Cherries are the calling card of Northern Michigan. They represent our home, just as citrus speaks for Florida, or as lobsters lobby for Maine. Here in the North, orchards define our landscape, U-Picking is a cherished tradition and a slice of pie means “I love you.” But cherry farmers these days face a perfect storm of challenges, from environmental to political. Erratic swings in temperature caused by climate change threaten cherry buds in the spring; cheap foreign imports have undercut prices that U.S. farmers can expect to earn; workers needed to harvest crops have grown scarce due to unaffordable housing prices and restrictive national immigration policies; and the local real estate frenzy has disincentivized growers from staying on their land when they can sell their orchards for millions.
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Immigrant farmworkers Pedro Francisco and his wife Juana Miguel met President Joe Biden on July 3 during the Commander in Chief’s visit to King Orchards in Antrim County. “What they do for King Orchards is invaluable,” Juliette King McAvoy told Biden. “Our business is what it is because we have the skilled people, skilled laborers that are here.”
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