This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Pennsylvania’s mushroom industry faces urgent labor shortage − and latest immigration policies will likely make it worse

Pennsylvania’s mushroom farmers have been struggling for decades to recruit and retain workers. John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images

Hazel Velasco Palacios, Penn State and Kathleen Sexsmith, Penn State

“I had never worked with mushrooms before,” Luis said, reflecting on his time in Chester County’s mushroom industry. “But my family has always worked in agriculture, so I like it. I’m used to hard work.”

Luis, whose name is a pseudonym to protect his identity, is part of the latest wave of immigrant workers who have, for decades, come to Chester County to work in Pennsylvania’s US$1.1 billion mushroom industry. He is a Venezuelan migrant who was granted Temporary Protected Status, or TPS, under the 2023 designation. TPS allows foreign nationals already in the U.S. to remain for six, 12 or 18 months – regardless of how they entered – if their home country is deemed too dangerous for them to return.

In February 2025, President Donald Trump terminated TPS for Venezuelans who received protection under the 2023 expansion. According to the Department of Homeland Security, this designation had allowed approximately 348,000 Venezuelans to remain in the U.S. legally, with many eligible for work authorization. Meanwhile, Venezuelans who were granted TPS under the earlier 2021 designation can retain their status until Sept. 10, 2025. This provides temporary relief but leaves their long-term status uncertain.

We are rural sociologists – a Penn State professor and a Ph.D. candidate – who study labor, migration and agriculture in the U.S. Our research examines how industries such as mushroom farming maintain a stable workforce. One of us recently published an article in the peer-reviewed journal Rural Sociology that highlights how Pennsylvania’s mushroom industry was already struggling with a labor shortage.

The termination of TPS for many Venezuelans, along with President Donald Trump’s broader immigration policies – including stricter border enforcement, increased deportations and tighter restrictions on work permits and asylum protections – will likely shrink the pool of available workers in Pennsylvania’s mushroom industry and other agricultural and food industries.

Photo of a water tower with 'Kennett Square Mushroom Capital of the World' painted on it

Kennett Square, Pa., bills itself as the ‘mushroom capital of the world.’ Nolabob/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Changing face of the mushroom workforce

The mushroom industry in Pennsylvania has been shaped and sustained by major waves of U.S. immigration since the late 19th century.

William Swayne, a Quaker florist, is credited with beginning mushroom cultivation in Kennett Square, a small borough in Chester County, in the 1880s.

However, it was Italian immigrants, who began arriving in the early 20th century, who transformed Kennett Square into the “mushroom capital of the world.”

Today, Pennsylvania produces 69% of all mushrooms sold in the U.S.

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Chester County alone produced 199 million pounds of mushrooms – mostly white button mushrooms – in the 2023-24 season. While Chester County remains the hub of production, mushroom farms also extend into adjacent Berks County and parts of northeastern Maryland.

Yet, workforce instability remains a pressing issue, as the industry has struggled for decades to recruit and retain workers.

Mushroom picking is physically demanding. Workers in humid, enclosed growing rooms carefully harvest delicate mushrooms by hand to prevent bruising. Pay is structured around a piece-rate system, where earnings depend on speed and productivity. While this model allows some workers to earn more, it also creates instability, as take-home pay fluctuates based on harvest conditions and market demand. These factors make it difficult to maintain a stable workforce.

As a result, mushroom production in Pennsylvania is highly dependent on immigrant labor. While there are no national statistics tracking the nationalities of workers in the industry, our empirical studies and ongoing field research indicate that most of today’s workers are from Mexico and Guatemala. In recent years, more have arrived from Venezuela and elsewhere.

Many of these newer arrivals have entered the U.S. through programs such as TPS and the Processes for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans, or CHNV. CHNV allows certain people from those four countries who have a sponsor in the U.S. and who pass a background check to live and work in the U.S. for two years. It was established to grant temporary work authorization to individuals fleeing crises in their home countries.

TPS and CHNV have been instrumental in addressing labor shortages in essential U.S. industries such as agriculture.

At the same time, the long-standing Mexican mushroom workforce is undergoing a generational shift and aging out of field labor. Their U.S.-born children sometimes work harvesting jobs in their teens but are unlikely to stay in agriculture long term.

Thousands of white button mushrooms in beds of soil in a growing house

Mushroom workers in humid, enclosed growing rooms must carefully harvest delicate mushrooms by hand to prevent bruising. John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images

Rise of mushroom labor contractors

To fill employment gaps, many mushroom farms now turn to labor contractors to recruit, manage and employ workers.

Contractors typically handle payroll, workers’ compensation and access to medical care if someone is injured.

On the surface, this system offers benefits for growers. It allows them to adjust their workforce depending on demand while reducing administrative burden and liability.

But for workers, this system can be a double-edged sword.

Evidence from other agricultural industries shows that workers hired through contractors may have less job security, fewer or no benefits, and less direct contact with farm owners – which makes it more difficult to negotiate wages or report workplace concerns.

Some Kennett Square farmworkers we have interviewed see contractors as a source of flexibility.

“I had to miss work for some weeks because my kid was sick, and I lost my spot,” one worker shared. “But then I reached out to a contractor and was able to get another job at a different farm within a day.”

However, that same worker went on to say that this new farm “has wider harvesting beds, and I am getting more tired and have more pain because of it.”

In other words, while labor contractors provide continuity in employment, workers may have less control over where they are placed or the conditions they work under.

For growers, contractors serve as an effective stopgap to keep mushroom farms in operation, but they do not solve their ongoing problem of attracting long-term employees.

Hundreds of white button mushrooms growing in soil

Pennsylvania produces over 60% of all mushrooms sold in the U.S. John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images

Fewer workers, more expensive mushrooms

With fewer workers, mushroom farms may struggle to meet the demand from grocery stores, restaurants and food processors.

A reduced supply could mean customers pay more for mushrooms at grocery stores and restaurants. If retailers must source mushrooms from other states or abroad, prices could rise further due to transportation expenses, tariffs and supply chain disruptions.

Without policies that recognize the industry’s year-round labor needs, Pennsylvania mushroom growers will be left scrambling for alternative workforce solutions.

Lawmakers have attempted to address this issue through the Farm Workforce Modernization Act of 2021, which passed the House but stalled in the Senate. If enacted, the bill would create a Certified Agricultural Worker status, which would offer legal protection to experienced farmworkers, and expand H-2A visa eligibility to agricultural workers in year-round jobs such as mushroom farming. The bill also includes a mandatory phase-in of E-Verify for agricultural employers, a federal system used to confirm workers’ legal authorization to work in the U.S.

For now, mushroom farms – and the broader agricultural sector – must prepare for the ripple effects of more rigid immigration restrictions. Without intervention from policymakers, the strain on workers, growers and consumers is likely to intensify.

Read more of our stories about Pennsylvania.The Conversation

Hazel Velasco Palacios, Ph.D. Candidate in Rural Sociology & Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Penn State and Kathleen Sexsmith, Assistant Professor of Rural Sociology, Penn State

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

  • @UncleGrandPa
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    721 hours ago

    the number of crops that need to be harvested by hand is very very large…this all halts real soon. with no one to harvest them the crops will simply rot in the fields.

    strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, and other soft berries, peaches, tea leaves, grapes, apples, pears, tomatoes, leafy greens like lettuce, cabbage, kale, asparagus, chocolate, vanilla, Yacon, python snake bean, bitter melon, apios Americana tuber, ground cherries, acai berries, oxcallis tuber, crosne tubers, manari and tiger nuts and saffron…to name a few.

    all these will stay in the fields and the cost of replacing them from another country will cause huge spikes in costs. and cause devastation to american agriculture

    but destroying the FUTURE abilities of America is what this is about. not to simply destroy the country but to make sure it CAN NEVER again be a world leader.

    to this end trump is committed to destroying the nations infrastructure and plundering it’s resources…so it can never heal from the damage he is doing.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 day ago

    Honestly, if your industry can’t exist without exploiting some of the most vulnerable people in our society, it shouldn’t exist.

    • @[email protected]
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      324 hours ago

      I see your point but keep in mind this is a microcosm of the entire US agricultural industry. We’ve drastically overbalanced to a knowledge economy, and if US agriculture collapses, that’s bad for the world.

      A big part of grocery prices is labor for harvesting. Mushrooms (to keep with the subject of the article) are ~$5.99 a quart at Costco. Assume that we’re talking about doubling the wages of the workers, that means nearly doubling the price of the product, if not more than doubling because retailers are insisting on a set profit margin. If someone even a little bit competent was in the White House, and if congress had even a slight interest in making life better for the average American, this situation might lead to a push for diversifying the ag sector and breaking up the giant corporations who are responsible for 90% of America’s farms. Instead who knows what happens.

      • @[email protected]
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        923 hours ago

        That’s a common misconception. Doubling the wages for workers basically never causes costs to double.

        This can be seen in markets where the minimum wage is 100% higher than other areas. Fast food also has a high percentage of expenses going to payroll, but a Big Mac isn’t twice as expensive in areas where the minimum wage is $15/h vs $7.50/h

        Labor costs for produce accounts for up to 50% of the costs for stuff like lettuce, but it’s closer to 30% for many other staple crops.

        Again, if your industry can’t survive without basically slave labor, then it doesn’t deserve to survive.

      • @Treczoks
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        118 hours ago

        If US agriculture collapses, it is first and foremost bad for the US.

        • @[email protected]
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          215 hours ago

          With the current crop of lunatics in office, it will almost immediately be turned into a problem for the rest of the world. Even in the best of times, the US has made its problems everyone else’s, these days it would only be worse.

  • @dogslayeggs
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    81 day ago

    What I’m not seeing from this story is whether the farmers have tried paying a higher wage to attract workers who are not at risk of being deported. Are they paying slave wages and taking advantage of a population of people who are unable to get a less physically demanding job?

    Another thing I’m not seeing is any mention of how these farmers voted in the latest election. Rural Pennsylvania isn’t exactly a hotbed of liberal ideology. I wouldn’t be surprised if the same people screamed about “illegals.”

    • @[email protected]
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      219 hours ago

      Kennett Square isn’t exactly rural. It’s near rural stuff but could arguably be considered an exurb of Philly, and there’s quite a lot of wealth nearby. Around the election I saw about even amounts of Trump and Kamala signs.

    • @Scott_of_the_Arctic
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      121 hours ago

      Including or excluding all the fabricated ballots made by Elon musk s child labour workforce?

      • @[email protected]
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        120 hours ago

        Musky “X, get back to work. Daddy needs these fabricated ballots ready to go by Friday.”

        X “I haven’t sleep in two days.”

        Musky “No sleep, builds character, son.”

  • @[email protected]
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    424 hours ago

    Start offering mushroom picking experiences: for every 50 buckets you fill, you get a free bucket of mushrooms.