By Jay Reeves
The Associated Press via Business Week
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Alabama agriculture officials are considering whether prisoners can fill a chronic labor shortage the farm agency blames on the state’s new law against illegal immigration.
Brett Hall, a deputy commissioner with the Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries, said planting season is coming up in south Alabama, and some growers fear most of their usual workers have left the state because of the law.
The nursery and landscape industry will need as many as 4,000 workers in southern counties early in 2012 to get ready for the growing season, he said, and forestry and farming will require still more laborers. Unable to find legal residents to fill all the employment gaps, Hall said the Agriculture Department is consulting with the Department of Corrections to determine whether prisoners could do some of the work.
Full Story: Ala. considers inmates to replace immigrant labor