Employment Laws. A number of laws provide employment protections to workers. These include the Minimum Wage Act (MWA), the Industrial Insurance Act, and the Employment Security Act. While these acts define who is covered in different ways, generally a person who provides services to a for-profit business is covered by the acts. Exemptions apply to each act. Referring to an individual as an intern or volunteer does not exempt the employer or the worker from the respective acts.
Minimum Wage Act. The MWA establishes a minimum wage which must be paid to all employees, unless they are exempt. Exempt employees include certain agricultural employees and volunteers for nonprofit organizations. The director of the Department of Labor and Industries (L&I) may, to prevent curtailment of opportunities for employment, issue special certificates to employers allowing them to pay wages lower than the minimum wage to learners.
Industrial Insurance. Industrial insurance provides medical and time loss benefits to workers injured in the course of their employment. Employers insure through the State Fund administered by L&I or, if qualified, may self-insure. State Fund premiums are calculated based on the industry risk classification and the employer's experience rating.
Unemployment Insurance. Under the Employment Security Act, qualified individuals who have lost their jobs through no fault of their own, or who quit for good cause, are entitled to unemployment insurance benefits. Exemptions include certain agricultural labor performed by students.
Farm Internship Pilot Project. In 2010, the Legislature directed L&I to establish a farm internship pilot project. The program expired and has been extended or reestablished. The pilot project, which originally began with a few counties, consists of the following counties: San Juan, Skagit, King, Whatcom, Kitsap, Pierce, Jefferson, Spokane, Yakima, Chelan, Grant, Island, Snohomish, Kittitas, Lincoln, Thurston, Walla Walla, Clark, Cowlitz, and Lewis.
Under the project, qualified small farms are allowed to employ up to three farm interns at any time, working under special certificates issued by L&I. Farms seeking to employ interns submit an application to L&I and are required to execute an agreement with the intern that sets forth specified information.
Under the pilot, farm interns are not considered employees under the MWA. Similarly, agricultural labor provided by a farm intern are not employment for purposes of unemployment insurance. L&I provides a special industrial insurance risk class for farm interns. Upon receipt of an application, L&I reviews the application and issues a certificate within 15 days if L&I finds the following:
When assessing an internship program, L&I may consult with relevant college and university departments and extension programs, and state and local government agencies involved in the regulation or development of agriculture.
Before employing an intern, a farm has to submit a statement confirming its understanding and intent to comply with certain labor laws and pay required workers' compensation premiums. L&I may revoke a certificate for a farm's failure to pay the premiums for interns or non-interns, and for other reasons.
A small farm is defined as a farm:
The farm internship pilot project and related provisions is scheduled to expire on December 31, 2025.
The farm internship program extends to all counties and does not expire.
In addition to current requirements to obtain the special certificate, L&I must find that the farm demonstrates that the interns will perform work that encourages the interns to participate in career and technical education or other educational content with courses in agriculture or related programs at a community or technical college.
For the definition of small farm, the annual sales that it reports on the IRS Form 1040 Schedule F must be less than $265,000, rather than less than $250,000.
The expiration date is removed related to exceptions for unemployment insurance, the exception in the definition of employee for farm interns, and the special workers' compensation risk class for farm interns.
PRO: This would open the program to all counties and make the program permanent. Many counties were wanting to participate and are ineligible. This is a great opportunity for interns who want to learn how to farm or run a farm. Washington provides 70 percent of the nation's hops. This is a great bill for anyone who wants to create their own brewery or work in the hop industry.
We depend on Washington farmers for food. There is a strong and important partnership between hunger relief programs, government, and Washington producers and growers. There has been 70 million pounds of donated foods to the hunger relief system. There are farm to school and farm to food pantry programs. These are programs to source more Washington produce. This is a part of a broader systems thinking to uplift the state's food system.