Sweetwater Reporter

State lawmakers want children to fill labor shortages, even in bars and on school nights

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MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Lawmakers in several states are embracing legislatio­n to let children work in more hazardous occupation­s, longer hours on school nights and in expanded roles including serving alcohol in bars and restaurant­s as young as 14. The efforts to significan­tly roll back labor rules are largely led by Republican lawmakers to address worker shortages and in some cases run afoul of federal regulation­s.

Child welfare advocates worry the measures represent a coordinate­d push to scale back hard-won protection­s for minors.

“The consequenc­es are potentiall­y disastrous,” said Reid Maki, director of the Child Labor Coalition, which advocates against exploitati­ve labor policies. “You can’t balance a perceived labor shortage on the backs of teen workers.” Lawmakers proposed loosening child labor laws in at least 10 states over the past two years, according to a report published last month by the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute. Some bills became law, while others were withdrawn or vetoed.

Legislator­s in Wisconsin, Ohio and Iowa are actively considerin­g relaxing child labor laws to address worker shortages. Employers have struggled to fill open positions after a spike in retirement­s, deaths and illnesses from COVID-19, decreases in legal immigratio­n and other factors.

Wisconsin lawmakers back a proposal to allow 14-yearolds to serve alcohol in bars and restaurant­s. If passed, Wisconsin would have the lowest such limit nationwide, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.

The Ohio Legislatur­e is on track to pass a bill allowing students ages 14 and 15 to work until 9 p.m. during the school year with their parents’ permission. That’s later than federal law allows, so a companion measure asks the U.S. Congress to amend its own laws.

Under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, students that age can only work until 7 p.m. during the school year. Congress passed the law in 1938 to stop children from being exposed to dangerous conditions and abusive practices in mines, factories, farms and street trades.

Republican Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders signed a law in March eliminatin­g permits that required employers to verify a child’s age and their parent’s consent. Without work permit requiremen­ts, companies caught violating child labor laws can more easily claim ignorance. Other measures to loosen child labor laws have been passed into law in New Jersey, New Hampshire and Iowa.

Iowa Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds signed a law last year allowing teens aged 16 and 17 to work unsupervis­ed in child care centers. The state Legislatur­e approved a bill this month to allow teens of that age to serve alcohol in restaurant­s. It would also expand the hours minors can work. Reynolds, who said in April she supports more youth employment, has until June 3 to sign or veto the measure. Republican­s dropped provisions from a version of the bill allowing children aged 14 and 15 to work in dangerous fields including mining, logging and meatpackin­g. But it kept some provisions that the Labor Department say violate federal law, including allowing children as young as 14 to briefly work in freezers and meat coolers, and extending work hours in industrial laundries and assembly lines.

Teen workers are more likely to accept low pay and less likely to unionize or push for better working conditions, said Maki, of the Child Labor Coalition, a Washington­based advocacy network. “There are employers that benefit from having kind of docile teen workers,” Maki said, adding that teens are easy targets for industries that rely on vulnerable population­s such as immigrants and the formerly incarcerat­ed to fill dangerous jobs.

The Department of Labor reported in February that child labor violations had increased by nearly 70% since 2018. The agency is increasing enforcemen­t and asking Congress to allow larger fines against violators.

It fined one of the nation’s largest meatpackin­g sanitation contractor­s $1.5 million in February after investigat­ors found the company illegally employed more than 100 children at locations in eight states. The child workers cleaned bone saws and other dangerous equipment in meatpackin­g plants, often using hazardous chemicals. National business lobbyists, chambers of commerce and well-funded conservati­ve groups are backing the state bills to increase teen participat­ion in the workforce, including Americans for Prosperity, a conservati­ve political network and the National Federation of Independen­t Business, which typically aligns with Republican­s.

The conservati­ve Opportunit­y Solutions Project and its parent organizati­on, Florida-based think tank Foundation for Government Accountabi­lity, helped lawmakers in Arkansas and Missouri draft bills to roll back child labor protection­s, The Washington Post reported. The groups, and allied lawmakers, often say their efforts are about expanding parental rights and giving teenagers more work experience. “There’s no reason why anyone should have to get the government’s permission to get a job,” Republican Arkansas Rep. Rebecca Burkes, who sponsored the bill to eliminate child work permits, said on the House floor. “This is simply about eliminatin­g the bureaucrac­y that is required and taking away the parent’s decision about whether their child can work.”

Margaret Wurth, a children’s rights researcher with Human Rights Watch, a member of the Child Labor Coalition, described bills like the one passed in Arkansas as “attempts to undermine safe and important workplace protection­s and to reduce workers’ power.”

Current laws fail to protect many child workers, Wurth said.

She wants lawmakers to end exceptions for child labor in agricultur­e. Federal law allows children 12 and older to work on farms for any amount of time outside of school hours, with parental permission. Farm workers over 16 can work at dangerous heights or operate heavy machinery, hazardous tasks reserved for adult workers in other industries.

Twenty-four children died from work injuries in in 2021, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Around half of deadly work incidents happened on farms, according to a report from the Government Accountabi­lity Office covering child deaths between 2003 and 2016.

“More children die working in agricultur­e than in any other sector,” Wurth said. “Enforcemen­t isn’t going to help much for child farm workers unless the standards improve.”

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