January 30, 2026
Idaho Built an Ag Empire on Modern Day Slavery
Tens of thousands trapped by fear, debt, and deportation threats
By: Idaho Senator Brian Lenney
Last week, some dairy industry and construction folks got offended when I compared their labor practices to “slavery.” Called it disrespectful and gaslit all of us who are opposed to illegal immigration.
Take a look:
You know what?
Good. Be offended. Because what’s actually disrespectful is what’s happening on farms and job sites across Idaho right now. And if the comparison bothers you, maybe that says something about the conditions you’re defending.
So this blog is my response.
Imagine you’re here illegally, working on an Idaho farm.
Could be dairy. Could be potato fields. Sugar beets. Onions. Maybe you’re on a construction crew building houses in Boise’s suburbs. Your boss knows. Of course he knows. The industry evenly openly claims there are 30,000 illegal workers in Idaho (I think it’s way more).
You complain about conditions? Mention the wages? Say something about the converted barn they’re making you sleep in with nine other guys? The farmer doesn’t have to do anything. Doesn’t have to call ICE. Doesn’t even threaten directly. The threat just exists in the air between you. It’s always there.
He needs you, actually. Can’t run his operation without you. But you don’t know that for sure, do you? And even if you did, the fear sits in your chest anyway because the risk isn’t worth testing.
This is human exploitation happening right now in every agricultural county in Idaho.
A couple months ago an ICE agent based in Boise told me something that keeps rattling around in my head. He busted some farmworkers during a raid last year and expected resistance, anger, fear, chaos, the usual. Instead they thanked him. Because they said they’d been working every single day since Christmas with no break. Not one day. Months straight of 12, 14, 16 hour days.
For them, getting arrested and deported was relief.
Think about what has to be true for deportation to feel like freedom.
Idaho agriculture runs a multibillion dollar operation annually. We got dairy, potatoes, wheat, sugar beets, barley, hay. The Magic Valley feeds a chunk of America. And it runs on people who can’t say no. Dairy operations needs milkers every day. No weekends off ever. Construction sites building the new subdivisions outside Meridian and Nampa? Same workers, different setting, identical fear.
You’re up before dawn, work until dark, sometimes seven days a week. Maybe you’re making $16 an hour on a farm or high teens to low twenties on a construction site. State minimum wage is $7.25 but rent keeps climbing anyway. Your back hurts from lifting sacks of potatoes or sheets of drywall. Fifty, eighty, hundred pounds. Over and over. The guy you work with lost three fingers last month in the machinery and kept working after they patched him up because… what else is he gonna do?
But the housing is where the farmer or contractor really becomes the slaveholder. You’re living in trailers or converted outbuildings, packed in tight with maybe ten or fifteen people sharing space meant for maybe four. Southern and southeast Idaho winters can get cold. Summer in the valley hits 100 and maybe there’s no AC. You’re paying rent for this, by the way. $100 – $300 monthly gets deducted right from your check for a room with mold creeping up the walls and mice in the corners.
These are human beings created in God’s image being exploited for profit.
Or, maybe you paid a coyote (i.e. smuggler) to get here.
$3,000, $5,000+. So now you’re working just to pay that off before you even start sending money “home” like you promised. Months of labor where you’re essentially getting nothing. It’s bondage with a paycheck.
And the boss knows this. He knows you can’t leave, can’t complain, can’t organize. He’s built his whole operation around your fear. The economics demand it, whether he’s evil or just practical. Cheap slave labor keeps him competitive. If he pays fair wages with real protections and benefits though, he’s out of business.
So he exploits you instead and pays poverty wages and houses you in conditions he wouldn’t let his dog live in. He takes your labor and your dignity and calls it a job opportunity.
Many of Idaho’s agricultural regions are remote. Twin Falls, Jerome, Gooding, up into the Magic Valley. Even the construction sites on Boise’s edges keep you isolated. Your employer often provides housing and transportation. Which means he controls everything about your life. Your sleeping arrangements. Your ability to get anywhere. Access to other people. Total control.
This is modern day plantation logic.
Different century, same structure.
Agricultural employers and construction outfits say there are 30,000 illegal aliens working in Idaho total. I don’t buy it.
But Idaho’s got hundreds of dairy operations. Add potato farms, onion operations, sugar beet harvest, hay production, cattle ranching, food processing plants in Twin Falls and Nampa. Then construction booming all across the Treasure Valley. All those new houses, the commercial buildings, road crews.
The math doesn’t work. I think the industry lowballs the number because acknowledging the real scale means acknowledging how completely dependent they are. It means admitting the whole state economy is built on exploiting people who have no legal standing to push back.
I’d bet it’s 50,000 easy. Probably more. Scattered across farms and job sites, invisible until ICE shows up, then suddenly they matter for a day before everyone goes back to pretending the system’s fine.
That’s fifty thousand human beings being systematically exploited.
It’s a human rights crisis happening in our backyard.
You can’t leave. Technically you can, sure. Nobody’s got you in chains. But leaving means possibly getting sent back to whatever you fled. Your kids grow up without you and the money you were sending to your mother in Mexico City stops.
So you stay. And the boss knows you’ll stay (he’s counting on it).
The threat of ICE doesn’t even have to be spoken. It’s just there. Hanging over every interaction. You see a sheriff’s car on the highway and your stomach drops. Hear sirens and wonder if today’s the day. That constant fear is the whip. It’s just modern and more efficient and wrapped in immigration law.
Those workers who thanked the Boise ICE agent weren’t confused or broken. They were exhausted past the point where deportation seemed worse than the daily grind. When going home to potential danger feels better than another day of farm work or construction, something’s fundamentally wrong with the equation.
Talk to anyone who actually knows Idaho agriculture or construction and they’ll tell you the same thing: 70-80%+ of the labor is illegal. The whole thing would collapse without it.
So there’s this weird unspoken agreement. Employers need workers. Workers need jobs that don’t ask for papers, and ICE does occasional raids to show they’re doing something but not so many that the economy crashes.
Everyone pretends the system works even though it’s built on people who have zero power and no recourse.
And the conditions stay brutal because they can. Why improve housing when workers can’t complain? Why pay more when the alternative for workers is deportation? Why add safety equipment when injuries don’t get reported?
The mechanism is different but the power structure is identical to slavery. One person owns your labor because the alternative is destruction.We built prosperity on the backs of people we exploit because we can. And we call ourselves a Christian state? Idaho, where everyone claims to love Jesus and follow His teachings? Where are those teachings when tens of thousands of people are being exploited in our fields and on our construction sites?
Jesus said whatever you did to the least of these, you did to Him. So what are we doing to Him right now in the Magic Valley? In Jerome County? In Canyon? On every farm and jobsite paying slave wages for 16 hour days?
Obviously farmers and contractors mostly won’t call ICE on their own workers. But they don’t have to because the possibility does the work for them. You police yourself because the consequences of stepping out of line are too catastrophic to risk.
You’re living in uncertainty.
Is today the day? Will this complaint be the one that triggers something?
The psychological weight of that is crushing and it’s deliberate. Your fear turns into someone else’s profit. Your silence keeps the whole machine running. Your inability to leave or demand better props up Idaho’s economy.
Those workers thanking the ICE agent would rather face deportation than one more shift. When that’s your reality, when the cage is that suffocating, what else do you call it? The person controlling you might think of themselves as a job provider, someone giving opportunities to people who need them. Maybe he even goes to church on Sunday and prays for the poor and the oppressed.
This is shameful…There’s no other word for it. We’re exploiting human beings, tens of thousands of them, and we’ve built a whole economic system that depends on their powerlessness. We make money from their fear while prices stay low because they can’t speak up.
And we do it in Jesus’s name?
In a state that prides itself on Christian values and family and hard work and integrity? Where’s the integrity in paying someone slave wages for 16 hour days, seven days a week? Where’s the family values in housing people in converted barns with no heat?
Where’s the Christian love in building your business model on the certainty that your workers are too terrified to demand basic human dignity?
This is the thing that seldmo gets talked about in the debate on illegal immigartion: that fact that these are people. They have names, families, hopes, pain. They are human beings created in God’s image deserving of basic rights and dignity and fair treatment.
The people profiting from this system should look in the mirror and ask themselves what they’re really doing. And they should reckon with the fact that their prosperity is built on other people’s suffering (because it is).
This has to change. Basic human decency demands it. You can’t claim to value life and dignity and justice while building your agricultural or construction empire on the backs of people who can’t say no.

































