VT Farms, Migrant Workers, and the Visa Problem

VT Farms, Migrant Workers, and the Visa Problem

In the wake of a chaotic immigration enforcement action in South Burlington — where federal agents, state and local police, and protesters clashed for hours as ICE detained several individuals — immigration has suddenly moved from an abstract policy debate to a front-burner issue in Vermont.

At the same time, warnings of a potential increase in enforcement activity and a surge in reports — some confirmed, some rumors — have left parts of the state’s migrant worker community on edge.

But behind the headlines, protests, and growing anxiety is a more basic question: how does Vermont’s dairy industry rely on migrant labor in the first place — and why doesn’t federal visa law actually fit the job?

Vermont’s dairy industry depends heavily on migrant labor. But unlike many other parts of agriculture, dairy work runs year-round — and that creates a mismatch with federal immigration law that helps explain much of the current debate.

At the center of the issue is a federal visa program known as H-2A — and a broader disagreement over what kind of immigration solution Vermont should be pursuing.

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What is the H-2A visa?

The H-2A visa allows U.S. employers to bring foreign workers into the country for temporary or seasonal agricultural work.

Under the program:

  • The employer sponsors the worker
  • The visa is tied to a specific job and employer
  • Workers stay for a limited period tied to the job
  • Employers must provide housing, transportation, and minimum wage compliance

The key phrase is “temporary or seasonal.”

Why dairy doesn’t fit

Dairy farming is not seasonal. Cows need to be milked every day, year-round. That creates a structural problem:

  • H-2A = temporary labor
  • Dairy = permanent labor need

Because of that mismatch, the H-2A system does not cleanly apply to Vermont dairy farms.

What that means in Vermont

According to UVM Extension, Vermont has roughly 750 to 850 year-round migrant farmworkers, primarily in dairy.

Because there is no visa designed for that type of continuous work:

  • Many of these workers are likely outside the formal visa system
  • At the same time, Vermont also has legal seasonal workers (for crops, etc.) under H-2A

So the reality is mixed:

  • Seasonal farm labor → often legal (H-2A)
  • Dairy labor → often not covered by an appropriate visa

Why enforcement fears come up

There have been isolated immigration enforcement actions in Vermont, including a Border Patrol operation at a dairy farm near the Canadian border.

But compared to the total workforce, enforcement has been limited and selective, not widespread.

That creates a tension:

  • Workers are legally vulnerable
  • But not consistently targeted at scale

Which helps explain why fear can spike even without constant enforcement activity.

The policy split: visa vs residency

This is where the conversation often gets confused.

There are three different concepts being discussed:

1. Temporary work visas (like H-2A)

  • Time-limited
  • Job-specific
  • No automatic path to staying permanently

2. Residency (green card)

  • Legal right to live and work in the U.S. permanently
  • Can change jobs freely
  • Can eventually apply for citizenship
  • Eligible for some public benefits after certain conditions

3. Citizenship

  • Full political rights (voting, passport, etc.)
  • Cannot be deported
  • Final step after residency

Why this matters

A lot of the current debate isn’t just about visas.

  • Leahy’s approach (2010):
    Fix the labor mismatch by expanding H-2A to include dairy workers
  • Sanders, Welch, and advocacy groups:
    Focus more on legal status for existing workers (residency or pathways toward it)
  • Migrant Justice:
    Opposes expanding H-2A into dairy, arguing it creates a “captive workforce” tied to employers
    Instead supports legal status and worker protections

Why this becomes a sticking point

The disagreement is not just technical — it’s about what problem is being solved.

Visa-first approach:

  • Create a legal way to do the job
  • Reduce undocumented labor
  • Keep the system temporary and structured

Residency-first approach:

  • Legalize the current workforce
  • Remove dependence on employers
  • Move toward permanent status

These are fundamentally different policy directions, which is why legislation often stalls.

A quick comparison of visa types

Here’s how the major categories line up:

Visa TypePurposeDurationTied to EmployerPath to Residency
H-2ASeasonal farm laborShort-termYesNo
H-2BSeasonal non-farm laborShort-termYesNo
H-1BSkilled professional workUp to 6 yearsYes (but portable)Often yes
EB-3 (Other Workers)Permanent low-skill jobsPermanentNoYes (green card)

What a middle-ground fix might look like

Some policy proposals — including past efforts by Leahy — suggest modifying H-2A or creating a new category that would:

  • Allow year-round agricultural work
  • Provide multi-year visas
  • Improve worker mobility between employers
  • Maintain housing and labor protections
  • Keep it separate from automatic citizenship pathways

Such a system would aim to:

  • Match the actual labor needs of dairy farms
  • Reduce reliance on undocumented labor
  • Provide legal stability without fully entering the broader immigration debate

The bottom line

Vermont’s migrant labor issue is not just about enforcement or politics — it’s about a mismatch between:

  • The real-world needs of dairy farms
  • The structure of federal visa law

Until that gap is addressed, the state is likely to continue operating in a gray area:

  • A workforce that is essential
  • A system that doesn’t quite fit
  • And a debate where people are often talking about different solutions to different problems

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Dave Soulia | FYIVT

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#fyivt #h2a #immigration #dairy

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