Who picked all the fruit and veg in the 70's and 80's when the the Soviets kept their lap dogs on a short leash?
Amongst other reasons:
1. A perception that their rights here have changed.
2. A climate of increased hostility towards them, and their families.
3. 'Lower pay' in relation to their home currency due to the nosedive in the value of the Pound.
No, it really didnt.. There were fruit picking jobs in the earlier links. For the sake of saving face on NSC, you refused to see them.
no there wasn't and you had this pointed out to you by another poster. I did my own search and found 3, one in Perth Scotland and 2 in Norfolk. Now thats not very good if you live in the south, it shows how some job markets have dried up as well as having wages supressed in others.
Who picked all the fruit and veg in the 70's and 80's when the the Soviets kept their lap dogs on a short leash?
Amongst other reasons:
1. A perception that their rights here have changed.
2. A climate of increased hostility towards them, and their families.
3. 'Lower pay' in relation to their home currency due to the nosedive in the value of the Pound.
Where are the UK university and college students when you need them?
local people before the expansion and acceptance of the welfare state as away of life.
I live in an area where there are numerous farms/companies who employ labour from abroad .
I have never in all my years of living here seen a single advert in the local paper or heard of a job being advertised at the local job centre for work at these farms ,it is a standard joke with people in our area and yes the local people at meetings have asked these companies why, and of course they get the usual "well British don't want the work " . They have specific job centres abroad . They are picked up by mini buses in the morning and taken back after work.
British people have tried to apply for these jobs and been told there are no vacancies only for foreign labour to be taken on (as reported by local newspaper) and the odd English worker that has slipped through the net has been ignored and ostracized by the other workers
This is information given to me by a manager and various employees of a large farming corporation at one of said companies .These companies try their upmost to not integrate with the local community unlike other business`s in area and are run more like camps than places of work.
Of course I don't know about companies in other areas but just the experience`s where I live .
Living on benefits in rural areas is a way of life? I didn't see much of that where I grow up.
They're starting to wake up and smell the coffee over the border now - http://www.kentlive.news/8203-farme...after-brexit/story-30410306-detail/story.html
What utter rubbish, you are quoting from Anthony Hook the Lib Dem campaigner for the UK in Europe.
Take a look, Kent County Council out of 81 seats up for grabs the Tories 67 with the Lib Dems getting 6.
General Election in Kent was Tories 56.5% of the vote and your mates Anthony Hooks party got 5.5%, try and get some credibility.
http://www.kentlive.news/kent-count...mean-for-you/story-30314950-detail/story.html
If you want reasonable debate cherry picking a Remainer from Kent and lending it to this board as some kind of indication of anything is laughable, its no more than a quote from a Remainer whom happens to be a councillor in Kent..
I seemed to have touched a raw nerve there. It seemed to be quoting research from Canterbury Christ Church University. Not a fan of Kent Live then?
Yeah sorry it did, its no more than someone offering another view on something that cannot be definitively proven and has been voted on already, it wasn't a 'wake up and smell the coffee moment'.
'Wake and up smell the coffee' was more in reference to it now being reported in local media in Kent. Heart Kent were reporting similar the other day apparently too. Are you disputing Canterbury Christ Church University's findings on recruitment numbers being down 50% from EU countries since the vote though in Kent? Albeit anecdotally, I've heard the same in regards to farms not too far away from where I am now, over the border in Kent also.
I have posted in depth on this issue, I am not sure currently Brexit is going to impact on an Eastern European currently on less than £2.00 hour in his own country when he still has an opportunity to come here and earn £7.50 an hour and with the likelihood of associated benefits.
50% down on a large figure would still leave a large figure, so I am not yet feeling too sorry for the farmers that seem to underpin their own business model by underpaying their employed labour.
If it becomes blindingly obvious that to sustain some fruit farmers it may require some help then I assume it could be done quite quickly, but it would require scrutiny.
I like a punnet of strawberrys as much as the next man, but it seems a little bit silly for me the tax payer to subsidise a grower, who then sucks in cheap labour from Europe which means I then subsidise those British citizens that might otherwise be encouraged to do the work if the pay was adequate so that Miss Marple up the road pays £2.00 a punnet rather than a viable price of £3.00.