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Tag: child labor violations

  • Child labor violations on the rise, problem could get worse: report

    Child labor violations on the rise, problem could get worse: report

    (NewsNation) — Child labor violations are increasing, and over two dozen states have made moves that are exacerbating the issue, a recent report by Governing for Impact, the Economic Policy Institute and Child Labor Coalition says. 

    “Many assume that children working long hours in dangerous jobs is a thing of the distant past in the United States,” the report’s authors said. “Unfortunately, they’re wrong.”

    Injury rates almost doubled among workers under 18 between 2011 and 2020, the report said.

    The Fair Labor Standard Act, passed by Congress in 1938, authorized some restrictions on child labor. Still, the report says, in recent years there have been “noted increases” in child labor violations, workplace injuries and chronic absenteeism from school. 

    In FY 2023, the Department of Labor concluded 955 investigations and reported that it found a 14% increase in violations from the previous year. Nearly 5,800 children were working in ways that didn’t follow the laws, and the department assessed more than $8 million in penalties, an 83% increase from FY 2022.

    Organizations, in their report, detailed the stories of a 16-year-old boy who was killed while deep cleaning a piece of machinery in the deboning area of a Mississippi chicken processing plant. Proper supervision and precautions failed him, the report said.

    Another teen near Orlando, Florida, died at the construction site of a two-story house in 2019 when he fell from a height of 8 feet off a step ladder while holding a 24-foot flooring joist. The joist fell on the boy’s chest and killed him, the report said.

    A number of factors can lead to youth getting hurt on the job, including which occupation they’re employed in, the report said. Agriculture is an industry where the risks to child workers are the highest and regulations are the weakest, for example, according to the report.

    “Instead of addressing the troubling increase in workplace injuries among children, industry-aligned groups like those behind Project 2025 have actually proposed to change federal regulations to let more young people work in more dangerous jobs,” the report said.

    Project 2025 is a nearly 1,000-page handbook from conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation, as well as other organizations, that serves as a guide for what they want done under a Republican presidential administration.

    While Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has distanced himself from Project 2025, dozens of people who worked closely with him during his time in the White House are involved in it, a fact Democratic nominee Kamala Harris’ campaign has pointed out. 

    Authors of Project 2025  wrote that some young adults “show an interest in inherently dangerous jobs.”

    “Current rules forbid many young people, even if their family is running the business, from working in such jobs. This results in worker shortages in dangerous fields and often discourages otherwise interested young workers from trying the more dangerous job,” Project 2025 authors said. “With parental consent and proper training, certain young adults should be allowed to learn and work in more dangerous occupations. This would give a green light to training programs and build skills in teenagers who may want to work in these fields.”

    Along with those in the industry pushing for less child labor protections, legislators in more than 30 states have taken steps to weaken them since 2021, Governing for Impact, the Economic Policy Institute and Child Labor Coalition wrote in their report.

    “Citing labor shortages and under pressure from industry groups, these states have taken steps to: allow children under 18 — often much younger — to work in dangerous occupations, limit employer liability when their child workers are injured, and let employers schedule children for overnight shifts,” the report said.

    What can be done to prevent child labor violations?

    Since 2021, the Department of Labor has “ramped up enforcement” of current federal regulations and given employers who have committed “some of the worst abuses” the maximum penalties, the report notes. However, “the regulations themselves are out of date and insufficient.” the report said. 

    “Even with full-throated enforcement of these regulations, it’s not enough to sort of protect kids from what’s going on now in the economy,” Reed Shaw, policy counsel at Governing for Impact and co-author of the report, told The Guardian. 

    Report authors had some suggestions for changes the department can make. These include expanding the list of occupations deemed too hazardous for workers under 18 years old; increasing protections for child workers in hazardous agricultural jobs; and issuing regulations prohibiting employers from scheduling certain child workers for overnight shifts, as well as requiring rest breaks and one-day off a week for others.

    Cassie Buchman

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  • Bipartisan bill allowing more teen labor on construction sites nears finish line

    Bipartisan bill allowing more teen labor on construction sites nears finish line

    A bill that would ease restrictions on the kind of work 16- and 17-year-olds can do on construction sites is nearly on its way to the desk of Gov. Ron DeSantis, after picking up bipartisan, bicameral support in the Republican-dominated Legislature.

    The controversial legislation, written by lobbyists for home builders and construction contractors, passed the Florida Senate unanimously on Friday, and passed the House earlier this week in a 84-30 vote with some bipartisan support.

    Not a single Democrat voted against the legislation (HB 917/SB 460) in the Senate (with Democratic Sen. Jones absent), while GOP Rep. Mike Beltran was the only Republican lawmaker in either chamber to cross party lines to vote it down.

    Orlando-area state Rep. Johanna López, a Democrat, even co-sponsored the bill exactly nine minutes ahead of its passage in the House on Wednesday.

    Supporters of the legislation, including a number of Democratic lawmakers, have argued that the intent of the bill has been taken out of context, and that the bill has been incorrectly labeled a “child labor bill.”

    “People take a snapshot of a bill, a bill number, and then they can never be told something else along the process,” said Sen. Jason Pizzo (D-Hollywood) on Friday, “even [if] it goes through material or substantive changes.”

    click to enlarge Sen. Jason Pizzo, a Miami-Dade County Democrat - Photo via News Service of Florida

    Photo via News Service of Florida

    Sen. Jason Pizzo, a Miami-Dade County Democrat

    Pizzo, like his Democratic colleague Sen. Davis before him, all but begged Simon to give the public a reason not to lambaste him and other Democrats for voting up the bill.

    “If you’d just walk through what it was and what it is today? Please, thank you,” he said, placing down his microphone in exasperation.

    The legislation does in fact affect Florida’s child labor laws (not teen labor, but literally “child labor”) by narrowly targeting restrictions on hazardous work performed by minors. Under existing state law, minors are prohibited from working on “any scaffolding, roof, superstructure, residential or nonresidential building construction, or ladder above 6 feet.”

    The legislation as originally filed would have gutted that restriction for minors aged 16 and older. However, following public pressure, the legislation was amended by the bill sponsors to largely maintain that prohibition.

    The legislation has also been amended to clarify that minors are not legally permitted to work on commercial construction sites — only residential ones — and that employers are barred from forcing minors to perform any work that would conflict with federal child labor standards under the Fair Labor Standards Act, the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA), or any other federal rule.

    Bill opponents, however, argue that the bill could still conflict with federal law due to a federal prohibition against allowing minors to work on any roofing job, regardless of how far off the ground they are laboring.

    Furthermore, because federal law specifically covers only organizations or enterprises that do more than $500,000 a  year in business (with limited exceptions), the nonpartisan Florida Policy Institute estimates that thousands of construction contractors in the state of Florida would not be bound by the standards of the FLSA as referenced in the Florida legislation. The Florida Policy Institute has been a firm opponent of the legislation both as filed and as amended.

    Rich Templin, director of politics and public policy for the Florida AFL-CIO — the state’s largest federation of labor unions — similarly believes this “loophole” (as the Florida Policy Institute has framed it) could unnecessarily put older teens at risk on potentially dangerous work sites.

    He pointed out that under the bill, minors are required to obtain the most base-level OSHA certification (OSHA 10) to work in construction and must work under the supervision of an adult at least 21 years of age or older who has similarly completed the 10-hour training course required for that certification.

    But workers in the trades have argued this isn’t good enough. And it won’t keep older teens safe on the job.  “So we have inexperienced people with little to no training supervising 16- and 17-year-olds on some of the most dangerous work sites in the state,” Templin told Orlando Weekly over the phone after the final vote Friday.

    Construction drives the highest number of unlicensed activity complaints in the state, and research has found that it is the deadliest industry for youth nationwide, behind agriculture.

    According to the U.S. Department of Labor, construction is also one of the most common industries in which child labor violations occur already, in addition to wage theft — which the state of Florida does not have a good track record on combating.

    Then there’s the federal prohibition on minors working “on or about a roof,” which Templin argues isn’t fully clear of conflict with the legislation as it is currently written.

    “It doesn’t clarify that 16- and 17-year-olds can’t be on a roofing site,” said Templin, which he says “is problematic, at best.”

    A state law enacted in Iowa last year, similarly targeting hazardous worksite protections for children in the workforce, was flagged by U.S. Department of Labor representatives for conflicting with federal law.

    Because Florida has literally only seven state employees dedicated to the task of enforcing Florida’s child labor protections, as of December, the task of protecting children on the job largely falls on the federal Wage and Hour division and OSHA, which similarly have a limited enforcement capacity in Florida.

    The problem of a potential conflict with federal law was brought to the attention of Florida lawmakers several times during the bills’ multiple committee stops, and Templin says they provided language to the bill sponsors to help close any potential loopholes that could get Florida employers in trouble with the feds.

    Those proposed changes, he said, weren’t accepted.

    “What they’re creating is a statute that contractors will use to say, we can use 16-year-olds to do manual labor on a roofing job, when in fact, that’s illegal by federal law,” he added.

    Even critics of the legislation, however, have admitted the bill is not all bad. There’s literally just one small section of the 26-page bill, titled “Career and Technical Education,” that affects child labor protections.

    The rest largely concerns career and technical education programs in schools, which are broadly supported, but not fully accessible in all of Florida’s school districts. This legislation, in part, aims to address that problem, according to its sponsors, and to help expand opportunities for Florida students to explore multiple career pathways, including construction.

    “What we wanted to do through this bill is ensure that these young people had an opportunity, that were interested in in construction, to start to get their feet wet so that they can expand their knowledge base as they move forward and graduate from high school to see if this is actually an interest,” said GOP Sen. Corey Simon, a former professional football player and sponsor of the legislation in the Florida Senate.

    “And so that’s all this bill does, is gives them an opportunity to really engage our construction trades,” he explained.

    click to enlarge Florida Sen. Corey Simon, R-Tallahassee - The Florida Channel

    The Florida Channel

    Florida Sen. Corey Simon, R-Tallahassee

    It’s a nice talking point that the authors of the legislation probably appreciate, too.

    Public records originally obtained by Orlando Weekly show that a lobbyist for the Associated Builders and Contractors of Florida, an industry trade group that’s historically lobbied against policies like minimum wage increases, fed Sen. Simon the legislation over email late last year.

    The lobbyist, Carol Bowen, also named a lobbyist for the Florida Home Builders Association as a fellow point person.

    Bowen has admitted during public testimony that she worked with the bill sponsors on the legislation, and that additional labor is needed in the construction industry due to a looming shortage with older workers retiring, and a current shortage of workers that critics say has been driven in part by a harsh immigration measure signed into law last year.

    “More than 50% of the industry is 50 years of age or older and retiring and we are just uniformly working to expose students in school to career and technical education opportunities,” Bowen shared during the House bill’s first committee hearing in January. 

    Child labor violations in Florida and across the country have risen in recent years, as have the number of industry-backed bills filed in state legislatures aiming to loosen child labor protections in states across the country. 

    The Home Builders Association of Iowa backed the state’s own child labor rollbacks last year, while the Michigan Home Builders Association explicitly opposed a bill in their state that would establish higher penalties for child labor violations.

    Florida GOP Senate bill cosponsor Keith Perry, a roofing contractor whose own company has been found guilty of wage theft, has argued the bill is unlikely to affect the number of child labor violations that occur, if employers are already violating the law as it is.

    “I started roofing when I was 16 years old. I started my business when I was 17 years old — which was illegal, is still illegal, and will be illegal under this bill,” Perry stated candidly during a committee hearing on the legislation last month. “People who break the law are not going to follow the law anyway, whether this bill is passed or not.”

    Due to some last-minute edits to provisions of the bill (not affecting child labor standards), the bill is currently “in messages,” meaning it’s headed back to the House for another vote.

    Meanwhile, another bill written by a billionaire-funded conservative think tank, similarly targeting Florida’s child labor standards, is also close to securing final passage.

    If approved by Gov. DeSantis, both bills would go into effect July 1, 2024.

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    McKenna Schueler

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  • Florida House votes to allow more teen labor on construction sites

    Florida House votes to allow more teen labor on construction sites

    The Florida House on Wednesday voted in favor of a controversial bill that would allow teenagers 16 and older to work jobs on residential construction sites, at the behest of industry groups that wrote the legislation.

    Members of the Republican-dominated Florida House voted 84-30 to approve the bill (HB 917), with most Democrats opposed. Democratic State Reps. David Silvers, Katherine Waldron and Lisa Dunkley crossed party lines to vote in favor of the bill, while GOP Rep. Mike Beltran was the only member of his party to vote the bill down.

    Democratic State Rep. Johanna López, a former teacher and Orange County school board member elected to the House in 2022, not only voted in favor of the bill — which largely concerns Career and Technical Education programs in schools — but signed on to co-sponsor the legislation literally nine minutes before it passed.

    López, who represents parts of Orange County, did not respond to our emailed request for comment on her vote or co-sponsorship of the bill, which has been criticized for rolling back child labor protections. Democratic Rep. Susan Valdes, who previously voted in favor of the legislation during committee stops, changed her vote on the House floor to “No.”

    House Bill 917, filed by GOP Rep. John Snyder, has raised alarm bells for a short section of the bill that would ease restrictions on the types of work older teens are legally permitted to do in construction.

    Most jobs in construction are considered “hazardous occupations” that are barred to minors under federal and state law, with limited exceptions for students of government-approved student learner programs or apprenticeships.

    Snyder described the goal of his bill earlier this month as “opening a pathway” for older teens who don’t plan on going to college and wish to pursue work in the trades. Critics have blasted the proposal as just plain dangerous and unnecessary.

    click to enlarge Florida Rep. John Snyder, R-Hobe Sound - The Florida Channel

    The Florida Channel

    Florida Rep. John Snyder, R-Hobe Sound

    “I’m familiar with construction job sites, and job sites — even residential job sites — are dangerous,” Jim Junecko, a certified tower crane operator, said during public testimony on the bill earlier this month. “We don’t need a 16-year-old kid — that’s what they are, they’re kids at age 16 — on a job site.”

    The construction industry drives the highest number of unlicensed activity complaints in the state, and is the deadliest industry for youth nationwide, behind agriculture. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, construction is also one of the most common industries in which child labor violations occur already, in addition to wage theft — which the state of Florida does not have a good track record on combating.

    Supporters of the legislation have desperately attempted to downplay the provision of the bill affecting child labor standards — which admittedly makes up just a small section of the 26-page bill.

    They’ve also defended the bill by pointing to proposed “safeguards” that are meant to help increase safety for teens on the job.

    Under the proposal, teens aged 16 and older would need to obtain OSHA-10 certification (a 10-hour training course) to work in residential construction, and would have to work directly under the supervision of someone at least 21 years old who has received the same certification and has at least two years’ work experience.

    The bill has been amended to remove the legalization of non-administrative work on commercial construction sites. Like its Senate companion, the bill also now clarifies that minors would not be permitted on any roofs, ladders, scaffolding, or superstructures more than six feet off the ground (so, nope, no more teen roofers).

    Workers in the trades, however, have argued these “safeguards” to protect kids on the job are insufficient. “To see in this bill that you don’t even need someone to have a journeyman with you while you’re doing this job, and it’s just someone who has taken their OSHA 10, is very worrying,” said trades apprentice Kevin Lawhorn, 19, during a committee stop for the Senate bill last week.

    “If I would have started maybe three years ago, and no journeyman …” the 19-year-old paused, then continued, “I don’t know how I would be today, if I would have been injured, if I would even be here. It’s a very dangerous job.”

    There are also very few people involved with oversight to ensure construction companies and contractors are following the law as it exists now.

    The agency in charge with regulating child labor in Florida told Orlando Weekly in December that they have just seven personnel dedicated to enforcing child labor standards, covering thousands of job-sites statewide.

    Federal investigators, employed by an agency that’s been nearly flat-funded by Congress over the last decade, are also dealing with historically low staffing levels, as the Biden administration scrambles to implement a stronger action plan to combat child labor violations.

    Industry groups, however, have been all in on the legislation. Email communications obtained by Orlando Weekly through a public records request show the Senate version of the bill was fed to its sponsor, Sen. Corey Simon, by a lobbyist for the Associated Builders and Contractors, an industry trade group that represents thousands of employers across the state.

    State Sen. Corey Simon (R-Tallahassee) - Florida Senate

    Florida Senate

    State Sen. Corey Simon (R-Tallahassee)

    The same lobbyist, Carol Bowen, showed up in support of the legislation in both House and Senate committees. So has a lobbyist for the Florida Home Builders Association, which also contributed to drafting the bill language. “I told him [Snyder] we were going to give him an easy bill this session,” Bowen admitted during the bill’s first committee stop in January. “Clearly I lied, and I owe him a free year without us next year,” she joked.

    Florida’s bill is one of several industry-backed bills recently introduced or enacted in state legislatures that seek to expand youth employment in hazardous occupations.

    According to the Economic Policy Institute, many are backed by state affiliates of industry groups like the National Restaurant Association, the Associated Builders and Contractors, Chambers of Commerce, and special interest groups like the Naples-based Foundation for Government Accountability, which has been a driving force behind child labor rollbacks across the country.

    Florida’s not missing out. Public records show the FGA drafted another child-labor related bill (HB 49) advancing through Florida’s state Legislature targeting youth work hours and mandatory breaks on the job.

    That bill — and the teen construction legislation — has been watered down following significant pushback from the public. There were also concerns voiced that the legislation could conflict with federal law, as lawmakers in Iowa were made aware following the enactment of their own rollback to child labor law in 2023.

    Florida’s House Bill 917, now that it’s passed the House, will head to a state Senate committee for their approval. Its Senate companion (SB 460) got its own vote of approval from the Senate last week. Both chambers need to OK legislation before it’s sent to the Governor’s Office for final approval.

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    McKenna Schueler

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