the process of organic certification, it has open farm tours, it explains and promotes its internship program at local conferences/classes/presentations and on its website, etc. Are you saying that technically all of this is illegal, and New Mexico is letting it slide, or looking the other way, or something like that? And that conceivably someone with a vendetta against this farm could get them in trouble or get the program shut down by calling them on it?

    I like this farm I am referring to, so I am not going to identify it in case it would get in trouble, but I would like to know how this reconciles with what you have said here. Thanks.

    Posted by Noor Emmanuel | August 23, 2011, 11:05 pm
  2. Hi Noor,

    First, the disclaimer: I can’t actually say whether or not the farm you are referring to is inside or outside the legal requirements without knowing all the details- I can’t undertake that process because that’s practicing the law and I’m still a law student! But, I can provide some more information.

    What I’m describing is the federal law. States may, and many do, have laws that are more restrictive than federal law. No state may pass laws that are less restrictive than federal law. So I don’t know what New Mexico laws are regarding internships, but I can say they are at least as restrictive as described.

    I also have to make a distinction between internships and apprenticeships. They are very DIFFERENT under the law. Although most farmers think they are the same thing. I have a post coming out very soon at the National Young Farmers’ Coalition website on internships and I’ll repost that here in a few days. In a couple weeks, I’ll put up a post about accounting for food or other tangible goods as part of wages. Initially, it sounds like your internship/apprenticeship would have provided you enough monetary and non-monetary compensation to make minimum wage. So, that’s good! Everything is probably fine for the farm you worked at.

    The unfortunate reality is that many, many farm internships/apprenticeships do not comply with federal law. But, many many other industries also don’t comply with federal law regarding their internships- there must be thousands and thousands of internships in the country that aren’t in compliance. Yes, most enforcement agencies look the other way or don’t bother with apprentice/intern regulations unless there’s a problem. If the employers/employees were investigated they could be responsible for a lot of back wages and back taxes. Will they be investigated? It’s probably unlikely. Things do happen though. Here’s an article about a farm “intern” in Oregon who sued his farm employer:
    http://tilth.org/education-research/in-good-tilth-magazine/articles/2008/19iii/outlawing-farming-internships

    Because non-complying internships are the norm, most people don’t know they don’t comply. As the old saying goes, “A law is only as good as its enforcement.” But, I do think everyone should be aware of what the legal requirements are. Offering food or housing in lieu of wages is a good strategy to get above minimum wage- look for more on that later!

    Thanks for reading!
    -Rachel

    Posted by smallfarmcommons | August 24, 2011, 7:05 am
  3. Interesting, thanks Rachel.

    Posted by Noor Emmanuel | August 24, 2011, 12:31 pm

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