The Conversation
14 May 2025, 19:57 GMT+10
In today's political climate, temporary migrants in Canada are being scapegoated for everything from rising grocery bills to the affordable housing crisis. Yet migrant workers, particularly farm workers, face a hidden housing crisis that needs urgent attention.
Much of Canada's ability to produce food hinges on hiring migrant agricultural workers from countries like Mexico, Guatemala, Jamaica and elsewhere. Yet, housing for migrant agricultural workers in Canada is often overcrowded, dangerous and undignified.
Amid government inaction, our group of 29 researchers, clinicians and advocates with the Coalition for National Housing Standards for Migrant Agricultural Workers (CoNaMi), have developed a proposal for national housing standards. This work is backed by clinical experience, hundreds of interviews and surveys and migrant agricultural workers' own advocacy.
When two of us - Anelyse and Susana - interviewed 151 migrants in Ontario and British Columbia as part of our research, workers described conditions of isolation, crowding, inadequate ventilation, poor maintenance and close proximity to hazards such as agrochemicals.
Both during and after the COVID-19 pandemic, many workers struggled to access health care, groceries and social services. In addition, their phone and internet access was often unreliable.
Some workers reported employer-imposed restrictions on leaving the property, and bans on visitors. These living conditions pose serious risks to workers.
Similarly to research led by the Centre for Climate Justice in British Columbia, we also encountered several workers who endured significant hardships as a result of extreme weather events.
Consistent with recent research in Nova Scotia, we found that a lack of meaningful union representation, precarious status and low wages created coercive conditions in which workers felt forced to accept poor living conditions.
As migrant workers typically live on the farms where they work, the lines between work and home can be blurred. This living arrangement often contributes to isolation and surveillance by employers. It may also enable harassment and abuse.
Furthermore, migrants are geographically separated from their families for months or years at a time. Research that Adam has conducted in Atlantic Canada and Ontario, Jill in Quebec and Susana in Ontario and British Columbia, outlines how poor housing conditions not only threaten workers' health and well-being, but also contribute to their marginalization and exploitation.
Workers often describe feeling demeaned and controlled, and they wonder why Canada, a country so willing to accept their labour, is so reluctant to accept their common humanity.
In 2024, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery has described Canada's temporary foreign worker program, accessed by migrant agricultural workers to come to Canada, as "a breeding ground for contemporary forms of slavery," a statement echoed by international human rights watchdog Amnesty International.
Yet the federal government has failed to meaningfully improve housing conditions or establish clear, enforceable and mandatory standards. This inaction persists despite years of reviews, consultations and recommendations.
In fact, a study commissioned by the federal government to review the possibility of a national housing standard for migrant agricultural workers in 2018 called for greater consistency in housing quality assessments.
Academic experts have long called for a national housing standard, as well as proactive and unannounced housing inspections. Other professional and labour organizations have identified the need for greater inter-jurisdictional co-ordination and attention to issues of safety, pandemic preparedness, privacy and dignity.
Furthermore, safeguarding housing quality requires policy changes that provide meaningful status and adequate collective bargaining representation to migrant workers, as these conditions underlie their vulnerability in housing.
In the 2020 Auditor General of Canada report, the need for national minimum accommodation requirements for migrant agricultural workers was identified. However, housing remains a key concern for these workers who have not yet benefited from such proposed recommendations.
A national housing standard for migrant agricultural workers is a crucial step towards protecting their rights and mitigating their vulnerability. These standards must include:
Appropriate and enforced housing standards: Ensure robust and proactive enforcement of housing standard. Living quarters must be well-constructed, safe and dignified.
Privacy, security, access and freedom: Guarantee workers' rights to privacy, movement, access to health and social services and freedom from surveillance. Workers must have access to transportation and be able to enjoy rest, leisure and a social life.
Dignified living conditions: Safeguard basic rights to comfort, storage and personal care by prescribing minimum standards and ratios for private bedrooms, common areas, laundry and cooking facilities. Workers should have private bedrooms and reliable internet access.
Health and safety in housing: Protect workers from the spread of illness, extreme weather events and other hazards through proper air conditioning, ventilation and reduced occupancy ratios for bathrooms and kitchens.
Co-ordinated government leadership: Prevent different jurisdictions passing the buck by mandating co-ordination, data-sharing and training among federal, provincial and municipal governments. For example, inspectors should be trauma-informed and armed with strategies to mitigate implicit bias and to anticipate barriers this group faces because of their precarious status. The federal government must lead with adequate funding and policy reform to address barriers that prevent workers from advocating for decent housing.
The evidence is clear. Canadian governments must raise the bar from the floor, and create national standards for migrant agricultural workers' housing.
Get a daily dose of Calgary Monitor news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Calgary Monitor.
More InformationTOKYO, Japan: Toyota Motor Corp is bracing for a 21 percent decline in full-year profit, as the impact of President Donald Trump's...
Doha [Qatar], May 14 (ANI): Qatar Airways on Wednesday signed a massive deal with US manufacturer Boeing to purchase 160 jets, valued...
(250514) -- BEIJING, May 14, 2025 (Xinhua) -- A foreign guest views a motorcycle for police use at the 12th China International Exhibition...
The US president has reportedly backed off the renaming of the Persian Gulf in light of ongoing nuclear talks in Oman US President...
BEIJING, May 14 (Xinhua) -- The United States unreasonably imposed two rounds of tariffs on China under the pretext of fentanyl, and...
The US will be less and less interested in the EU and UK in the coming years, the French president has warned Western Europe must...
MONTREAL, Canada: Air Canada has cut its annual core profit forecast and missed first-quarter revenue estimates, citing a drop in U.S.-bound...
DUBLIN, Ireland: Ireland recorded its hottest-ever April day as temperatures hit 25.9 degrees Celsius, according to the EU's Copernicus...
In today's political climate, temporary migrants in Canada are being scapegoated for everything from rising grocery bills to the affordable...
BEIJING, May 14 (Xinhua) -- A selection of the best press photos from Xinhua.People visit the Xi'an Beilin Museum in Xi'an, northwest...
Public servants are the backbone of Canadian government. Canadians expect them to act in the best interest of society, to uphold Canadian...
New Delhi [India], May 14 (ANI): External Affairs Minister (EAM) S Jaishankar on Wednesday congratulated Anita Anand on her appointment...