Wisconsin Dairy Industry Relies on Undocumented Immigrants, but State Won't Let Them Legally Drive [View all]
Caleb Alvarado
Thursday, August 3, 2023
Melissa Sanchez and Maryam Jameel / ProPublica
Central Wisconsins Clark County is home to more dairy farms than any other county in the state, which bills itself as Americas Dairyland. Its identity is so tied to the dairy industry that a 16-foot-tall, black-and-white talking Holstein stands outside downtown Neillsville, the county seat.
To corral the cows, milk them and clear their manure at these dairy farms the dirty, dangerous work that makes this multibillion-dollar industry go farm owners here and across Wisconsin rely on a labor force that they know is largely undocumented.
But the state makes it almost impossible for workers to have lives outside the farm without breaking the law. In Wisconsin, undocumented immigrants can own and register their cars and trucks, but they arent allowed to drive them. Those who drive anyway are pulled over again and again and again, and issued tickets that eat away at their wages.
The law banning undocumented immigrants from obtaining drivers licenses has cascading effects across the state. Law enforcement officials say the roads are less safe because undocumented immigrants arent trained and tested on basic driving rules but they drive anyway and often without insurance. Court officials say tickets for driving without a license overwhelm their dockets and drain their limited resources. Farmers say they have to build or find employee housing to help their workers avoid getting ticketed.
The workers, many from remote, impoverished communities in Latin America, are grateful for the jobs. And yet they feel trapped.
More:
https://elfaro.net/en/202307/centroamerica/26968/wisconsin-dairy-industry-relies-on-undocumented-immigrants-but-state-won-rsquo-t-let-them-legally-drive