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U.S. dairy farmer says Trump’s mass deportation plan would put him out of business

1 min read

Dairy farms face uncertainty amid immigration crackdown


Wisconsin dairy farms face uncertainty amid immigration crackdown

02:59

John Rosenow, a fifth-generation farmer in Waumandee, Wisconsin, owns more than 900 acres and over 600 dairy cows. He said about 90% of the work on the farm is done by immigrants.

He said his mother and siblings back home depend on his salary, along with money made by his dad, who works on the same farm.

More than half of all workers in the U.S. dairy industry are immigrants, according to a study by Texas A&M University. Many are presumed to be undocumented since dairy farms generally can’t access seasonal visa programs to hire legal migrant workers. Like Kevin, many leave behind loved ones for wages that are below what American workers get.

“If I hired Americans to do the work, I would have to pay probably about $100,000 a year per person, and they would only work maybe 40-50 hours a week at that rate,” Rosenow said. “Clearly, I couldn’t be able to afford to pay Americans as much as they want.”

But as the new Trump administration begins to follow through on the president’s promise to deport undocumented immigrants, Rosenow is fearful of the future.

But Kevin doesn’t appear to share his boss’ fear.

“Four years ago, when he was the president, he said ‘I am going to deport everyone’ but it never happened,” Kevin said in Spanish. “Sometimes we would watch the news and we would see that a family was deported, and we were scared to go out and buy groceries. But I have not felt fear since then.”

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