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Jamaica: Gebbers Farms workers provide funding to Jamaican retirement home

In a gesture of giving to those in need, some 400 Jamaican seasonal farm workers at Gebbers Farms in Brewster, WA, made a remarkable contribution of $250,000 in Jamaican currency to the Golden Age Home in Kingston, capital city of their home country, in mid-February.

At the ceremony, the Honorable Derrick Kellier, Jamaican Minister of Labour and Social Security, took part in the check presentation and addressed the assembly at Golden Age Home.

Thanking Gebbers Farms’ workers, the official lauded their “marvelous benevolence and act of philanthropy,” and he went on to “boast unashamedly about what these workers have decided to do by way of touching the lives of the residents of this Golden Age Home.”

He said, “This is a time of enormous challenges for our country. We exist in a very tight fiscal space, and in times like these, gestures of kindness and philanthropy towards the less fortunate and the very vulnerable among us take on profound significance.”

The donation of $250,000 Jamaican dollars from the workers’ collective earnings has “brought national recognition to the best characteristic of the Jamaican spirit,” the minister continued.

Kellier cited Gebbers Farms as well, noting that, “in the short space of two years, their establishment has made a profound impact on the history of endurance of the US-Jamaica Overseas Farm Workers Programme that is over 60 years old. Not bad going for a ‘new kid’ on the block.”



The donation was earmarked specifically to the retirement home’s self-sufficiency backyard gardening program, which Kellier said, “powerfully underscores the meaning and relevance of the inspiring words of the late Winston Churchill, who once said, ‘We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.’”

He said, “The example set by this group of outstanding Jamaican farm workers is a genuine challenge for the current generation of professionals and entrepreneurs who need to understand that, if they are going to lead, they have to participate.”

According to Chelan Fresh Marketing Director Mac Riggan, the workers were “never asked for this donation but simply took it upon themselves to do it.” Chelan Fresh is the marketing and sales arm for the fruit cooperative that includes Gebbers Farms, and Riggan said the Feb. 11 presentation of the check illustrated the cooperation and goodwill between the two countries.

“This whole gesture was made possible by the working conditions provided by Gebbers Farms,” Riggan said. “It says a lot about the farm and about working conditions in the United States. The fairness of wages allows workers to do this kind of giving.”

Riggan said the workers, who come to Gebbers Farms in June and return to Jamaica in November, will be arriving for the 2013 cherry season within weeks.

“They’ve been coming to Gebbers Farms for four years, and we will be happy to see them again this spring,” he said.

For more information:
Mac Riggan
Chelan Fresh Marketing
Tel: +1 509 682-4252
Mob: +1 509 421-7053
[email protected]


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