<p>A cap on visas for workers from foreign countries has some Vineyard employers scrambling to fill jobs before the summer.</p>
A new cap on visas for seasonal workers from foreign countries has some Martha’s Vineyard employers scrambling to fill jobs before the summer tourist crush begins.
Like many resort destinations, Vineyard businesses use J-1 and H-2B visa programs to fill a workforce demand that is not met by the supply of American workers. For the past decade, foreign workers from Jamaica, Ghana, Serbia, Croatia, Bulgaria, Kazakhstan and elsewhere have become more of a presence behind counters, wheeling housekeeping carts and washing dishes during the Island’s busiest season.
The J-1 visa program is an exchange program allowing international students to come work in the United States. The H-2Bvisa program allows 66,000 foreign workers to come to the United State and work for six months, split into two seasons. In past years, returning H-2B visa workers were not counted toward the cap. That exemption expired on September 30, 2016 and was not renewed.
The cap of 33,000 H-2B visa workers for the summer season was met on March 13. Employers can only petition for visa holders 90 days before they start work, meaning businesses that start later in the season stood a lower chance of making it under the cap.
Cong. William Keating has introduced legislation that would bring back the exemption for returning H-2B visa holders for this season. He has also filed for an audit of last season’s visas to bring over any of the unused 33,000 to this season.
Yet as spring begins in earnest, some employers are still unclear if they will be able to fill positions with the H-2B visaholders they petitioned for.
Nancy Gardella, executive director of the Chamber of Commerce, said every year brings staffing concerns, but these have been amplified this year because of the visa issue.
“Quite a number of businesses I talked to this year are very, very frustrated with how the new laws have impacted their ability to return employees who have worked with them previously through the H-2B visa program,” she said. “It’s a very popular program here on the Vineyard to get adult workers and some of those workers are in supervisory positions.”
Ms. Gardella said the Vineyard just doesn’t have enough workers in the demographic needed for the hard labor jobs that visa holders often fill.
“We have a large retiree base. Those people won’t want work landscaping or busing tables at one in the morning. They won’t do housekeeping,” she said.
“We have abundance of high school students. They aren’t going to do that either. We don’t have the 18 to 50-year-olds who are going to work these jobs. We have to find them.”
At Cronig’s Markets, J-1 and H-2B visa holders fill out various staff positions across the two stores. Owner Steve Bernier said Wednesday he feels very uncertain about the upcoming season.
“I have a feeling this is going to be the summer we won’t forget,” said Mr. Bernier. “It’s a tough enough thing when everything goes right... I can’t imagine how this is all going to work.”
Of the approximately 120 workers he employs during the summer, 35 come through visa programs, Mr. Bernier said. About three-fourths are returning workers, both H-2B and J-1. He equated putting together a summer workforce with putting together a puzzle.
“Right now the pieces are not fitting and working,” he said. “The worst case scenario is picture Cronig’s closing at 6 p.m. at night because we don’t have the staff.”
Congressman Keating, reached by phone, said the H-2B visa issue has been viewed as an immigration issue when it is really a small business issue.
“Our economy is growing, we’re having great success in hospitality and service industries, there’s more demand and that demand has resulted in the need for more H-2B visas,” he said. “There are people coming to meet most of the need. There will be businesses in our region that still won’t be able to have the personnel they need for the season because there is a cap.”
Many of the visa workers on the Island are returning workers. Mike McCourt, owner and general manager at Murdick’s Fudge, who made it under the cap, said 13 of his 14 H-2B visa workers for this season are returning. It’s a staff he has been curating over the years, picking and choosing and working on the recommendations of his trusted employees. “It’s like having a year-round employee,” he said. “They opened up and closed down last year. They come in, set everything up and we’re ready to roll.”
His three best fudge makers are H-2B visa holders from Jamaica. Daniel Ferguson has been with Murdick’s for five years, Ricardo Salmon for about four and Davyan Miller joined last year.
Furthermore, he said, the workers stick around for the entire season.
“I can depend on the person I appoint in April will be there in October,” he said.
Mr. McCourt has been working with H-2B visa holders for 20 years. One year, right after the terror attacks of 9-11, visas were restricted and Murdick’s missed the cap. Mr. McCourt had to scramble, looking to visa workers who came to the United States during the first half of the year.
“We recruited H-2B workers at ski resorts, filed for extensions, and they came here and worked for me that summer,” he said. “I had to train everybody from ground zero.”
Mid-season, as American college students return to school, keeping a business staffed is even more difficult.
“Finding employees, it becomes a mad scramble end of July and first of August,” he said. “Especially people who start losing employees, it becomes a bidding war.”
In Oak Bluffs, Summercamp Hotel, formerly the Wesley Hotel, relies on visa workers as the backbone of its housekeeping department. General manager Tania Pereira said they employ about 40 seasonal workers to care for their 100 rooms and about 60 to 70 per cent of those are hired through a visa program. Concerns this year about staffing are more worrisome than last year, she said. Hiring is handled out of the main office for Lark Hotels, which owns the Summercamp.
“It’s never 100 per cent easy, because you could petition for a certain number and we can’t petition for new H-2B visas,” she said. “We’re a little more nervous than past years, definitely.”
Businesses that rely mainly on J-1 visa holders to fill gaps left by American workers are facing less anxiety than those who use H-2B, as J-1 visas are not subject to the cap.
JB Blau, owner of several restaurants including Sharky’s, the Copper Wok and Martha’s Vineyard Chowder Co., relies on J-1 visa holders to fill a gap in staff between the summer season and the winter to keep his restaurants open year round.
“If you can’t bridge September and October, there’s no way to get to November,” he said.
Smaller businesses, who don’t act as visa-holder sponsors, benefit from the influx of workers in the summer and often employ the foreign visa holders as a second job.
Jane Cecilio, co-owner of Fella’s said she hires many J-1 visa holders once they arrive on the Island. However, the tense environment surrounding immigration has her concerned.
“I’m hoping all the J-1s come, I’m a little worried this year,” she said. “It’s tough to find staff. And finding good people, that’s the bottom line always. We do count on visa people, very much so. I don’t know what it is, but we don’t get as many high school and college kids anymore.”
As for businesses waiting to hear if they can count on returning visa holders, Congressman Keating said the soonest they will hear is in about three weeks, when Congress considers a resolution that includes an amendment exempting returning workers. It is the second time such an amendment has been sought this year.
“There is no reason businesses should have to go through this every season...if we could deal with the returning worker issue, this anxiety would end,” he said.

Comments
Let's hope this gets resolved
Dean Rosenthal EdgartownLet's hope this gets resolved before the summer tourist crush. Cronig's closing at 6 PM, as Steve Bernier says in the article of a worst case scenario, would be a rough thing to have to live with, for sure. Jane Cecilio says, "I don't know what it is, but we don't get as many high school and college kids anymore." Could it be that businesses have been hiring J-1s for so long that high school and college kids no longer apply for jobs that they know will and have been filled for years? A possibility.
I do not know one single high
Islander MVI do not know one single high school kid or kid home from college who has ever applied for a job at Cronigs. Not one in the last 10 years or so. The kids I know do landscape/gardening or babysitting/nannying or they work in restaurants. I also know a couple of kids who have worked in nice, higher end stores where the tourists shop. But none in any supermarkets. I'll have to ask them why!
What a crisis. You mean we
deshandra brown EdgWhat a crisis. You mean we will no longer be able to buy those 'bargain' $20 hamburgers? Run a fast boat to new Bedford you'll get all the cheap help you need to maintain your excessive profit margins.
Not sure where have been, but
gina Menemsha/nycNot sure where have been, but FYI there has been reliable Fast Ferry Service between MVY & New Bedford for over 10 yrs in the summer.. The issue at hand is more complicated than just going to New Bedford, where a modest economic recovery is also happening where many folks forced out of Newport due to increasing cost of living have moved into New Bedford..
It's really about the quality of employees..
If anything Deshandra, this
Robert Skydell ChilmarkIf anything Deshandra, this article should reveal the inherent problems business owners face on MV in filling their summer staff needs. A more careful reading of the article will bear this out. Nothing in the article suggests the hidden desire or need to exploit either the customers or the workers. But taking your suggestion on face value; how much does a r/t ticket on the ferry cost? Would this added expense necessitate paying higher wages? Would this turn your hypothetical $20 hamburger into a $25 hamburger?
Sadly, your preconceived prejudice is not affected by either economics or woods to the contrary. I also found it heartening that so many workers return year after year to work for the same businesses. Perhaps another blow to the oft-stated opinion that these are exploited workers.
Sorry you won't get any
deshandra brown EdgSorry you won't get any sympathy on that one. Business owners on MV routinely GOUGE customers with respect to pricing for mediocre goods and services. They have a captive audience and I for one get tired of hearing the constant whining. As another poster so eloquently stated, its simply supply and demand- if you page wages commensurate with the demand for labor you will have no problem finding employees. There is no justification for a hamburger costing $20 (or your projected 25) when the best establishments off island present the same meal for 50% of the cost. And make no mistake about it, the cost of real estate off island in places like Manhattan make MV look like a bargain. Sure MV has a shorter season, but there is NO competition from 'value priced' restaurants as in the rest of the USA. Everyone jumps on the 'gouge-the-tourist' train and charges whatever they can. And that's fine- be my guest. I'll never pay $25 for the 'classic rubber chicken sandwich' of institutional quality that seems to be the norm. Not a chance. And if the employers can't pay enough for the hired help to take a fast ferry from New Bedford, they better figure out another plan. And @Gina/menemsha/nyc...that boat schedule is tailored to getting muffy and buffy here, not the working stiff from New Beige. The schedule needs to accommodate workers not tourists.
US high school and university
Thomas Hodgson WTUS high school and university students come with a major shortcoming. Nowadays. US schools often start their fall terms in August. Which means that those students leave their summer jobs between the first and third weeks of August, at the height of the summer season. The J-1 workers are usually able to stay through August, into September or even later. If you were running a summer business here, you might prefer employees who could stay the full season.
When I first came to the
Andy T. Vineyard HavenWhen I first came to the island for work as a college student. I had a place to live for the entire season. That home was with a friend who had spent almost every summer of his life on the island. So, I was set. Once I found a job I noticed a few of my boss’s problems with finding reliable employees. The unreliable employees tended to be other collage kids whose families had summer homes, really only working to “learn the value of a dollar.” And most of the reliable employees where visa holders or kids who would most likely be changing housing more than once throughout the summer. The simple truth is, the collage kids who have summer homes, are going to the island for summer break. Not a working vacation. And most Off islanders have no idea of the employment opportunities on island. Frankly the housing problem would probably scare them off anyway. That said. The years I worked on island where some of my best. I had a great experience with my working vacation. And Mr. F will always be the best Boss I have had the sheer luck of knowing. If there were a way to ensure stable living conditions and advertise to colleges, I’m sure there would be fewer problems in finding workers.
My two cents
“We have abundance of high
Slater MV“We have abundance of high school students. They aren’t going to do that either."
Oh right, because they are lazy and entitled. I remember what it was like, I was exactly the same way. Turns out if you want to be successful and feel fulfilled, no honest work should be "beneath you", but yeah, it's not that you don't have the workforce, it's that 80% of your available young local workforce has a horrible work ethic and no motivation.
Employers might have to pay
Jay Ayer ChilmarkEmployers might have to pay higher wages to attract workers. Has anyone calculated the true cost of living on the Vineyard? Let's say that rent should be no more than 1/3 of your pre-tax wages. If a bare room with a bathroom down the hall costs $1,000/month the math gives us a wage of $18.75/hour. If these kids are going to have anything left after paying the other costs of being here it may have to be $25/hour. Otherwise they will take chances. They may live with 22 other roommates in a house with 3 bedrooms as recently happened in OB. In that case, the septic tank overflowed. They chose to pump raw sewage into the yard so they could continue flushing toilets.
Who gets the blame for that? The kids or their slave wages?
The labor market is driven by
Tom NJThe labor market is driven by economics, increase the hourly wage for employees and you will fill the jobs.
Visa workers dont pay ss or
Ken EDGVisa workers dont pay ss or fica. Really no benefit to America. I imagine if they did they might raise the cap. think about it. Its 15.3 percent of payroll.
Housing is another issue that
Ssuan OsmersHousing is another issue that college kids face if they want to come work on the Island. I have friends who would consider it but have no place to live.
This could be a good thing...
Mike Vineyard havenThis could be a good thing.....it might get more college students to work so they can pay off their student debt......i know my son will be out looking for a job waiting tables rather than partying this summer. Good luck to all the local businesses....i will see you out there and support you all i can.
Mike I agree
Luke OBMike I agree
As one who's first job was
Ivan Drechsler Tubac,AzAs one who's first job was with the Colonial Inn, back in 1969, I remember the difficulty of staffing back then. The primary answer that went forward to find the seasonal staffer was to scan the horizon of the prime season being opposite to the Vineyard. There used to be a strong exchange between resort areas in Florida and Arizona, and a rotation was made and housing was provided.Some even opened businesses in those opposite areas and reaped the benefits of having a dedicated staff plus another season.Ski resorts are also prime to finding the more transient lifestyle staff.Best of luck!!!
I respect the businesses that
KRS AquinnahI respect the businesses that pay a decent living wage and don't resort to the possible exploitation of H2 Visas. If you think there is a worker shortage, it's because you are not paying a decent living wage. I would advise all readers to ask businesses and restaurants if they hire H2 workers, what they pay and whet the living conditions are. For me if they hire H2, I don't return.
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