Environment Secretary confirmed
today [19 February] the expansion of the Seasonal
Workers Pilot to allow farmers to hire up to 10,000
workers in 2020 – an increase from the previous 2,500
workers.
This will support the UK’s vital horticulture sector
and give fruit and vegetable growers access to a much
bigger pool of workers this year to help pick and
gather even more Great British produce.
With soft fruit production in the UK continuing to
skyrocket – growing by 185% between 1998 and 2018 – the
expansion will support these farmers over this year’s
busy summer harvest, while allowing government to test
the pilot further.
The announcement delivers on the commitment set out in
the Government manifesto and comes as Home Secretary
today set out plans
for a new UK points-based immigration system, which
will open up the UK to the brightest and the best from
around the world, while reasserting control of our
borders.
Environment Secretary said:
The farmers and growers I’ve spoken to have made a
powerful case for needing more workers during the
coming busy months.
Expanding our Seasonal Workers Pilot will help our
farms with the labour they need for this summer’s
harvest, while allowing us to test our future
approach further.
We will always back our farmers and growers, who
produce world-famous British food to some of the
highest standards anywhere in the world.
The Seasonal Workers
Pilot opened in 2019 and is designed to test
the effectiveness of our immigration system at
supporting UK growers during peak production periods,
whilst maintaining robust immigration control. It will
allow farms to hire workers for a period of up to six
months and will continue to run until the end of 2020.
The expansion will allow government to keep testing how
this pilot operates further, while helping to ease some
of the pressure felt on farms when they are at their
busiest.
Although the numbers are increasing based on the
success of the pilot so far, it is not designed to meet
the full labour needs of the horticultural sector. This
workforce boost will complement the EU workers already
travelling to the UK this year to provide seasonal
labour on farms during the busy harvest months.
The pilot will be evaluated ahead of any decisions
being taken on how future needs of the sector will be
addressed.