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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Garcia, M.P.
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
3/06/07
3/12/07 HM 52/aHLC/aHFL#1
SHORT TITLE Study Farm and Ranch Laborer Workers Comp.
SB
ANALYST Lucero
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY07 FY08 FY09 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring or
Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
Minimal
Minimal Non-Recurring Workers’
Compensation
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
SUMMARY
Synopsis of House Floor Amendment #1
House Floor Amendment #1 to House Memorial 52, as amended by House Labor and Human
Resources Committee, adds additional members to the task force to include farm and ranch
advocates and persons actively engaged in the insurance industry. The amendment also strikes
the requirement for the task force to draft appropriate legislation and instead requires the task
force to report to the appropriate interim legislative committee.
Synopsis of HLC Amendments
The House Labor and Human Resources amendments clarify that the workers’ compensation law
applies to employers of three or more workers excluding the owner
, and requests that the
Director of the Department of Agriculture be added to the list of individuals and organizations
who should receive a copy of the memorial.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Memorial 52 requests the Workers’ Compensation Administration (WCA) convene a task
force to study whether to extend workers’ compensation coverage for farm and ranch laborers.
The task force is to be composed of equal numbers of persons who are actively engaged as farm
and ranch business owners, persons who are farm and ranch laborers and their advocates and
staff from WCA. It also directs WCA to report to the appropriate interim committee the
conclusions and recommendations of the task force by November 2007 and to draft appropriate
legislation in response to those conclusions.
pg_0002
House Memorial 52/HLC/HF#1 – Page
2
The memorial directs that a copy of the memorial be transmitted to the advisory council on
workers’ compensation and occupational disease disablement compensation, WCA, the secretary
of labor, and the governor.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
This memorial does not contain an appropriation. There may be a slight fiscal impact
attributable to staff time and travel costs.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to the Farmworker Justice website:
http://www.fwjustice.org/Health&Saftey/workers_comp.htm
Although agriculture is one of the nation’s most hazardous industries, about half of all states
allow agricultural employers to provide little or no workers compensation coverage for migrant
and seasonal farm workers. There are many obstacles preventing farm workers from securing
needed workers compensation benefits. They include: lack of coverage; a small, but growing
trend for states to reduce or deny benefits to undocumented workers; workers’ reluctance to file
claims for fear of employer retaliation; and the difficulty of finding a doctor who will keep farm
workers off work long enough to allow them to fully recover. Without workers compensation
benefits, however, injured farm workers often forgo needed treatment or go into debt to obtain it.
Many states do not require agricultural employers to provide workers compensation coverage for
migrant and seasonal farm workers. The states are almost evenly split between those that provide
all or most migrant and seasonal farm workers with workers compensation coverage and those
that require little or no coverage for this workforce. Specifically, only 13 states, the District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands require employers to cover seasonal agricultural
workers to the same extent as all other workers. These jurisdictions are: Arizona, California,
Colorado, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Hawaii, Idaho, Massachusetts, Minnesota,
Montana, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Ohio, Oregon, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. In an
additional 13 states (including Florida and New York), only small farmers are exempt from
providing coverage to their migrant and seasonal farm workers. Moreover, employers who hire
legal temporary foreign workers, under the H-2A visa program, are required to provide workers
compensation insurance or equivalent benefits to their employees.
By contrast, 16 states do not require employers to provide any workers compensation insurance
for migrant or seasonal farm workers. These states are: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Georgia,
Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North
Dakota, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. In an additional eight states, coverage is limited
to full-time workers (e.g., Maine), workers in specialty jobs (e.g., South Dakota), or those
employed on large farms (e.g., Rhode Island).
DL/mt:csd