KEY POINTS
  • Farmers in the nation's top agriculture state are increasingly moving to different forms of mechanization to get around the farm labor crunch, according to a survey.
  • More than 40% of farmers in the past five years have been unable to obtain all the workers they needed for the production of their main crop, according to a California Farm Bureau survey.
  • It finds that about 56% have started using mechanization in the past five years, and of the total, more than half said it was because of labor shortages.
  • California's $45 billion agriculture industry produces nearly half of the nation's fresh fruits and vegetables.
Vineyard crews pick grapes in the early morning hours of September 18, 2018, near Sebastopol, California.

Farmers in the nation's top agriculture state are increasingly moving to different forms of mechanization to get around the farm labor crunch, according to a California Farm Bureau survey.

The number of farm workers in California has been gradually declining in the past several years and stepped-up immigration sweeps by the federal government in California haven't helped. Labor shortages have been especially tough on farmers with crops such as tree fruits, grapes and berries.