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Job details
Fruit Farm Worker
- Country: United States
- Visa type: H-2A
- Job ID: (Open on offer list)
- Employer name: Confidential
- Employees needed: 115
- E-mail (employer): Confidential
- E-mail (agent): Confidential
- Phone: Confidential
- Agent phone: Confidential
- Working hours per week: 45
- Wage: 17.91 USD / Hour
- OFLC Certification: ACCEPTED - PENDING RECRUITMENT
- Start date: 08/31/2026
- End date: 10/30/2026
- Process date: 06/24/2026 21:00:00
- Submit date: Confidential
- Offer description:
Crops: Apples Primary job duty is to manually harvest apples, some times uses ladders or platforms. Workers must make sure bins are clean and free of debris before placing harvested apples into the bins. Designated workers will manually manipulate empty bins to position them in orchard rows as directed by management. Workers' picked fruit will be inspected according to instructions given by orchard management. Workers will be directed to either strip all fruit from the tree at one picking or to spot pick (selective picking) according to size and color, depending on crop conditions and maturity. All fruit is to be handled with care to avoid bruising. Apples injured by bruising during picking shall not exceed 1% (WNY) for fresh and 1% (WNY) for processing. Workers are required to properly follow instructions for picking apples. Failure to follow such instructions may result in progressive discipline, up to and including termination. Workers who fail to perform their duties in a timely and proficient manner will be provided up to three warnings and will be coached/instructed regarding how to work faster and more efficiently. Upon issuance of the third warning, the employee may be terminated. Workers harvesting apples must meet basic productivity standards for the 4 categories of apples harvested. The productivity standard for an 8 hour day is as follows: 100 bushels of processed apples, 80 bushels of fresh apples, 66 bushels of stem-clipped Honeycrisp, and 50 bushels of juice apples. New workers will be provided 2 days of training prior to being held to productivity standards. Returning workers will be expected to meet the productivity standard from the first day of work. Failure to meet the productivity standard for the season will result in the worker not being recalled the following season. Pickers, who exceed the productivity standard for the day, are eligible for a bonus, based on the amount of fruit picked over the standard. Only workers picking apples are eligible for bonuses. Workers designated by management as drivers (in addition to performing the other tasks outlined in this contract for the majority of the workday) will operate employer-owned vehicles to transport workers at the beginning and ending of each day to and from employer-owned housing to and from work sites (a portion of the route will be on public roads), haul tools, supplies. Drivers will also transport workers to the nearest town/city to conduct personal errands on an as-needed basis and as directed by management. Workers will be compensated at the correct rate of pay for all hours worked, including when they are performing the employer’s obligation of driving. Designated workers may also operate equipment, such as tractors, in the orchards to move empty and full bins. When tree fruit is not available to pick, other job duties during the contract may include but are not limited to, weeding, picking up rocks, constructing trellises, transplanting, use of hand tools such as shovels, trowels, hoes, and tampers to perform field work, clear debris from work sites and properties, clean equipment and tools, pick up brush, harvesting dropped fruit. Some workers performing general farm labor duties may be assigned as working crew monitors. These workers will be chosen based on several factors including the workers' performance and tenure and may assist with relaying daily instructions from management to assigned crews, scanning and attaching tags to bins, recording the amounts of fruit picked within assigned crews, alerting management of any issues at work sites, and checking fruit for size and quality.