24th August 2024: Bureau of Investigative Journalism ‘We sacrificed everything we had’: seasonal workers in UK left without jobs after Home Office decision
When Ubay* was told in January that he and his wife had been selected to work as seasonal workers in the UK, they celebrated. The 37-year-old father of four from Uzbekistan, had seen his timber import business go bankrupt. Here was a chance to get his family out of debt.
Original Source: TBIJ by Emiliano Mellino – 24th August 2024
He had previously received similar offers that looked like scams, but this time there was no reason to be suspicious. The recruitment drive was organised by the Uzbek government. There had been a formal interview process. He would be working on a UK government visa.
More than six months later, however, Ubay’s involvement in the UK’s seasonal workers scheme has left him unemployed and with yet more loans he can’t pay off.
Ubay is one of nearly 100 seasonal workers from Uzbekistan who paid hundreds of pounds to work on UK farms and have been left without the jobs they had been promised after the Home Office revoked the sponsor licence of the company that recruited them.
“Working in the UK gave me a lot of hope,” Ubay told the Bureau of Investigative Journalism (TBIJ). “But when we lost our jobs, we lost all hope … I don’t know how to repay the debt.”
The seasonal workers had each paid nearly £400 to the Home Office and a government contractor for seasonal workers’ visas before the UK-based recruitment company, Ethero, had its licence cancelled earlier this month. Some workers who spoke to TBIJ said they had quit their jobs in Uzbekistan and paid out as much as £800 for visas, flights and other costs.
Ethero was one of the six government-licensed recruiters that offer people from overseas a six-month temporary visa to work on farms as part of the UK’s seasonal worker scheme. It had offered jobs to more than 1,800 Uzbek workers but fewer than 400 had been sent to work in the UK before the company had its sponsor licence cancelled on 2 August, reportedly because it could not guarantee the required minimum number of paid hours.
The consortium to which Ethero belongs has told seasonal workers it will not be offering them compensation.
Ubay says he and his wife borrowed more than £800 – the equivalent of more than three months’ wages in Uzbekistan – to pay fees to the UK Home Office, the contractor in charge of processing visas and the Uzbek government, as well as for a medical certificate. Besides the money he has wasted, he says, he lost seven months of his life during which he turned down other jobs. With he and his wife both unemployed, they have borrowed more money to make ends meet.
The Uzbek government has offered to give back about £100 workers paid in administrative costs. At least one person has been told by the Home Office they would be entitled to a £300 refund if they withdrew their application. However, they would still be out of pocket by about £100, since there has been no offer to refund the visa processing charge or the cost of their medical certificates. Other seasonal workers told TBIJ they had not been contacted.
On Monday more than a dozen seasonal workers went to the offices of the Uzbek government’s ministry of employment demanding to be given the jobs they had been offered – or refunded the money they spent.
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Visa system forces care workers to stay silent on rape and abuse
Seasonal Workers Not Informed of License Suspension
Ethero’s licence was initially suspended on 1 May, but seasonal workers in Uzbekistan were not informed until some time later – in some instances, several weeks.
An email sent to workers by Telpasc in May said the company had been handed a “temporary suspension” to its sponsor licence. “We hope and expect this will be lifted soon,” it said. Later correspondence from the company said the suspension would be lifted on 13 June, followed by emails saying a decision would come on 10 July, then 24 July.
However, on 6 August the seasonal workers were told that the company’s licence had been revoked altogether and that they would not be able to come to the UK.
“We lost our jobs, our money, our health – in short, we sacrificed everything we had for this,” said Bahromjon, 23, who quit his job as a solar panel installer after he was offered a placement in the UK. He is now unemployed and unable to look for work abroad because his passport is still with the company in charge of processing UK visas.
“We didn’t [do] something wrong. We just followed what Telpasc said to us and that’s all,” said Abdullo*, a 23-year-old former English teacher. “The saddest thing is that I have already resigned my work, and I was waiting for the visa […] for three months.”
He said the government and Telpasc should compensate people for the money they lost.
“The most important thing for me is to get back my money fully,” he said.
Former Labour shadow chancellor John McDonnell MP told TBIJ that this case shows how vulnerable workers are to exploitation.
“There needs to be an independent review of the [seasonal worker visa] scheme to determine its fundamental overhaul,” he said. “In the meantime, the government must take immediate action to secure compensation from this company for these workers.”
Zack Polanski, deputy leader of the Green Party, said that the Home Office should ensure the workers are able to find jobs elsewhere given that many farmers might want to employ them.
“This is an appalling injustice that could leave these workers in a desperate situation through no fault of their own,” he said.
An Uzbek official said the country’s government agencies have been approached by workers asking for help in recovering the money they had paid out. “Every day, we are receiving lots of complaints, reports regarding this issue,” said the official.
The Uzbek government recently met with its British ambassador to discuss the situation, and it has contacted the UK’s Home Office and the Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority (GLAA).
Caroline Robinson, executive director of the Worker Support Centre, which assists workers on the scheme, said the new government has a chance to make changes to the visa so that workers are protected.
“These risks are baked into this scheme which has been designed without input from workers,” she said. “We have a ridiculous situation where no one has stopped to think, until now, what will happen to those workers affected by this licence suspension and revocation.”
Workers such as Ubay, Bahromjon and Abdullo are vital to the UK’s horticultural sector, which is reliant primarily on migrants to pick crops in fields and pack them in warehouses. A recent government-commissioned review into labour shortages in the agriculture sector said that “unappealing working conditions” made it difficult to recruit British people.
Despite concerns over the seasonal worker visa scheme, it has been repeatedly expanded since it was launched five years ago. From an initial 2,500 workers in 2019, now more than 30,000 come each year from more than 60 countries around the world.
The visa relies on a handful of recruiters – called “scheme operators” – to sponsor workers’ visas and secure them placements on UK farms. Previously, many workers were given zero-hours contracts, but rules have been tightened and now scheme operators need to guarantee that people on the visa are given at least 32 hours of paid work per week. Ethero had its licence revoked for failing to fulfil this condition, according to the Grocer magazine.
The Seasonal Worker Interest Group, a coalition of NGOs and frontline organisations that support seasonal workers, has called on the government to compensate workers left out of pocket and for the immigration status of workers who are already in the UK to remain unaffected.
“Our organisations have previously pressed the government to have a publicly accessible plan in place to deal with the fallout of licence revocation for workers, and asked for information to share with workers since we knew the licence was suspended in May, to no avail,” it said. “This is yet another systemic failure in the governance and operation of the seasonal worker visa.”
The Home Office told TBIJ: “Sponsors must meet their obligations to workers or potentially face removal from the sponsorship register.”
It did not answer questions as to whether it would compensate workers.
A spokesperson for the GLAA said it had been contacted by the Uzbek government and was liasing with the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the Home Office.
“We have asked them to consider a response to the Uzbek government as they work to resolve this,” the spokesperson said.
* Names have been changed
Header picture: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Reporter: Emiliano Mellino
Bureau Local editor: Gareth Davies
Deputy editors: Chrissie Giles and Katie Mark
Editor: Franz Wild
Production editor: Alex Hess
Fact checker: Somesh Jha
Our Bureau Local project has several funders. None of our funders has any influence over our editorial decisions or output
—
31st July 2024: BBC Indonesia -‘I’m at my wits end’ – The fate of Indonesia’s aspiring seasonal fruit pickers who have yet to be sent to the UK (translated from Bahasa)
A total of 145 new people from Indonesia were sent as seasonal workers on British plantations this year, from a request for 500 Indonesian migrant workers (PMI) who were originally to be placed. In fact, the harvest season is currently at its peak.
Original Source: The BBC Indonesia – 31st July 2024
They were sent by PT Mardel Anugerah Internasional, the Indonesian Migrant Worker Placement Company (P3MI). The company partnered with AGRI-HR, one of the British companies licensed by the country’s government as an operator to bring in seasonal workers in the plantation sector.
Registering since mid-2023, a prospective PMI admitted to being anxious. He had been declared to have passed the initial screening stage.
“I have also deposited Rp5 million through Forkom. Promised to depart in July, postponed again promised to depart in August. Now it is not certain, yes I am worried,” said Totok.
6th August 2024: Fruitnet – Indonesian picker allegations highlight risk of exploitation for seasonal workers
Original Source: Fresh Produce Journal By Fred Searle – 6th August 2024
For the second time in two years, Indonesian pickers are alleged to have been charged illegal fees by a third party to come and work on UK farms
Forkom (communication forum) is a workers’ group formed by former fruit pickers for delivery in 2022. Officially, Forkom is not allowed to recruit. Forkom management denied recruiting for PT Mardel.
Another applicant, Mamat, claimed to have passed three stages of testing and spent more than Rp6 million. Mamat has not yet deposited the official fee for departure to England.
He claimed that the withdrawal of funds was still carried out even though the selection process was underway, but AGRI-HR emphasized that there should be no costs outside the provisions. This is in accordance with the statement of AGRI-HR Director, Jan-Willem Naerebout, that workers are not allowed to pay any costs outside the provisions.
“Until now I’ve exhausted all my efforts, left hanging and not leaving yet. I’m disappointed and restless,” said Mamat.
He became even more worried when he recently found out that his age, 51 years old, was being questioned even though age was not used as a benchmark during screening.
The two prospective migrant workers admitted that they did not mind spending more than the official benchmark as long as there was certainty of departure.
Responding to the concerns of prospective workers, President Director of PT Mardel, Delif Subeki, said that his party had informed prospective workers who had registered online and had taken the selection regarding the actual situation.
“It is possible that they cannot be placed in 2024 due to limited orders from the farm (plantation), and the majority of them stated that they are willing to wait until placement in 2025 if it is still possible,” said Delif Subeki in response to a question for BBC News Indonesia on Thursday (25/07).
AGRI-HR Director, Jan-Willem Naerebout, said that the placement was carried out based on requests from the plantation.
“So far we have received requests from plantations for 158 Indonesians. The number of workers requested in waves of 500 people was agreed with the embassy,” said Jan-Willem Naerebout.
Read also:
- See also: UK re-employs seasonal Indonesian fruit pickers – ‘I have no job here’ May 8, 2024
- See also: Indonesian former fruit picker becomes illegal immigrant and asylum seeker in UK – ‘This is the easiest shortcut’ January 30, 2023
- See also: Hundreds of Indonesian citizens flee to England, more than 1,200 Indonesian workers are threatened with cancellation of their migration plans February 15, 2023
PT Mardel said recruitment for seasonal workers to the UK this year closed in February because it already had enough applicants to fill the quota.
Meanwhile, AGRI-HR stated that recruitment was immediately stopped as soon as the issue of levies outside of official fees arose.
“As soon as AGRI-HR became aware of the allegations, they reported this to the relevant parties, GLAA and the Indonesian Embassy in London. The investigation is ongoing and at an early stage, Jan-Willem Naerebout told journalist Rohmatin Bonasir in London reporting for BBC News Indonesia.
The GLAA is a body in the UK that deals with workers and labour rights violations. The GLAA licenses and then supervises all recruitment companies, including seasonal worker operators.
Only six weeks on the job, already laid off
Of the 145 people sent to the UK so far, five have been dismissed after less than a month and a half of work after failing to meet fruit picking targets.
Three of them were immediately sent back to Indonesia even though they were supposed to work for six months. The other two refused to go home. They were still able to work thanks to the help of a migrant workers’ rights activist.
According to AGRI-HR Director, Jan-Willem Naerebout, each plantation company has its own minimum target and this fact has been explained to prospective workers in the recruitment process.
“The five workers were given three warnings each to increase their work speed. Unfortunately, despite further training and different assignments, the five workers still failed to meet the target.”
As a result, they were dismissed. One of them admitted that the salary they had received was not enough to cover the total departure costs of around Rp40 million, consisting of the official departure cost of Rp33 million plus levies and intercity transportation.
According to the worker who asked not to be named, the termination began with a misunderstanding in communication with the foreman. He thought that during the first three days he was not required to meet the target for fruit production, but rather just training.
“They said I was told to pick only good fruit, not to chase targets. It turned out that the target was still imposed and I did not reach the target,” said the worker.
The incident of the dismissal of five migrant workers from a plantation in England then raised a sensitive issue regarding the alleged collection of fees outside the reference for placement fees. Several workers claimed the costs they incurred were greater than those published.
Read also:
- Over 200 Indonesian migrant workers in UK sent home – ‘Mortgaged house, debt not yet covered’ December 6, 2022
- Thousands of Indonesian citizens lose hope of working on British plantations in 2023, Indonesian Embassy in London anticipates sending them next year April 6, 2023
- Hundreds of Indonesian citizens flee to England, more than 1,200 Indonesian workers are threatened with cancellation of their migration plans February 15, 2023
The issue of excessive fees arose in the 2022 placements, which among other things resulted in the termination of sending workers to the UK in 2023. The UK government prohibits any form of charge to applicants for finding work or trying to find work.
President Director of PT Mardel, Delif Subeki, emphasized that his company does not charge money outside the reference fee set by the Indonesian Migrant Workers Protection Agency (BP2MI). The reference fee for placing PMI in the UK is less than IDR 40 million.
“We have clearly conveyed and emphasized to applicants both in the information dissemination stage, presentation, face to face/final interview , and finally during the briefing one day before departure that PT Mardel does not use or cooperate with any third party in recruitment and applicants will be able to finance visa fees, round trip tickets, medical check-ups , insurance and other costs in accordance with the provisions of the Indonesian government.”
Delif added that new workers were asked to pay the fee after passing the face-to-face interview stage.
In fact, a number of workers claimed that those who registered through Forkom were asked to deposit money from the start. Some of them showed proof of fund transfers.
PMI Forkom Coordinator Agus Hariyono denied that his organization charges fees for sending workers to the UK as seasonal workers. He asserted that what was charged was the organization’s membership fee.
“And the voluntary nature is Rp1.5 million for the organization’s operational costs. Apart from that, there are no other costs, and the departure costs of CPMI (prospective Indonesian migrant workers) are paid directly to PT Mardel through the personal accounts of each CPMI, with an estimated total departure cost of Rp33 million according to what was conveyed during the screening stage by PT Mardel,” he explained.
When the placement of seasonal workers to England was stopped in 2023 because many migrant workers sent the previous year ran away, Forkom actively lobbied the government and the DPR with the aim that sending migrant workers to England could be continued.
Both PT Mardel and Forkom denied that Forkom was involved in recruiting prospective workers that PT Mardel wanted to send to England. Both admitted that Forkom was involved in providing supplies to share experiences working on plantations.
So far, no workers have reported the alleged levies outside the official fees to law enforcement. However, the Director of Placement for the Asia and Africa Region at the Indonesian Migrant Workers Protection Agency (BP2MI), Sri Andayani said that her agency plans to conduct a summons for mediation between the sending company or P3MI and PMI.
“If the evidence shows that there are additional charges outside the official reference/stipulations that have been set, then P3MI must return the funds suspected of overcharging . The return time is based on the agreement of the parties,” he explained.
This year, England is again taking on Indonesian workers to be placed in the plantation sector through a seasonal worker scheme .
The first group consisted of 19 people who were sent off in mid-May. They were required to register online, go through a screening process – a series of tests and examinations – related to English language skills, knowledge of agriculture, and matters related to their work. They were also required to make payments through accounts in their own names.
However, behind the improvements in the recruitment process, there are still gaps in the burden of costs on workers.
The alleged two-year withdrawal of excess funds by agents and third parties in Indonesia, according to migrant workers’ rights activist Andy Hall, “would certainly make Indonesia a high-risk country for becoming a lucrative source of migrant workers like the UK’s seasonal worker scheme.”
The UK’s farming sector has long relied on seasonal workers to tend, harvest and pack fruit and vegetables. The need for workers has increased since Brexit, or Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union, in 2020.
Before Brexit, workers from eastern European countries came to the UK without visas. The problem of seasonal workers became even more complicated when the war broke out in Ukraine because many of its citizens could not fill jobs in the UK’s farming and livestock sectors.
The types of fruits harvested include apples, pears, strawberries, yaws and others. The picking season usually starts in April or May.
In the UK, seasonal workers are granted a six-month work visa with a salary according to the minimum wage standard of £11.44 (around Rp239,000) per hour. The salary is before deducting 20% income tax, accommodation, food, transportation and other personal expenses.
In 2024, the British government set a quota of 47,000 seasonal workers from abroad. Of that number, the plantation sector will receive 45,000 people and the rest for the livestock sector.
Besides Indonesia, fruit pickers come from countries such as Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Bulgaria.
Reporting by Rohmatin Bonasir reporting from London, England.
21st July 2024: Guardian Exclusive Investigation – Indonesians who paid thousands to work on UK farm sacked within weeks
Original source: The Guardian by Emily Dugan – 21st July 2024
Indonesians who paid thousands of pounds to travel to Britain and pick fruit at a farm supplying most big supermarkets have been sent home within weeks for not picking fast enough.
One of the workers said he had sold his family’s land, as well as his and his parents’ motorbikes, to cover the more than £2,000 cost of coming to Britain in May and was distressed to find himself unemployed with few possessions.
The labour exploitation watchdog is investigating allegations that he was one of several workers charged illegal fees of up to £1,100 by an Indonesian organisation claiming it would get them to the UK faster.
In Indonesia the worker earned about £100 a month selling food and said his parents were “very disappointed” as he had sold everything for a shot at helping his family. He said: “I feel confused and mad and angry about this situation. I have no job in Indonesia [and] I’ve spent all my money to come to the UK.”
The Guardian has spoken to four of the dismissed workers and in three cases seen evidence of apparent fee payments to a third party in addition to the more than £1,000 transferred for flights and visas to the licensed recruiters.
The allegations of illegal fees being paid in Indonesia raise questions about the risk of exploitation in the seasonal worker scheme, which allows workers from foreign countries a six-month visa to work on farms but makes them bear all the financial risk.
The Guardian understands the new immigration minister, Seema Malhotra, will look into exploitation in the work visa system to clamp down on exploitative practices. The Migration Advisory Committee recommended on Monday that seasonal visas should continue to “ensure food security” but that they should include more protections, such as guaranteeing at least two months of work.
Additional Reading:
Kumparan News 25th July 2024:Impact of 5 Indonesian Citizens Fired in England, PT Mardel Will Be More Selective in Recruiting Prospective PMI/Imbas 5 WNI Dipecat di Inggris, PT Mardel akan Lebih Selektif Rekrut Calon PMI
Kumparan News 25th July 2024: Allegations of Extortion by Indonesian Migrant Workers Who Pick Cherry: Company Denies, Ministry of Manpower Seeks Solution/Dugaan Pungli TKI Pemetik Ceri: Perusahaan Bantah, Kemnaker Cari Solusi
Kumparan News 24th July 2024: PT Mardel Denies Extortion of Indonesian Cherry Pickers in England, Ready to Compensate/PT Mardel Bantah Pungli ke WNI Pemetik Ceri di Inggris, Siap Ganti Rugi
Kumparan News 24th July 2024:
Commission IX Asks Government to Help Indonesian Citizens in England Suspected of Being Victims of Extortion
Haygrove, a farm in Hereford that supplies soft fruit to British supermarkets, gave the man and four other workers warning letters about the speed of their picking before dismissing them between five and six weeks after they started work. They were booked on a flight home by their recruiters the next day.
The workers said the targets at the farm in Ledbury included picking 20kg of cherries an hour. Another of the sacked pickers said: “It was very hard to meet the target because day by day there was less fruit.”
He said he borrowed money from “the bank, friends and family” and that he was still more than £1,100 in debt. “Why have I ended up like this? Now I’m in Indonesia with no job … It’s not fair for me because I’ve sacrificed so much.”
Beverly Dixon, the managing director of farming at Haygrove, said the farm had consistently had to make up the men’s wages because of poor performance and had supported them to try to improve. She said targets were “set based on achievable standards with the majority of pickers sometimes achieving more than double that speed”.
The five men only arrived in Britain in mid-May and were all dismissed from Haygrove on 24 June, having earned between £2,555 and £3,874. Once the cost of coming to Britain – as well as living costs – were taken from this, several said they were left with significant debts.
Two of the men ran away to London and refused to board flights home booked for 25 June. They have now been given new jobs in a packhouse after an intervention by a migrant welfare activist.
Andy Hall, the migrant labour rights specialist who intervened on behalf of the men, said: “This scandal shows once again that the entire burden of shouldering the multiple risks associated with the seasonal workers scheme in the UK is placed not on supermarkets, farms, scheme operators or other supply chain actors but on vulnerable workers from overseas.”
A Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority investigation was opened last month. It is understood to be focused on allegations over the illegal charging of fees in Indonesia.
Dixon said Haygrove was “deeply concerned” to hear of the “alleged financial challenge faced by the Indonesian workers, particularly if one or more paid an illegal recruiter in Indonesia” and the farm was fully supporting the GLAA investigation.
The Guardian revealed that Indonesians were coming to Britain with debts of up to £5,000 to unlicensed foreign brokers in 2022. The debts were to third parties, and AG, the British agency that officially recruited them, lost its licence as a seasonal worker sponsor.
Since then, Indonesia had been considered a risky country to recruit from, but the route was reopened this year by a new UK recruiter, Agri-HR. It worked in partnership with the Indonesian agent PT Mardel Anugerah, which also secured a licence to recruit to Britain, and was being supported by the Indonesian embassy.
However, workers allege a third party in Indonesia, Forkom, which appears to be a communication hub for Indonesians trying to work abroad, recruited workers and charged fees, saying it could get them to Britain faster. It is illegal to recruit without a licence under UK and Indonesian law.
Agri-HR said: “On hearing these allegations, Agri-HR immediately contacted the GLAA with the request to investigate these claims. The GLAA interviewed some workers that same day and are continuing with their investigations and further worker interviews have taken place and are scheduled.”
Workers told the Guardian that Forkom was encouraging its members to put pressure on the families of the dismissed pickers who ran away, with one saying his family in Indonesia was visited at home at 3am.
In messages to a Forkom WhatsApp group of recruited workers, its chair, Agus Hariyono, encouraged those still in Indonesia to put pressure on the men who had run away in Britain by going to their family homes. In a follow-up video call to members, he then allegedly asked workers to delete records of any money paid to Forkom.
Hariyono said his organisation was a social forum set up for Indonesians with seasonal worker visas after some did not return from the 2022 season, meaning the visa route was closed down. He said one worker “entrusted funds” to Forkom but that “this was intended as a deposit” and the funds were returned to his account to pay PT Mardel Anugerah directly.
Hariyono said it conveyed messages to families to encourage those who were dismissed to return to Indonesia and prevent a repeat of the 2022 season where one in five overstayed their visa.
Delif Subeki, of PT Mardel Anugerah, said his recruitment agency was introduced to Forkom by the Indonesian ministry of manpower and made a commitment to “give priority” to members. Subeki said it “clearly informed” applicants that it was not using any third parties for recruitment and that no fees should be paid.
16th July 2024: Financial Times -UK food sector should cover migrant workers’ upfront costs, advisers say
UK immigration: Migration Advisory Committee urges government to do more to stamp out abuses in seasonal worker scheme
Sourced from: Financial Times Delphine Strauss and Oliver Telling – 16th July 2024
The UK food industry should cover the upfront costs faced by migrant farm workers if it wants to keep access to the overseas labour it relies on, the government’s advisers on migration have said.
Farm workers coming to the UK are at risk of debt bondage because they often borrow money to cover flights and visas without knowing what they will earn, a report by the independent Migration Advisory Committee found.
To maintain current levels of food production, there was no immediate alternative given a lack of willing UK recruits to the seasonal worker scheme (SWS), the report published on Tuesday said, urging ministers to give industry certainty over the scheme’s future.
However, the report also said the industry and government had not done enough to stamp out abuses of workers’ rights in a scheme where they faced “an inherent imbalance of power” against employers.
The SWS allows UK growers to hire around 45,000 people a year on six-month visas.
The previous Conservative government said in May that the programme would run at least until 2029 but noted the aim would be to taper its size over time, while encouraging farmers towards automation.
Ministers should confirm visa numbers each year on a rolling basis, so the industry would in effect “have five years’ notice if the scheme were to be closed”, the MAC said.
Labour pledged before the general election on July 4 to reform the immigration system with a view to reducing overseas hiring, by making employers’ access to visas conditional on greater efforts to train UK workers.
However, it has not yet said what this will mean in practice or proposed any changes to the SWS.
But workers also need more certainty over how much they will earn, the committee added, calling for a guarantee of at least two months pay, to ensure they could recoup the costs of coming to the UK.
It urged the industry to accelerate action to move to an “employer pays principle”, so that recruitment and relocation expenses are borne by employers rather than workers.
An industry task force, including supermarkets, growers and recruiters, has said it will model waysan EPP model could work. But it has made slow progress because there is no consensus on how to share costs along the supply chain, given the tight margins imposed by retailers on UK growers.
The MAC said the task force needed to work faster and urged it to set a timeframe to present proposals. Ministers should then confirm the scheme’s continuation only if this timeframe was met, it said.
Recommended UK employment: Britain’s seasonal worker scheme leaves many migrants in debt, research finds
The committee noted that the government and employers needed to do more to inform workers of their legal rights and to enforce them through proactive inspections. It also called for a clearer process to refund income tax and help workers opt out of pension auto-enrolment.
Workers’ rights campaigners welcomed the committee’s recommendations. “All the risks of the seasonal worker scheme are on the workers, all the costs . . . It’s really important the government takes heed of this,” said Andy Hall, a migrant rights campaigner who has worked with the industry’s Stronger Together task force.
A government spokesperson said it would “carefully consider” the MAC’s findings and respond in “due course”.
Sophie De Salis, a sustainability policy adviser at the British Retail Consortium, said the task force’s study would be “a vital step” to understand how the EPP could be applied in practice.
It urged the government to adopt the MAC’s recommendations but also to scrap visa fees, arguing that these “heighten the financial risk to workers from the outset”.
The industry’s SWS task force said it acknowledged the committee’s call for its study to be conducted in a timely manner and was working closely with the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs on the jointly-funded project.
Additional Reading:
Independent 2nd June 2024: Vulnerable workers coming to UK in post-Brexit deal at risk of bullying and sexual harassment, report finds
Independent 29th May 2024: UK ministers pressed ahead with seasonal worker visa scheme for migrants despite UN experts’ warning of forced labour and human trafficking risks
Bureau of Investigative Journalism 29th May 2024: Government expanded visa scheme weeks after UN raised alarm over people trafficking
BHRRC 23rd May 2024: UK – Leading supermarkets asked to meet costs of implementing the Employer Pays Principle across supply chains by civil society group (see 9th May 2024 below); incl. company responses
Bloomberg 22nd May 2024: Fruit Picker Who Said Her Hands Bled From Work Sues UK Employer
Seasonal Worker Scheme Taskforce Update 17th May 2024: SWS Taskforce update on Employer Pays Principle study
GROCER 10th May 2024: SOURCING Workers’ groups call on supermarkets to pay seasonal labour fees – The groups said there are risks farmers will be unable to comply to new rules
Guardian 9th May 2024: UK Government says employers may be required to pay travel and visa costs for people getting seasonal worker visas
9th May 2024: Landworker’s Alliance and Allies call for UK supermarkets to pay recruitment related fees and costs for migrant workers
April 30th 2024: BBC World –England again employs seasonal fruit pickers from Indonesia (translation)
The Grocer 30th Apr 2024: Growers brace for up to £90m in additional seasonal worker costs in UK in move towards internationally compliant zero cost responsible recruitment model for vulnerable migrant workers
3rd April 2024: Financial Times (London) UK employment – Britain’s seasonal worker scheme leaves many migrants in debt, research finds
3rd April 2024: Independent – Migrant fruit pickers saddled with debts of up to £5,500 to come to UK through government scheme
26th January 2024: UK Seasonal Worker Scheme Modern Slavery Issues: Indonesian seasonal fruit pickers landed in debt bondage challenges Home Office
26th Jan 2024: ATLEU – UK government fails to protect workers from trafficking and exploitation
26th Jan 2024: ATLEU – Challenge to government’s Seasonal Worker Scheme
25th Jan 2024 Home Office: UK government survey on experiences of seasonal workers scheme confirms the exceptionally high levels of issues (confusion, fees etc) faced by Indonesian and Nepali workers in 2021/2022
24th Jan 2024: ATLEU – Seasonal worker recognised as a potential victim of trafficking
12th January 2024: UK government ‘breaching international law’ with seasonal worker scheme, says UN envoy
FLEX 26th Oct 2023 – Seasonal Workers’ Rights; Who’s Responsible?
21st July 2023: Vulnerable UK migrant workers at risk as audits of farm recruiters stall
17th March 2023 BHRRC Blog Series: UK Seasonal Worker Scheme Endangers Vulnerable Foreign Workers. (My Op Ed)
23rd February 2023: Farm workers on UK seasonal visas to be guaranteed 32 hours a week
Other stories on challenges of UK seasonal worker scheme:
1. Working in the UK: Hundreds of Indonesian Citizens Escape, More Than 1,200 Workers from Indonesia Threatened to Cancel (BBC, 16th Feb 2023)
2. AG Recruitment, UK recruiter of debt-hit Indonesian and Nepali migrant workers, loses seasonal workers scheme license following forced labour related allegations, worker abscondments and asylum claims (Guardian, 10th Feb 2023)
3. Indonesian former fruit pickers become illegal immigrants and asylum seekers in the UK – ‘This is the easiest shortcut’ (BBC, 26th Jan 2023)
4. Home Office accepts recommendations in Chief Inspector’s report on immigration system as it relates to the agricultural sector (Freeths, 16th Jan 2023)
5. Immigration: Investors warn food companies about risk of forced labour on UK farms (Financial Times 19th Dec 2022)
6. Investor statement on the UK Seasonal Worker Scheme (Public Investor Statement 19th Dec 2022)
7. Hundreds of Indonesian fruit pickers in UK seek diplomatic help (Guardian, 2nd Dec 2022)
8. Seasonal worker visa puts migrants at risk of exploitation, say supermarkets (Guardian, 2nd Dec 2022)
9. Seasonal fruit pickers from Nepal left thousands in debt after being sent home early from UK farms (Guardian, 13th Nov 2022)
10. Indonesia to investigate claims fruit pickers in UK seasonal agricultural workers scheme charged thousands to work in Kent (Guardian, 29th Aug 2022)