October 16, 2025

How Trump's anti-immigrant policy could cut the food supply

 ABC News -  The U.S. Labor Department is warning of a potential food crisis linked to President Trump’s immigration raids – and one family-owned farm is caught in the middle.

"The near total cessation of the inflow of illegal aliens combined with the lack of an available legal workforce, results in significant disruptions to production costs and threatening the stability of domestic food production and prices for U.S consumers," according to a Department of Labor report submitted earlier in October.

Owyhee Produce, a third-generation agricultural business in Idaho, is now facing worker shortages in the wake of the Trump administration's increasing deportation raids. Shay Myers, Owyhee Produce's general manager, said the farm typically has 300 workers at peak harvesting times, with roughly 82 H-2A visa employees, who are temporary, seasonal agricultural workers from abroad. According to Myers, these seasonal workers – some from Mexico, some from South Africa and other countries – are granted a visa for up to nine months after being interviewed to determine whether they qualify. Owyhee then provides their travel to the farm, and their housing – "everything, really, when they're here except for food and clothing. That's part of the requirements," said Myers.

Given the cost and requirements, it may seem easier to hire local workers instead. Not so, according to Myers. "We would love to hire people from here. The reality is that we can't find the numbers of people here," Myers told ABC News. "We're in a rural area, number one. Number two: This is hard work. It is difficult work, and there are lots of people that are not willing to do it."....

James O'Neill, the director of Legislative Affairs for the American Business Immigration Coalition, which describes itself as "a bipartisan coalition of over 1,700 employers and CEOs from across the country to provide a strong and unified voice seeking lasting immigration solutions," says that President Trump's immigration raids are hurting agricultural labor forces and could lead to higher food prices.

"It's absolutely impacting the labor force," O'Neill told ABC News. "Nationwide, the USDA's ag labor survey suggests that somewhere between 50 and 60 percent of our farm labor workforce is undocumented immigrants."

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