A federal judge in California has allowed the Trump administration’s revised wage framework for temporary agricultural workers to remain in effect, rejecting a union-backed effort to halt a rule that farm groups say will reshape labor costs across U.S. agriculture while critics warn it could depress already fragile farmworker wages.
In a decision issued last week, U.S. District Judge Kirk Sherriff of the Eastern District of California denied a request from the United Farm Workers for a preliminary injunction against the Labor Department’s interim final rule governing the Adverse Effect Wage Rate, or AEWR — the baseline wage intended to ensure foreign guest workers do not undercut domestic farm labor. The court found the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate “irreparable harm,” a key legal threshold for emergency relief, concluding that claims of future wage losses and financial hardship were largely speculative.
The ruling allows the administration’s October 2025 policy to remain in place as litigation continues, marking a significant, if preliminary, victory for agricultural employers who have long argued that the prior wage-setting system inflated labor costs beyond market realities.
At the center of the dispute is a technical but consequential shift in how wages are calculated for workers under the H-2A visa program. The Labor Department abandoned its reliance on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Farm Labor Survey — which has been discontinued — and instead adopted data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics survey. The revised approach also introduces a two-tiered system that distinguishes between entry-level and more experienced agricultural workers, alongside an adjustment reflecting the value of employer-provided housing.
Administration officials and industry groups say the changes will better align wages with actual labor market conditions. The Labor Department has estimated the rule could save employers roughly $2.5 billion annually, a figure echoed by supporters such as the National Council of Agricultural Employers, which backed the government in court.
“For too long, employers have been forced to pay wages that were detached from economic reality,” said John Hollay, the group’s president and chief executive, calling the decision a step toward leveling the playing field for U.S. farmers competing globally.
Worker advocates see it differently. The United Farm Workers argued that the new methodology will “drastically” reduce the minimum wages employers must offer H-2A workers, exerting downward pressure on earnings for both foreign and domestic farm laborers. The union also contended that lower wages could force workers to cut back on basic necessities or leave agricultural employment altogether.
But in his ruling, Sherriff emphasized that economic harm alone is typically insufficient to justify emergency intervention and said the plaintiffs had not shown that workers were likely to face immediate, concrete hardship. Declarations submitted by farmworkers, he noted, did not establish that individuals would return to the same jobs, experience wage reductions, or suffer severe financial consequences as a direct result of the rule.
The court did, however, affirm that the union has standing to pursue the case on behalf of its members, ensuring the broader legal challenge will proceed.
The stakes of the policy shift extend well beyond the courtroom, particularly in major agricultural states reliant on seasonal labor. Under the updated methodology, AEWRs — which vary by state and occupation — have begun to reflect lower or more stable wage levels compared with prior years in some regions.
In Indiana, the 2026 AEWR for crop and livestock workers is set at approximately $17.50 per hour, down from prior projections under the previous system. In Michigan, the rate stands near $18.15 per hour. While still above federal and most state minimum wages, the revised figures represent a moderation from earlier AEWR increases that had outpaced broader wage trends in some sectors.
For farmers facing tight margins, rising fuel and fertilizer costs, and ongoing volatility in commodity markets, even modest wage adjustments can have significant financial implications. Many growers rely heavily on H-2A workers to fill labor shortages, particularly for labor-intensive crops, and have argued that escalating wage mandates threaten the viability of their operations.
Labor advocates counter that farmworkers — many of whom live near or below the poverty line — are uniquely vulnerable to even small reductions in income, and that the AEWR has historically served as a critical safeguard against exploitation.
The legal battle now moves into a longer phase, where the court will consider the merits of the union’s claims that the rule violates federal law and was implemented without proper rulemaking procedures. Until then, the administration’s revised wage system will remain in force during a critical growing season, shaping paychecks — and balance sheets — across much of rural America.


