S-4101-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry.
Sponsored by Ben Luján (D-NM)
What it does
This bill would direct the Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS) to create a grant program that provides stabilization payments to farmworkers, meat processing workers, and grocery workers when a natural disaster or other disaster occurs. AMS would distribute funds to membership organizations or labor unions that represent those workers, who would then pass the payments to eligible workers.
Who benefits
Farmworkers, meat processing workers, and grocery workers who experience income disruption due to disasters. Labor unions and membership organizations representing those workers, who would receive and administer the grant funds. Workers in disaster-prone regions — such as agricultural areas vulnerable to hurricanes, floods, or wildfires — would likely see the most direct benefit. Indirectly, food supply chain stability could benefit consumers and food retailers.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who fund the grant program. Worker organizations that are not unions or formal membership groups — such as informal worker centers or advocacy nonprofits — may be excluded from receiving funds if they do not meet the bill's organizational eligibility criteria. Workers who are not represented by a qualifying union or membership organization would not receive payments. Competing disaster relief programs or agencies may face resource competition. Non-unionized workers in the same industries would be ineligible regardless of their disaster-related losses.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that farmworkers, meat processing workers, and grocery workers are essential to the national food supply but are among the lowest-paid and least financially resilient workers in the economy, leaving them especially vulnerable when disasters disrupt their employment. They contend that existing federal disaster assistance programs — such as FEMA individual assistance — frequently fail to reach agricultural and food-sector workers due to documentation barriers, language access gaps, and eligibility restrictions, making a targeted stabilization program necessary to prevent severe economic hardship in communities that keep the food supply running.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that routing federal disaster payments exclusively through unions and membership organizations creates an arbitrary eligibility structure that excludes millions of workers in the same industries simply because they are not organized, raising fairness concerns about using public funds to benefit one class of workers over another. They contend that existing federal disaster relief infrastructure — including FEMA, USDA emergency programs, and Small Business Administration disaster loans — already provides a framework for worker assistance, and that a parallel, union-channeled grant program duplicates bureaucracy and adds administrative costs without demonstrating it would reach workers more effectively.