Michigan Apples Could be Huge This Season, but Provide Less Loads

Michigan Apples Could be Huge This Season, but Provide Less Loads

134_3463Michigan could have a record, or at least near record apple crop this season, but there may be fewer loads available for produce haulers.  In a nutshell, there’s not enough farm laborers and there are worries of fruit actually rotting on the trees.

Question.  Unemployment is at 7.8 percentange, but some reports state it’s more like 17 percent when including people who have quit looking for work.  So why is there a  labor shortage?  If there is a driver shortage amounting to 20,000 a year, as claimed by the American Trucking Associations, with unemployment so high, what’s the problem?

Could it be that government assistance has become so common and so excessive that folks figure why should they work when there are food stamps, free cell phones, housing assistance, etc.?

 Michigan agricultural organizations teamed up to send “help wanted” postcards to more than 300 farm labor contractors, mostly in Florida and Georgia, informing them of the state’s large apple crop and need for hundreds of qualified workers for the next few weeks.

About 20 to 30 percent of the state’s apples remain to be harvested.  If the fruit isn’t picked by early November there’s a good chance it will be lost.

Apple pickers are paid $15 to $20 and hour, plus are provided with housing during the season.  The crop is estimated to be about 30 million bushels this season.