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Chapter DWD 301, which includes requirements for employers who hire migrant seasonal agricultural workers, migrant labor contractors, and housing for migrant seasonal agricultural workers.
The changes to DWD 301 will go into effect on Feb. 1, 2024. A summary of changes are listed below.
Employers, camp operators, and migrant labor contractors are required to comply with the updated regulations. Migrant labor camp operators who already have received their camp certification or submitted their camp application will need to provide any additional application materials and make any updated updates to the camp to come into compliance.
Those who cannot comply can submit a request to receive a variance from specific requirements. The department may grant permission to individual camp operators to vary from particular provisions. The variance application can be found online
Find updates, templates, new and revised forms at the department's Migrant Seasonal Farm Workers website.
The department gathered input on these changes from members of the Governor’s Council on Migrant Labor, which is made up of representatives of employers who hire migrant workers, migrant labor advocates, and elected representatives. The department also met with an ad hoc committee of the Governor's Council on Migrant Labor to provide feedback on proposed changes. Updates were made based on their feedback.
The following summarizes updates to DWD 301.
Application for a Permit to Operate a Migrant Labor Camp Updates:
Facility Updates:
Disease and illness prevention:
As updated, the rule:
As updated, the rule:
Please reach out to MSFW@dwd.wisconsin.gov with questions.
The Wisconsin Department of Health Services issued DPH Numbered Memo BCD 2022-13 on September 1, 2022. This memo updates and supersedes recommendations outlined in DPH Numbered Memo BCD 2022-08 issued on June 3, 2022. The memo is to employers of migrant and seasonal workers, health care providers, local and tribal health officers with recommendations for COVID-19 prevention and mitigation among migrant and seasonal agricultural workers. The information in this memo describes public health measures for employers to reduce the risk of COVID-19 among migrant and seasonal workers, including recommendations for prevention, screening, vaccination, and referral for treatment.
Additional information and resources to assist employers of migrant and seasonal farmworkers, migrant labor camp operators, and migrant labor contractors in mitigating the risk and spread of COVID-19 among migrant workers can be found below:
Migrant Labor field staff are assigned a specific geographic area in which pre-occupancy inspections are performed. Each migrant camp must meet specific standards in order to qualify for certification. Certification is issued only after a determination is made by a field inspector that a migrant camp has met all standards required by state law.
Field staff are responsible for ensuring that migrant workers are provided with a Work Agreement at the time of recruitment or prior to the commencement of employment, whichever is earlier. Each inspector will visit all the migrant camps assigned to them to determine whether a migrant worker was provided with a Work Agreement. It is the responsibility of each inspector to explain to the migrant worker all aspects of that agreement and to assure that the employer who provides the agreement complies with all the terms and conditions of employment as outlined in that agreement and as required by law.
Field staff are responsible to monitor and register all known migrant labor contractorsr in the state. Migrant Labor Contractors means any person, who, for a fee or other consideration, on behalf of another person, recruits, solicits, hires, or furnishes migrant workers, excluding members of the contractor's immediate family, for employment in this state. Migrant Labor Contractors must comply with specific regulations and must apply with the department and obtain a certificate from the department to operate in this state. Migrant Labor Contractor are monitored regularly to ensure compliance with the state laws.
The Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act (MSPA) requires a contractor to obtain federal certification prior to performing any farm labor contracting activities. Generally, the MSPA applies to any person (or business) who recruits, solicits, hires, employs, furnishes, or transports migrant or seasonal agricultural workers (the MSPA refers to these activities as "farm labor contracting activities"). Persons employed by farm labor contractors (farm labor contractor employees) to perform such activities on behalf of the contractor are also required to register with the U.S. Department of Labor.
To register or obtain more information regarding federal registration please visit The United States Department of Labor's website.
Effective January 1, 1986, employers who hire 6 or more migrant workers who are engaged in hand labor must provide sanitation facilities to their workers. Field staff are responsible for the inspection of "field sanitation" facilities and assure that those facilities are provided, kept clean and in sanitary condition.
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