Romanian fruit pickers !!!!
Author
Discussion

monty999

Original Poster:

1,220 posts

129 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
Firstly, and I stress, I don't have any issue with Eastern European folks !!!! What I do have an issue with at the moment is hearing on the news that people are being flown in from Romania especially to pick the fruit and veg. Why, when people are in dire need of finances at the moment or students not attending universities or colleges, are these people not doing this. This makes my blood boil to think we are above picking fruit in these desperate times and possibly facing mass unemployment very soon.

abzmike

11,478 posts

130 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
Two primary reasons I think... The Romanian teams are known to the farms, need no training, are a known quantity in terms of quality of work and wilingness to tolerate living and working conditions for a period of time to take money back to thier families at the end of the season. Individual locals will require training, are an unknown quantity, and not willing to tolerate the conditions.

Davel

8,982 posts

282 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
Because, sadly, they either can't be bothered to get of of bed or want to work sadly.

Pity we can't use the lowlifes being funded by us all or the young offenders to help.




Road2Ruin

6,248 posts

240 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
I would happily do it if I needed work, just most UK workers would rather claim benefits. I have a friend who runs a fruit farm in Somerset and they advertise every year locally and last year they got one person. He lasted two days.

TorqueVR

1,933 posts

223 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
I had exactly the same conversation earlier on. Somethings seriously wrong here

Bodo

12,523 posts

290 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
monty999 said:
Firstly, and I stress, I don't have any issue with Eastern European folks !!!! What I do have an issue with at the moment is hearing on the news that people are being flown in from Romania especially to pick the fruit and veg. Why, when people are in dire need of finances at the moment or students not attending universities or colleges, are these people not doing this. This makes my blood boil to think we are above picking fruit in these desperate times and possibly facing mass unemployment very soon.
From a news article:
Stephanie Hildon, who runs Langmead Herbs in Chichester on almost 3,000 hectares of land, told Sky News her Romanian workforce is loyal and committed. "If I was going to be recruiting from the UK and taking on people that are unfortunately out of work that would require a huge amount of retraining to get these people up to speed," she said.
https://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-jobs-row-as...
Seems qualifications, loyality and commitment are missing.

TomTheTyke

565 posts

171 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
monty999 said:
Firstly, and I stress, I don't have any issue with Eastern European folks !!!! What I do have an issue with at the moment is hearing on the news that people are being flown in from Romania especially to pick the fruit and veg. Why, when people are in dire need of finances at the moment or students not attending universities or colleges, are these people not doing this. This makes my blood boil to think we are above picking fruit in these desperate times and possibly facing mass unemployment very soon.
Presume you will be the first to volunteer?

Seriously it's partly that people don't want to do it but also not quite so simple. Firstly, whether this technically rules you out of fruit picking I don't know, but a lot of people have heard you're not supposed to work at all if furloughed. I think this means in the job you're furloughed from but the communication hasn't been clear.

Secondly, location, if you are out of work but living in the middle of a city it's pretty unlikely you are going to go to East Anglia and pick fruit without a major organised scheme incentivising you to do so. Even less likely if you have children to look after who aren't allowed to go to grandparents.

There is definitely unwillingness though. As a student I did a few weeks in a boring, repetitive minimum wage factory job. Locals would often just walk off the line half way through a shift because they didn't like it, one even had the cheek to ask for his half day's wages, via his mum who still worked there. The Eastern Europeans, OTOH, just cracked on with it. Not sure if it's lifestyle or pay, would they have stuck around for more money? At some point they would I think, it's just where's the level?


Edited by TomTheTyke on Friday 17th April 14:19

Tallow

1,633 posts

185 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
Some years ago my brother ran a vegatable farm in Cornwall that was predominantly staffed by Eastern Europeans. They worked hard, did a good job, kept their heads down and didn't cause any problems at all.

The deputy manager was a local and he was a feckless imbecile that didn't get a great deal done at all. One several occaisions I went down there to visit, he was either late or didn't come in at all because he was hungover.

And that was the only local they could find that was willing to work there.

eccles

14,221 posts

246 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
Bodo said:
monty999 said:
Firstly, and I stress, I don't have any issue with Eastern European folks !!!! What I do have an issue with at the moment is hearing on the news that people are being flown in from Romania especially to pick the fruit and veg. Why, when people are in dire need of finances at the moment or students not attending universities or colleges, are these people not doing this. This makes my blood boil to think we are above picking fruit in these desperate times and possibly facing mass unemployment very soon.
From a news article:
Stephanie Hildon, who runs Langmead Herbs in Chichester on almost 3,000 hectares of land, told Sky News her Romanian workforce is loyal and committed. "If I was going to be recruiting from the UK and taking on people that are unfortunately out of work that would require a huge amount of retraining to get these people up to speed," she said.
https://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-jobs-row-as...
Seems qualifications, loyality and commitment are missing.
It doesn't say that at all. She's just saying she'd have to train UK people, and not have to train people who have been previously employed by her.
If anything, she's saying that she won't even give UK people the chance to work for her.

SCEtoAUX

4,119 posts

105 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
Bottom line is that they will do the work for the wages on offer. It's damned hard work and it's for minimum wage.

Chuck £20.00/hour at local people and they'll be queuing at the door.

Pothole

34,367 posts

306 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
Road2Ruin said:
I would happily do it if I needed work, just most UK workers would rather claim benefits. I have a friend who runs a fruit farm in Somerset and they advertise every year locally and last year they got one person. He lasted two days.
Cool story, but what do you think it really tells us? Nothing, really.

towser44

4,080 posts

139 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
I was thinking about this before, if I was out of work and lived near enough I'd be all over this rather than not working. I don't understand the mentality of people who can't be arsed to work, but unfortunately accept there are plenty of them and there's no point letting it get to you cos they don't give a stuff.

Pothole

34,367 posts

306 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
Bodo said:
monty999 said:
Firstly, and I stress, I don't have any issue with Eastern European folks !!!! What I do have an issue with at the moment is hearing on the news that people are being flown in from Romania especially to pick the fruit and veg. Why, when people are in dire need of finances at the moment or students not attending universities or colleges, are these people not doing this. This makes my blood boil to think we are above picking fruit in these desperate times and possibly facing mass unemployment very soon.
From a news article:
Stephanie Hildon, who runs Langmead Herbs in Chichester on almost 3,000 hectares of land, told Sky News her Romanian workforce is loyal and committed. "If I was going to be recruiting from the UK and taking on people that are unfortunately out of work that would require a huge amount of retraining to get these people up to speed," she said.
https://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-jobs-row-as...
Seems qualifications, loyality and commitment are missing.
How have you extrapolated those three words from "retraining"?

s1962a

7,447 posts

186 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
monty999 said:
Firstly, and I stress, I don't have any issue with Eastern European folks !!!! What I do have an issue with at the moment is hearing on the news that people are being flown in from Romania especially to pick the fruit and veg. Why, when people are in dire need of finances at the moment or students not attending universities or colleges, are these people not doing this. This makes my blood boil to think we are above picking fruit in these desperate times and possibly facing mass unemployment very soon.
Why didn't you volunteer, or suggest it to people you know?

55palfers

6,291 posts

188 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000h7td

There's a good explanation in this clip. R4 Farming Today this morning.

You can see the farmer's point.

Bodo

12,523 posts

290 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
eccles said:
Bodo said:
monty999 said:
Firstly, and I stress, I don't have any issue with Eastern European folks !!!! What I do have an issue with at the moment is hearing on the news that people are being flown in from Romania especially to pick the fruit and veg. Why, when people are in dire need of finances at the moment or students not attending universities or colleges, are these people not doing this. This makes my blood boil to think we are above picking fruit in these desperate times and possibly facing mass unemployment very soon.
From a news article:
Stephanie Hildon, who runs Langmead Herbs in Chichester on almost 3,000 hectares of land, told Sky News her Romanian workforce is loyal and committed. "If I was going to be recruiting from the UK and taking on people that are unfortunately out of work that would require a huge amount of retraining to get these people up to speed," she said.
https://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-jobs-row-as...
Seems qualifications, loyality and commitment are missing.
It doesn't say that at all. She's just saying she'd have to train UK people, and not have to train people who have been previously employed by her.
If anything, she's saying that she won't even give UK people the chance to work for her.
Please read again. I didn't claim she put that into context with every non-Romainian candidate. That's why I used the word seems.

monty999

Original Poster:

1,220 posts

129 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
TomTheTyke said:
Presume you will be the first to volunteer?

Seriously it's partly that people don't want to do it but also not quite so simple. Firstly, whether this technically rules you out of fruit picking I don't know, but a lot of people have heard you're not supposed to work at all if furloughed. I think this means in the job you're furloughed from but the communication hasn't been clear.

Secondly, location, if you are out of work but living in the middle of a city it's pretty unlikely you are going to go to East Anglia and pick fruit without a major organised scheme incentivising you to do so. Even less likely if you have children to look after who aren't allowed to go to grandparents.

There is definitely unwillingness though. As a student I did a few weeks in a boring, repetitive minimum wage factory job. Locals would often just walk off the line half way through a shift because they didn't like it, one even had the cheek to ask for his half day's wages, via his mum who still worked there. The Eastern Europeans, OTOH, just cracked on with it. Not sure if it's lifestyle or pay, would they have stuck around for more money? At some point they would I think, it's just where's the level?


Edited by TomTheTyke on Friday 17th April 14:19
If, firstly, I needed the money to put food on the table for my family or secondly lived locally to a fruit/veg farm requiring pickers, then yes you're damn right I'd be there.

Exactly how much training is required, I really don't know, but wouldn't expect it to be too intense even for the least of intellectuals.Work ethic is the most difficult skill to create but cash injection may give a better incentive.The government should step in at least to make it more financially attractive in an attempt to keep the money within our economy rather than seeing it overseas.

monty999

Original Poster:

1,220 posts

129 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
s1962a said:
Why didn't you volunteer, or suggest it to people you know?
See above.

Also, would beat staring out of windows wondering if I should clean one of the cars.......again !!!!!

Penelope Stopit

11,209 posts

133 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
towser44 said:
I was thinking about this before, if I was out of work and lived near enough I'd be all over this rather than not working. I don't understand the mentality of people who can't be arsed to work, but unfortunately accept there are plenty of them and there's no point letting it get to you cos they don't give a stuff.
Hard workers can't help but let the situation get to them

This situation is another example of what's gone wrong in the UK

Once upon a time UK people that had gone through an apprenticeship and then added several years experience to it were respected for their skills and knowledge

Knowledge means nothing anymore, job status in the office is what's important

People used to not mind hard work

These days people are classed as being productive when sat in an office or playing the stock exchange all day

People can't be getting dirty for a few pound

The country is in a proper mess

Kids used to do plenty of fruit picking for spare cash

Tell the kids of today this and.........

Driver101

14,451 posts

145 months

Friday 17th April 2020
quotequote all
The farmers have been shouting out far ages they are desperately short of workers. They can't get anyone and will be forced to write off their produce.