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A quiet moment is enjoyed before the chatter picks up again during snack at the after-school program held at FHDC’s Woodburn site. After snack, the children participate by age groups in various academic activities. Then they are allowed time to play various games that have an educational aspect to them. (Photo by Alan Borrud)

A pictorial on immigrant farmworkers housing in rural Oregon: Part II

Street Roots
by Street Roots Staff | 20 Jun 2013

Oregon is a bountiful state. We produce 220 crops and livestock commodities, a greater variety than any state except Florida and California. The value of these crops and commodities totaled more than $5 billion in 2011, a record high.

As consumers, we can shop row upon row of premium produce, meats and other products, most of us with little thought about who makes that possible — the roughly 90,000 migrant and seasonal farmworkers who work in Oregon each year.

For them, Oregon’s agricultural industry presents a much different experience. Farmworkers, nearly all of them immigrants, receive nominal pay for labor-intensive work, suffer food insecurity and hunger, and most are without health insurance and have limited access to health care providers.

Topping the list of needs, however, is housing. Only a small fraction of the state’s farmworkers live on state-registered farmworker camps. The Farmworker Housing Development Corporation, a nonprofit based in Woodburn, is working to fill the enormous deficit, building community-based properties to provide stable, supportive housing for this vital labor force. Also read an in-depth interview on the challenges and opportunities Oregon farmwarkers face today.

See part-one in this photo series by photographer Alan Borrud illustrating the FHDC housing community of Oregon farmworkers.

“Street Roots strives to serve an often-forgotten population within our community. I offered my services to assist in this project that showed an organization’s effort to increase proper shelter and childhood education for people in its community.
“Caring for others — I just wanted to honor that with my camera.  But, as is often the case when spending some time on a project, I learned as I worked with my camera.  I saw good people working hard to assist others in their quest for a better life.” — Alan Borrud

Borrud is an experienced freelance photojournalist with a newspaper and editorial background, living in Portland.  Over the years his work has included documentary work on a domestic abuse shelter, a small town high school prom, a skateboard church preacher and a Russian Orthodox Old Believer teaching in a Woodburn grade school.

Tags: 
Immigrant, Farmworkers, Photography
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