Supreme Court to hear migrant farm worker case
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case over the constitutional authority of federal agencies to handle migrant farmworker disputes.
The case, Department of Labor v. Sun Valley Orchards, focuses on a New Jersey farm that was accused of violating an employment agreement under the H-2A visa program.
The H-2A visa program is a federally administered work visa system that allows agricultural employers to hire immigrant workers for temporary or seasonal jobs when there are not enough U.S. workers available.
The Department of Labor accused Sun Valley Orchards of failing to provide adequate housing, meal plans, transportation and work hours for H-2A employees. The department imposed hundreds of thousands of dollars in liabilities for violations at the farm.
Lawyers for the Department of Labor said employers that use the H-2A program to hire workers must comply with federal guidelines to ensure American citizens are not disadvantaged by the program.
“Administrative adjudications provide an efficient mechanism for ensuring that employers who participate in that vast program comply with those terms and conditions,” the lawyers wrote in a brief to the court.
Lawyers for Sun Valley Orchards argued that the department violated Article III of the Constitution, which gives power for federal adjudications to the judiciary branch, not the executive.
The lawyers argued the Department of Labor overstepped in its pursuit of adjudicating the claim.
“There is no precedent or history supporting agency adjudication of such employment-related issues,” lawyers for the farm wrote. “The government’s contrary argument would vastly expand the public rights exception for immigration-related claims to encompass myriad issues involving temporary workers.”
Justices on the court will decide whether the Department of Labor can adjudicate immigration-related violations in the fall. The court will likely decide the case in 2027.
Latest News Stories
Judge: Benefits of feeding babies beat risk claims in NEC lawsuits
Frankfort Park District Approves Over $322,000 in August Bills
Frankfort Board Approves New Dump Truck Purchase, Sale of Surplus Vehicles
Frankfort Approves Over $203,000 for Holiday Lighting Contract
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Summit Hill School District 161 for October 15, 2025
Will County Committee Grapples with $8.9 Million Budget Gap After Contentious 0% Tax Levy Vote
Frankfort Earns Clean Audit, Receives National Finance Award for 35th Consecutive Year
Poll: Young adults not confident in 2026 election fairness
Narco interdiction at sea isn’t new, CBP, Coast Guard have been doing it for years
Government shutdown halts visa, permanent resident approvals
Frankfort Approves Plan for 43-Home First Phase of Stalled Country Crossing Subdivision
Ads roll on, money pours in, and SCORE Act waits