EDITOR’S NOTE: Here’s an installment from Tillamook County’s State Representative Cyrus Javadi’s Substack blog, “A Point of Personal Privilege” Oregon legislator and local dentist. Representing District 32, I focus on practical policies and community well-being. This space offers insights on state issues, reflections on leadership, and stories from the Oregon coast, fostering thoughtful dialogue. Posted on Substack, 3/8/25
By Cyrus Javadi, State Representative District 32
Look, I’m all for trying to protect the little guy, promote social justice, and ensure that working folks don’t get trampled underfoot by society’s greediest. But sometimes, in our frenzy to crank out laws that look great on campaign flyers, we manage to do more harm than good.
Case in point: Oregon’s House Bill 2548. On paper, the bill wants to set up an Agricultural Workforce Labor Standards Board—complete with wage floors, benefit guarantees, training protocols, and a “just cause” requirement before a farmer can let someone go. In reality, it’s about as well-advised as juggling knives in a room full of toddlers.
Before we start crying “big farm villainy,” let’s remember Oregon family farms aren’t your moustache-twirling antagonists out of a silent film. They’re everyday folks coping with random immigration crackdowns, risky trade tariffs, and profit margins thinner than the gravy at a second-rate diner. But hey, Salem has spoken, and their bright idea is to “help” farmworkers by doubling down on regulations. The only problem? The new mandates will likely give small farmers an ulcer—and you, the consumer, a lighter wallet at the grocery store.
The Immediate Wallet Wallop
Here’s the part that should make every Oregonian perk up like a cat hearing the can opener: these proposals will cost you money. Think about it—if a farm’s labor costs go up, if they have to jump through more hoops to stay within legal lines, who ultimately foots the bill? Spoiler alert: the final tab lands on your kitchen table. Milk, veggies, steak—anything that comes out of the Willamette Valley or any other patch of farmland across Oregon—will see higher prices. It’s not rocket science. Or, in this case, it’s not advanced farm science. Either way, you pay more.
Now, this is about more than just a few extra cents per pound of apples. For working families on a tight budget, every price spike is a step backward. Inflation is already hammering the budget-conscious among us, and Salem’s bright idea is to pile on. Grocery bills will climb. Small farms might shutter. And before you know it, that once-quaint stretch of farmland gets gobbled up by mega-corporate agriculture, which has no problem spending piles of cash on compliance lawyers and fancy HR departments.
Farmers Aren’t the Villains Here
Despite what the bill’s drafters might suggest, the average farm family in Oregon isn’t an evil, top-hat-wearing cartoon. They’re the kind of folks who get up at four in the morning, chug some coffee (no time for a Starbucks latte), and slog through fields alongside the very workers the legislature thinks they’re exploiting. Farming is as much about relationships as it is about physical labor. You don’t milk cows in the dead of winter with a team you plan to shortchange.
But you won’t find that nuance in House Bill 2548. The solution du jour from Salem is the same old sledgehammer approach—treat everyone like a potential wrongdoer just because a few creeps have found ways to mistreat workers. The real villains, those handful of unscrupulous “bad apples” (pun somewhat intended), will likely weasel their way around new regulations anyway. So we’re left with a situation where good, honest farmers—who already want to do right by their teams—have to become walking compliance manuals just to avoid hefty fines or lawsuits.
A Farm Is Not a Corporate Office
Ever notice how politicians assume every workplace functions like a place with fluorescent lighting, break room memos, and air conditioning that barely works? It’s as if they think farmers can clock out at precisely 5 p.m., ignoring that the cows, the crops, and the weather don’t run on a neat 9-to-5 schedule.
Got a labor-intensive harvest that can’t wait? Too bad—if you don’t adhere to the new mandates, you might as well be wearing a “Sue Me!” T-shirt. Maybe industrial-scale farms with an army of legal teams can push the paperwork around, but for your typical Oregon family operation—especially one already bleeding from tariffs and staff shortages—these burdens can be devastating. Let’s just say if you’re a wheat farmer who also has to conduct your own HR seminars, you might want to invest in more coffee… or possibly just buy a robot to do the job.
The “Just Cause” Clause: A Disaster in the Making
If you’ve ever worked a white-collar job, you know the concept of “just cause.” It’s that system where, if your coworker habitually strolls in three hours late smelling like a distillery, management needs a thick stack of formal warnings to let them go. Now, imagine how well that works on a small family farm.
Farming is all about timeliness and hustle—if your lettuce wilts in the field, your profit wilts with it. Forcing farmers to go through a legal labyrinth just to fire a worker who constantly shows up late or slacks on the job is a recipe for rotting produce. In agriculture, you need to trim the fat quickly, pun intended. Yet HB 2548 wants to strap an office rulebook onto an occupation where nature, not a union steward, decides the pace of work.
Unintended Consequences: Fewer Jobs, More Automation
Here’s where the movie plot really thickens. Once farmers realize each new hire is a potential regulatory nightmare, they’ll become pickier than ever—leading to fewer job openings. Meanwhile, older farmers nearing retirement might do the math and decide it’s easier to unload the land and flee to retirement communities in Arizona. That’s not just a blow to tradition and community—those smaller farms often keep local economies humming.
And don’t forget about the automation genie. Push labor costs high enough, and that robotic arm in the John Deere catalog looks mighty tempting. After all, robots don’t need lunch breaks, they don’t unionize, and they don’t file lawsuits if you “fire” them. Of course, that also means fewer opportunities for actual human workers, the very folks this bill purports to protect. Cue the ironic slow clap.
Who Pays? Consumers and Small Farms
So, with House Bill 2548 marching forward, let’s ask the million-dollar question: who really takes it on the chin? The short answer: you and the small farmers who can’t foot the bill. The compliant farmers get saddled with bigger overhead. They pass along those costs, which means your grocery tab inflates like a bad case of bread yeast gone wild. Meanwhile, the “bad apple” operators—the ones who inspired this legislation in the first place—will scurry under the radar as they always do, misclassifying workers or ignoring the law. Good farmers do everything by the book and pay the price; the shady ones keep lurking in the shadows.
In the end, this is a lose-lose for small family-run outfits and consumers who value fresh, local produce. But for big corporate agriculture? It’s practically a party. Sure, they’ll whine about the regulations, but they’ve got the staff and capital to adapt. Another competitor knocked out? That’s one more slice of the market for the big guys.
A Better Path Forward
Now, if lawmakers genuinely want to protect farmworkers, how about we focus on surgical fixes instead of nuclear strikes? Strengthen whistleblower protections, step up enforcement against known abusers, or funnel resources into training programs that help farmers and workers alike. Maybe even acknowledge that the entire system is complicated by federal immigration policies so scattershot they’d make a carnival dunk tank look stable.
And let’s not forget that farming is seasonal. You can’t put a plow in the barn and wait for a new legislative session when the strawberries won’t stop ripening. A carefully crafted plan that respects the ebbs and flows of harvest seasons will do far more than an overreaching labor board stamping out mandates.
The Predictable Tragedy of Bad Policy
Of course, we’ve seen this movie before. Good intentions swirl through state legislatures, colliding with messy reality to produce a tidal wave of unintended consequences. House Bill 2548’s cheerleaders likely believe they’re championing social justice. But in practice, they’re forging yet another chain around an industry struggling to keep its head above water, thanks to trade uncertainties and immigration drama. The bill’s authors overlook a fundamental truth: layering more mandates onto farmers who already treat their crews decently won’t magically turn the rotten apples into paragons of virtue. It will just force the good guys out of business.
And so the cycle continues. If enough farmers have to sell or retire, the face of Oregon agriculture changes. We’ll see more corporate consolidation, more automation, and—ironically—less local flavor in our food. Meanwhile, the farmworkers we wanted to help might find fewer job openings, period. It’s the legislative version of shooting yourself in the foot. Except in this case, you also have to pay for the medical bills, the hospital visit, and the nurse’s regulatory compliance training.
Conclusion: There’s No Free Lunch (or Harvest)
At the end of the day, legislation like House Bill 2548 reminds us there’s no free lunch—or free harvest—in the real world. When lawmakers get starry-eyed about grand new mandates without considering real-life trade-offs, someone always ends up mucking the stalls. Oregon’s family farmers are already weighed down by uncertain immigration policies, precarious trade conditions, and tight profit margins. The last thing they need is another stack of regulations that punishes the good guys more than the actual villains.
If Oregon wants to keep its family farms alive and well—and keep grocery prices from spiraling—it needs policy solutions that strike the right balance: tough on cheaters, fair to honest employers, and rooted in the practical realities of farm life. Otherwise, we can all look forward to paying more at the checkout line for whatever flavorless produce Big Ag decides to dish out.
We can’t lose sight of the fact that legislation, like any recipe, requires the proper ingredients and a dash of common sense. Pile on the mandates without forethought, and you’ll cook up a disaster that nobody wants to swallow.