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Tag: Florida SB 460

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

    Florida House votes to allow more teen labor on construction sites

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    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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  • Florida bill weakening child labor protections on construction sites heads to full Senate

    Florida bill weakening child labor protections on construction sites heads to full Senate

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    click to enlarge

    The Florida Channel

    Florida Sen. Corey Simon, R-Tallahassee

    As some states seek to strengthen protections for minors in the workforce, Florida lawmakers are moving forward with a bill that would weaken child labor law by allowing teenagers 16 and older to work non-clerical jobs on residential construction sites.

    The bill (SB 460) cleared its final Republican-dominated committee stop Thursday in a 13–4 vote.  The bill will now head to the Senate floor, for a vote by the full Chamber.

    The child labor provision, which has drawn opposition from social advocacy and labor organizations, is tucked within a larger bill about career and technical education programs in schools, which can include supervised courses in the construction trades.

    Under federal law, minors under 18 are barred from most jobs on construction sites — save for office or sales work — with limited exceptions for minors who are employed as part of a government-approved student learner program or apprenticeship.

    Email communications obtained by Orlando Weekly through a public records request show the bill was written by lobbyists for the Florida Home Builders Association and Associated Builders and Contractors of Florida — both of which have also lobbied against efforts to raise Florida’s minimum wage and have lobbied in favor of other anti-worker policies.

    Carol Bowen, chief lobbyist for the ABC of Florida, emailed the draft legislation to Sen. Simon’s legislative office in October, describing herself and a lobbyist with the FHBA as “point people” for the bill.

    click to enlarge Screenshot of email sent by ABC lobbyist to a legislative aide for Florida Sen. Simon. - Public records obtained by Orlando Weekly

    Public records obtained by Orlando Weekly

    Screenshot of email sent by ABC lobbyist to a legislative aide for Florida Sen. Simon.

    The bill has drawn criticism as a “child labor rollback” proposal, coming at a time when child labor violations in the U.S. and in Florida have been on the rise. According to the Department of Labor, the number of U.S. minors found employed in violation of the law (nearly 6,000) has increased 88% since 2019.

    It also fits within a broader trend of child labor law rollbacks that have been introduced and passed in state legislatures across the country in recent years, with the backing of deep-pocketed special interest groups that routinely lobby for anti-worker policies.

    Sen. Simon’s office declined to comment on his collaboration with industry groups on the legislation, when reached by Orlando Weekly in January. Simon has publicly defended the bill by arguing that the goal is to increase gainful opportunities for youth.

    Critics, including the Florida Parent Teachers Association and union workers in the trades, have warned of potential safety risks. The private construction industry accounts for the highest number of workplace fatalities in the state, and is the deadliest industry for youth nationwide, behind agriculture.

    Construction is also one of the most common industries in which child labor violations occur, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. During a previous hearing on the legislation, co-sponsor Sen. Keith Perry argued that, if employers are breaking the law already — by allowing kids to work hazardous jobs — this bill by and large would not change that.

    “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,” said Perry, who owns a roofing company that has been cited by the federal government in the past for wage theft. “People who break the law are not going to follow the law anyway, whether this bill is passed or not.”

    The legislation has garnered support not just from Republican lawmakers — who generally vote in step with one another — but also several Democrats, who feel confident with changes made through the amendment process that have watered down the proposed rollback to child labor protections.

    The original version of the legislation, for instance, would have allowed teens 16 and older to work on commercial construction sites, in addition to residential. It also would have allowed teens 16 and older to work on roofs, scaffolding, and superstructures — with no limit on how high those constructions could be.

    As amended — following pressure from the public — the bill would instead only allow those older teens to work in residential construction and would maintain a prohibition on allowing minors to work on roofs, scaffolding or superstructures more than six feet off the ground.

    The bill does have certain safeguards. The bill prohibits any work by minors that would violate federal child labor or OSHA rules. Older teens would need to first obtain OSHA-10 certification, and would need to work under the supervision of an adult 21 or older who has at least two years’ experience in the industry.

    Bill opponents, however, point to the fact that available supervision on construction sites in Florida is already lacking, according to employment data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the OSHA-10 license offers insufficient training.

    “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 Kevin Lawhorn, a 19-year-old apprentice in the trades who testified in front of senators Thursday. 

    “If I would have started maybe three years ago, and no journeyman …” Lawhorn 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 few personnel to actually ensure construction companies and contractors are following the law, as it is.

    A spokesperson for the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, which enforces Florida’s child labor law, told Orlando Weekly in December that they have just seven personnel dedicated to the task of enforcing the law across thousands of job sites statewide.

    The federal government also has enforcement personnel in the state, plus investigators from OSHA, but experts say — due to flat-funding from Congress and consequent understaffing — that federal enforcement is also lacking in the states.

    Unlike cases of minimum wage or overtime violations, there is also no right to private action for child labor violations under state or federal law.

    This means victims and their parents can’t sue employers for child labor violations on their own; the only way to enforce child labor law is through the government. Colorado recently enacted its own law to, at the very least, allow minors who are injured on the job to sue for damages.

    Minors 14 and older can work a number of jobs legally in the state — in grocery stores, convenience shops, movie theaters and more.

    But supporters of the bill say that construction jobs can pay better. They also point to a labor shortage in the industry that is expected to worsen as workers age and retire.

    The bill also garnered additional criticism from workers in the trades Thursday for language in the bill that, according to their interpretation, could undermine the journeyman licensing process in the state. “It really eliminates the ability of cities and counties to issue [journeyman] licenses, and to make sure qualified people are on these jobs,” said electrician James Ingle, president of an International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) local in Gainesville.

    For this reason, Democratic Sen. Shevrin Jones, who voted in favor of the bill during a previous committee hearing, said he was a ‘No’ vote for the time being.

    Sen. Simon, the bill sponsor, said he’s “always open to learn” from various stakeholders about how to improve the bill and to give kids the ability to do work in the trades “as safely as possible.”

    “Nobody up here in this room wants to put our kids in harm’s way unnecessarily,” Simon said in closing. “And we’ll continue to strengthen this bill as we move forward.”

    If passed by the full Senate, the legislation would still need to be approved by the Florida House, where a similar companion bill has also been advancing. If approved by both chambers, the legislation would then head to the Governor’s Office for DeSantis’ final approval.

    Meanwhile, another child labor-related bill (HB 49), gutting restrictions on the number of hours that minors 16 and older can work during the school year, already passed the Florida House earlier this month. It would also  explicitly allow home-schooled children to work during school hours, which is currently prohibited. The bill is scheduled to be heard by the Senate Rules committee Monday afternoon.

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    McKenna Schueler

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