Foreign workers at N.B. seafood plants face threats, cramped quarters and racism, study finds - Action News
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New Brunswick

Foreign workers at N.B. seafood plants face threats, cramped quarters and racism, study finds

A new report paints a grim picture of the conditions faced by temporary foreign workers in New Brunswick's seafood industry.

Report calls on governments to regulate housing, working conditions to protect 3,000 workers

A crate of freshly caught lobster
Lobster and other seafood feed a multibillion-dollar industry in New Brunswick. (Isabelle Larose/Radio-Canada)

Four people, sleepingin one room, wake upearly to line upto usewashrooms they share with a dozen others.

They take a two-hour bus ride to work at aNew Brunswick seafood plant, making several stops, when a straight drive would have taken 15 minutes.

Ata lobster processing plant, they standin one place for 10hours, facing dangerous, finger-crushingmachinery with little training and can only nod when a supervisor screams abuse at them.

According to a new report, the situation faced by temporary foreign workers in New Brunswick isprecarious.

Nat Richard, a spokesperson for lobster-processing plants, dismissed the report, saying it unfairly discredited the industry based on a small number of interviews with workers.

"New Brunswick processing plants are subject to extremely rigorouscontrols and inspections," he said Wednesday.

Work the industry relies on

The workers' experience is compiled from interviews with 14temporary foreignworkers in the province's seafood industry, and one hired to be a mushroom picker.

The workersspoke under conditions ofanonymity toresearchers from Dalhousie University,St. Thomas University, Cooper Institute and the Madhu Verma Migrant Justice Centre.

The report,released Wednesday, includes accounts of exploitation, racism, and threats of deportation, all affecting people paid $13 an hour to do work on which the industry relies.

"They pay us the minimum wage, the lowest you can afford," one worker told the researchers.

"Because we're doing the work that a lot of Canadians don't want to do, well, be fair with the payment. I will not say that they have to pay us the same as some Canadians, but well, come closer, right?"

At the end of their shifts, someworkers suspect their supervisor of under-weighing the meat they processed to avoid paying thema bonus, said the report, which does not identify the plants or their locations.

And the workersneed the bonus to pay backmore than$1,000 a recruitercharged each of themto help with the paperwork that got them to New Brunswick.

No visitors allowed

Back in theirrural housing, the workers line up again to wash the smell of seafood off. Some of themwant to invite friends over, butdon't, because they fear their boss will find out and scold them.

The boss is their landlord and forbids visitors.

Raluca Bejan,the study's lead author andassistant professor of social work at Dalhousie University,said overall, working and livingconditions in New Brunswick are "much more precarious," than what the researchers found in a similar study in Prince Edward Island.

"Here we have 10, 20 people living in one accommodation ... for the most part unsuitable," she said.

One worker lived in an unfurnished apartmentand could not buy any furniture or appliances, except a second-hand microwave, the report said.

A person wearing gloves standing in front of a container of shellfish.
The majority of New Brunswick's temporary foreign workers work in seafood processing. (CBC)

The worker slept "on the floor, just like that. [I] bought some blankets. A friend gave me a blanket and I bought another one, and that's how I stayed."

Most housing also had little hot water, low temperatures, and no internet access,Bejan said.

"Also housing tends to be very isolated. So workers have no way to go to a grocery store," she said.

The workers have to rely on their employers, some of whom dock paycheques for a van tripto the supermarket, Bejan said.

On these trips, they have onehour to shop, a worker said.

"Many times, you go out, and the van isn't there. They left you there. And you must get a taxi to your home."

Bejan said the researchers also found alot more "verbal abuse andyelling" compared to P.E.I.

The workers were all interviewed after the COVID-19 pandemic was declared.

The report says the pandemic exacerbated problems that already existed, but the fear of foreign workers bringing in the virus made some issues worse, such as employers being unreasonably strict.

The report also says some workers felt they weren't equipped with enough personal protective equipment, and some had to buy their own cleaning supplies.

Several workers said they experienced racism and xenophobia, both from their employers as well as the wider community.

Some workers said they feel they're treated differentlybecausethey're foreign, and noticedpreferential treatment to their Canadian counterparts.Some also recounted insults hurled from cars and being called "damn Mexicans," while trying to shop at a store.

One worker said they don't mind the long hours and difficult work, because it's the job, but it's all made almost impossibleto manage because of the difficult living conditions.

Since the pandemic, the number of temporaryworkershasbeen growing "exponentially," Bejan said. In 2019, the province had around 1,600 temporary foreign workers.

At the end of 2022, there were around 3,600 temporary workers, 60 per cent of them coming from the low-wage streamand supplying the seafood industry.

What about government regulations?

Bejan said the researchers studied the low-wage stream of temporary foreign workers, mostly from Mexico and Philippines, which is the least regulated of the three streams.

Other streams, which bring in agricultural workersfor example, havehousing standardssuch as no more than two people per room. In this program, there is no such rule.

"There area lot of things like that, which I think can be quickly remediated by introducing more regulations and guidelines," Bejansaid.

The report asks the federal government to grant permanent residency to the workers, abolish employee-specific work permits that prevent workers from speaking up out of fear of deportation, establish minimum labourstandards, ensure access to safe housing and create bilateral agreements with the countries that most of the workers come from.

The recommendations to theprovincial government are similar, but include specifically strengthening the EmploymentStandards Act to protect workers from abuse, removing barriers to unionization, andprovidinghealthinsurance andlegal aid.

Carla Qualtrough, the federalminister of employment, workforce development and disability inclusion, declined a request for an interview Wednesday.

The New Brunswick government said it is still reviewing the report butissued a statement saying anyone with concerns about their workplace should report them to theemployment standards branch.

"Anytime we hear stories or reports of this nature it is troubling," said Paul Bradley, spokesperson for the Department of Post-Secondary Education, Training and Labour.

Bejan said that when it comes to employers,there's no disagreement thattheir primary aim is to make a profit.

"The state needs to jump in and put some regulations so theemployers behave," she said.

With files from Information Morning Moncton