The Seasonal Worker Program: a personal story

Our family, our workers and their families, back in their village
Our family, our workers and their families, back in their village

This is an edited transcript of a speech given at the Pacific Labour Mobility Annual Meeting in Brisbane in November 2017.

My husband and I run a vegetable business on the Darling Downs, which is just under three hours west of Brisbane. We specialise in growing leafy greens and sell to both the Brisbane Markets and big grocery chains.

My talk today is from the point of view of a farmer. I do not have the facts and figures and I cannot show you graphs or charts. I can only relay my own experience and paint a picture of the seasonal worker story and how this program is changing lives for the better.

Five years ago, we became involved in the Seasonal Worker Program due to necessity. At that time we were an isolated farm and could not find reliable local labour to employ. We tried using labour hire companies from the Lockyer Valley but as we were on the end of the line in regards to location, we were always given last priority. If you hadn’t already heard, in regional Australia there is a major labour shortage!

We found out about the Seasonal Worker Pilot Program at an Ausveg Conference and jumped at the opportunity to get on board.

We are only a small operation by Australian vegetable farm standards. We started with two workers under the Program and now employ 12 men and women. Our growing season is from October to July.

Our daughters Grace and Kate, with our worker Fox, his wife Janet and their babies Kerry and Jack McCarthy (named after me and my son Jack)
Our daughters Grace and Kate, with our worker Fox, his wife Janet and their babies Kerry and Jack McCarthy (named after me and my son Jack)

Our workers

Our workers come from a remote rural village in the Solomon Islands. They have no road access and no electricity. They don’t own cars or operate technical machinery. They have to grow or hunt food or the family does not eat. They must build their own shelters. They are 100% accountable for their own wellbeing – a rare trait in modern Australia. Job opportunities are rare to non-existent. This standard of living helps shape their positive work ethic. They arrive in Australia physically and mentally fit. They are here to work. They want to work. They are enthusiastic and show ownership. They want to learn and they want to be appreciated for the job that they perform. They are energetic, easily trained, honest, happy and reliable, and they are grateful. They really are every employer’s dream.

Our worker Allen with Kate, Jack and family children, travelling from the village on the Kwarare River
Our worker Allen with Kate, Jack and family children, travelling from the village on the Kwarare River

In short, the Seasonal Worker Program has offered us a reliable labour solution. It has given us the confidence to expand our business, knowing that we can plan ahead, as our workers are going to be there for us and are going to stay with us for the whole season. Yes, it is a lot of paperwork. Yes, it is time consuming to get involved, and, yes, it is a lot of responsibility to ensure the wellbeing of the workers whilst they are employed in your care 24 hours a day. However, the benefits outweigh the disadvantages. We estimate that one of our Solomon Island workers does the workload of nearly two regular workers.

Win-win

The Seasonal Worker Program is a win-win.

I, the farmer, get what I want – a productive season and a viable business with a future.

Our workers get cash – money to take home and better the lives of their families, their villages and their communities. They not only get income, they go home with a sense of self-worth. A sense of accomplishment, hope for a brighter future, and ideas. Ideas to invest in their future. Perhaps business opportunities that were never possible before. Some of the things our workers have invested in are: a taxi based in Honiara, a fishing boat (with a motor) that is now permanently leased, and tools and machinery (generators, and chainsaws for cutting timber to build their own homes or to sell for income). We have had five new high-quality houses built by our workers, as well as other infrastructure improvements.

Grace showing a teacher from the One One Village School one of the laptops donated by the McCarthy children’s school (The Scots PGC College in Warwick, Queensland)
Grace showing a teacher from the One One Village School one of the laptops donated by the McCarthy children’s school (The Scots PGC College in Warwick, Queensland)

Our employees have now become employers – they pay neighbours to do jobs for them whilst they are in Australia: cut timber, create gardens, build structures. The economic opportunity spreads through the greater community. This wealth is being shared. They financially support the local school where over 300 children are registered. This school has two permanent classrooms and no drinking water or sanitation. This school now has hope. Hope for a better future. My family has visited the village for the last two years; to witness the changes first hand is overwhelming. All of this positive change has come from our small business. It boggles the imagination as to what can be achieved on a broader scale.

School student warriors welcome
School student warriors welcome

The town of Clifton is our closest town, with a population of approximately 1,300 people. Our workers have integrated so well into the community that they have formed friendships with local storeowners and residents. They have earned the respect of the locals by being polite, kind and friendly and supporting local businesses by buying from them. They volunteer to help set up for the school fete, they attend the local show (where they are hot contestants in the cross-cut saw competition) and rodeo, and they attend local church services. We are often asked: “When are the boys coming back?” At Christmas they have been given beef and lamb from neighbours, and during their stay they are usually gifted several whole pigs and multiple unwanted roosters, which they excitedly accept.

Welcome to the village by the pan pipe band
Welcomed to the village by the pan pipe band

Back in the Solomons we have babies named in our honour. We are treated with respect and we are treated as family. Up that river, in that remote jungle village, the boys have built me my own washroom with a flushing porcelain toilet. Throughout our Seasonal Worker Program journey, we have developed a close working relationship with the Honiara Government Labour Sending Unit, as well as the Australian High Commission in Honiara. It is great to have friends with a common cause.

Pacific Labour Scheme

I am so excited by the new Pacific Labour Scheme and the opportunities it brings for the Solomon Islands, other Pacific Island neighbours, and Australian businesses.

Pacific Islanders have never had such access to Australian working visas. Australia spends a fortune on much-needed economic aid in these regions, but these working visa programs will help bring independent financial security to those lucky ones who are involved in them.

Grace presenting one of the donated laptops to the Head Girl of the One One Village Primary School, Malaita Province
Grace presenting one of the donated laptops to the Head Girl of the One One Village Primary School, Malaita Province

While our employment will probably remain under the Seasonal Worker Program, the opportunities for other Australian businesses who sign up to the new program are endless. We have been directly asked by the local Clifton hospital board if any of the wives could come and work in the local nursing home. They are desperate for unskilled staff.

This opportunity for the Pacific has a long time been in the making and I applaud the Australian Government for having the foresight to bring the program to fruition.

We need to continue to support the Pacific Governments’ Labour Sending Units, ensuring they send the best quality workers with the best intentions to these positions in Australia. The word is already spreading and increasing numbers of Australian employers are realising the benefits of the program to their businesses.

I will continue to “bang the drum” about the Seasonal Worker Program and the Pacific Labour Scheme. They are no-brainers. And I can’t wait to see their evolution over the next few years. The potential for these schemes are staggering.

Kerry with the school’s Head Teacher, John Maeinua
Kerry with the school’s Head Teacher, John Maeinua
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Kerry McCarthy

Kerry McCarthy and her family own a vegetable farm on the Darling Downs in Queensland and have been employing workers from Solomon Islands under the Seasonal Worker Programme since 2012.

11 Comments

  • And amazing story, of Kerry and your family. I am from Papua new Guinea, and while reading your story, it’s really interesting.
    just imagine, if one of my three children would be your worker, and when he or she returns home, there’s a change in whole family’s, community’s, and village as a whole. I appreciate and acknowledge you, for your most interesting stories thanks.

  • Thank you for this uplifting story Kerry. My husband and I are connected with some of them mainly from Vanuatu and Samoa. We teach them English and get them involved in church on weekends and feasts with them occasionally during the weeks. Now with your story it encourages us to look into deeper and get insight on how to bless them, their families and communities. Keep up the good work

  • Great story Kerry, I was deployed to the Solomon’s in 2003/4 with the ADF to stabilise the country from civil war and it changed my life. We were mainly patrolling the weathercoast where militia had caused many atrocities. The people there were fantastic, especially the kids. Unbelievably positive and industrious. These are the people we should be helping. Keep up the great work mate. #lostmemories

  • Thanks for sharing your experience of the Seasonal Workers Program. I have travelled to the Solomons many times volunteering with medical & education projects. We treat the locals like family as they respect us, work hard & appreciate anything we do & any skills they pick up while working with us. They appreciate every opportunity & most help their fellow man by sharing the knowledge learnt. We are always happy to help our northern neighbours who are no different to us except that they were born in a different place with less opportunities. Do you know if Days for Girls have been into the area your Workers come from? I am sure you would be able to approach a local sewing team or chapter (possibly Toowoomba?) to supply kits. If you plan on going back they would talk you through distributing the kits for all the students at the local schools. I have distributed them in the Western Province & Guadalcanal & they are prized possessions to all who were lucky enough to receive one.

  • What a great testament to the Seasonal Workers Program! It’s been a pleasure for the Australian High Commission in Honiara to work closely with the McCarthy family here and on the Darling Downs. Kerry and Simon are superb ambassadors for the program, and the bond they and their children have formed with a small village in rural Malaita is a terrific bonus. I hope that other Australian farmers will discover the great benefits of employing the strong and reliable workers of the Solomons. As Kerry notes, it’s a win-win.

  • Great story Kerry. Good reminder of all the positive things that can come from the SWP and why we should be aiming for a level playing field for Pacific workers compared with backpackers. Is our priority to support grass roots sustainable development, or holidays?

  • Great post and a moving story! I cannot wait to see the SWP scaled up. More stories of this nature will prove valuable in convincing policymakers and the public of the mutual benefits of a bigger labour-mobility scheme.

  • This is a really important story that captures some of the detail of how SWP can have meaningful effects on people’s lives so thank you for sharing it. The relationship here mirrors the most positive examples we have seen in Vanuatu with the RSE program in New Zealand. Tanna Farms presents a particularly good example of how this can mature to good effect.

  • As someone usually buried in the very detailed numbers of gains to GDP of remittance flows, I really loved the personal elements of this post. Thank you Kerry and family!
    Congratulations to the Development Policy Centre for promoting this as a policy priority. Pleased, as noted by Professor Howes, that this area is getting more prominence in the Government’s White Paper.
    Let’s beat the Kiwis! Not just in cricket, netball and in rugby, but also in our labour migration scheme support!

  • What a exciting and positive story. I really enjoyed reading the story and am thinking, just imagine if more farmers could do that. More Pacific communities could be changed. There is already a strong development process taking place here and both sides are winners. A good development approach when you consider it. Thanks Kerry and your family for your contribution towards this community.

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