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Commentaries and editorials

Broetje Orchards Contributes
to the Community

by Susan Palmer
Walla Walla Union-Bulletin, June 5, 2015

I have admired Broetje Orchards for its contributions to the community,
its pro-employee policies and its deep humanity.

(Bob Brawdy photo) Workers at Broetje Orchards pick apples in 2013 near Prescott, Wash. An immigration official said Thursday that the government found last year the company employed nearly 950 immigrants who lack proper work authorization. For as long as I have lived in the Walla Walla Valley, I have admired Broetje Orchards for its contributions to the community, its pro-employee policies and its deep humanity.

Several of my students at the community college, children of migrant workers, have benefitted enormously from the financial support from Vista Hermosa scholarships supporting a first generation of college-bound students.

I have also witnessed the testimony of Broetje employees encouraged to pursue a broad range of educational opportunities to enhance their language skills, coupled with enhancing their work and life skills.

Not long ago, I also recall a devastating shortage of workers, leaving apples to rot on the ground.

It saddens me that no sensible solution has been reached to resolve agricultural labor needs with unaccommodating immigration, or guest worker, policies.

Broetje Orchards responded that "this case highlights what is clearly a dysfunctional and broken immigration system ... The agricultural labor shortage needs to be fixed, and now."

I couldn't agree more.

Broetje Orchards has been so forward thinking, community minded, and open hearted that the penalty they have incurred is almost shameful.

Over all the years of operation, Broetje Orchards has generously given our broad community so much more than it has incurred in its unprecedented financial penalty.

I hope the citizens of the Walla Walla Valley will join me in supporting Broetje Orchards in their efforts to bring about a more equitable immigration and guest worker program that benefits us all.

Related Pages:
Broetje Orchards Agrees to Pay a $2.25 Million Fine for Illegals by Miriam Jordan, Wall Street Journal, 6/9/15
Broetje Orchards Puts People Before Profits by Stan Friedman, The Christian Century, 11/18/8
Irrigation from 4 Lower Snake Reservoirs by Reed Burkholder, Fact Sheet 1993


Susan Palmer, Walla Walla
Broetje Orchards Contributes to the Community
Walla Walla Union-Bulletin, June 5, 2015

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