comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Canadian agricultural human resource - Page 14 : comparemela.com

Migrant farmworkers coming to Canada remain at risk a year into COVID-19 pandemic

Migrant farmworkers coming to Canada remain at risk a year into COVID-19 pandemic Anna Mehler Paperny Bookmark Please log in to listen to this story. Also available in French and Mandarin. Log In Create Free Account Getting audio file . This translation has been automatically generated and has not been verified for accuracy. Full Disclaimer SHANNON VANRAES/Reuters Pedro, a Mexican migrant worker, knew he had to leave the Ontario cannabis operation where he worked when so many of his coworkers caught COVID-19 that his employer began to house them in a 16-person bunk house alongside the uninfected. Pedro moved in with friends in the nearby farming town of Leamington, Ontario, at the end of October. He asked to be identified under a pseudonym because he fears that speaking out will affect his chances of employment.

Canada s migrant farm workers still at risk one year into coronavirus pandemic

Published Wednesday, April 14, 2021 6:16AM EDT TORONTO, April 14 (Reuters) Pedro, a Mexican migrant worker, knew he had to leave the Ontario cannabis operation where he worked when so many of his coworkers caught COVID-19 that his employer began to house them in a 16-person bunk house alongside the uninfected. Pedro moved in with friends in the nearby farming town of Leamington, Ontario, at the end of October. He asked to be identified under a pseudonym because he fears that speaking out will affect his chances of employment. I didn t know where to go, where to get help. So I was left behind, hopeless, he said, speaking through a translator. About a week later, Pedro landed another job, working with peppers in a greenhouse. Conditions are better, he said.

Migrant farmworkers remain at risk a year into pandemic

Article content Pedro, a Mexican migrant worker, knew he had to leave the Ontario cannabis operation where he worked when so many of his co-workers caught COVID-19 that his employer began to house them in a 16-person bunk house alongside the uninfected. Pedro moved in with friends in the nearby farming town of Leamington, Ont., at the end of October. He asked to be identified under a pseudonym because he fears that speaking out will affect his chances of employment. “I didn’t know where to go, where to get help. So I was left behind, hopeless,” he said, speaking through a translator. About a week later, Pedro landed another job, working with peppers in a greenhouse. Conditions are better, he said.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.