Final H-2A rule tightens housing laws, increases government enforcement ability
Program changes include governmental authority to ban from the program for misconduct, upgrades to housing and inspections, updates to bond requirements, mandatory electronic filing, and changes to how wages are determined.
The final rule, which is available on the Federal Register, will be officially published there on Oct. 12, and it becomes effective Nov. 12.
Changes to the program include governmental authority to ban some people from the program for misconduct, upgrades to worker housing requirements and inspections, updates to bond requirements for labor contractors, mandatory electronic filing for most applications, and changes to how wages are determined.
“By improving H-2A program regulations, we are strengthening worker protections, meeting our core mission,” Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh said in the department’s announcement of the final rule. “Today’s new rule makes several improvements to enhance the integrity of the H-2A program and provide employers and other stakeholders greater clarity.”
- Improves safety and health protections for workers housed in rental or public accommodations.
- Streamlines and updates bond requirements for labor contractors to better hold them accountable and clarifies joint-employer status for employers and associations.
- Clarifies the housing certification process to allow state and local authorities to conduct housing inspections.
- Establishes explicit authority to debar attorneys and agents for their misconduct, independent of an employer’s violations.
- Makes electronic filing mandatory for most applications to improve employers’ processing efficiency.
- Modernizes the methodology and procedures for determining the prevailing wage to allow state workforce agencies to produce more prevailing wage findings.
Read the unpublished final rule to amend H-2A temporary labor certification regulations at the Federal Register.
Throughout the U.S., Wage and Hour Division violations of H-2A regulations and recovery of back wages have increased significantly over the past five years. In 2021, the Wage and Hour Division found H-2A violations in 358 cases and collected more than $5.8 million in back wages for more than 7,000 workers.