The children that are going to be most impacted by the easing of child labor laws are going to be migrant, undocumented, and children in poverty. Let's face it, the issue isn't little Freddie sneaking out the back door, jumping on his bike, and heading to his secret job at Pizza Hut so he has money for prom. Migrant and immigrant children are the ones that are being endangered and injured with this swath of recent violations. Also, minors are not required to be paid minimum wage, they aren't required benefits, and companies are not generally liable for injury or death on the job. Let that sink in. The agriculture industry has no maximum hours a minor can work in a day or a week.Della wrote: ↑Tue Apr 09, 2024 6:29 pmIf they manage to convince Trump to remove 11 million people from the country, the labor will need to come from somewhere. They're also trying to dummy down education. Coincidence?Momto2boys973 wrote: ↑Tue Apr 09, 2024 5:57 pm I’m with you here. We’re not talking 7 year olds loading machines in a factory. If this is about teenagers not requiring parental consent to get a job, I don’t see how that’s a “child labor push”. Maybe I misunderstood what this is about..?
And what’s so ironic to me is that the same people who pushed for teens to not require parental consent for medical choices are the same people all up in arms about this. So a 15 year old girl can go and get an abortion without telling her parents but God forbid she can get a job at Taco Bell after school without her parents’ permission? Always the selective outrage.
mcginnisc wrote: ↑Tue Apr 09, 2024 12:49 pm Ok.. I read the article. I am trying to find an issue here. There should be regulations for employers that employ children and teens that are 14-15 are still minors. Their parents should have the knowledge of the fact that they are employed so that they are appraised of the regulations imposed by their state and they can be followed. Here is what the GA DOL says: Minors 14 and 15 years of age can work:
3 hours on a school day
8 hours on a nonschool day
18 hours in a school week
40 hours in a nonschool week
Minors 14 and 15 years of age may:
Not work before 7:00 a.m.
Not work after 7:00 p.m. (extended to 9:00 p.m. June 1 through Labor Day)
Not work during normal school hours
Minors 14 or 15 years of age who do not attend school (home schooled, married, excused from school, etc.) are subject to the above restrictions. They MAY NOT WORK DURING THE HOURS THE LOCAL SCHOOL SYSTEM IS IN SESSION.
For 16-17 yo: Minors 16 and 17 years of age have no state or federal law work hour restrictions.
No minor under 16 years of age shall be permitted to work during the hours when public or private schools are in session unless said minor has completed senior high school or has been excused from attendance in school by a county or independent school system board of education in accordance with the general policies and regulations promulgated by the State Board of Education.
The rub is that GA does not allow anyone under 18 to drive between 12-5 am so employers also have to abide by that law.
My daughter is 15 and works at her karate dojo. She works 3 hours a day no more than 3 days a week. She is a junior instructor just like her older sister did while she was in HS.
I have no issue with there being regulations such as nobody under 18 is allowed to use certain equipment in a kitchen at a foodservice establishment. I think parents need to be aware of where their child is working just so they can make sure that they remain safe at work.
The only entity that benefits from reducing child labor laws are businesses because it helps their profits. One only has to look at the PAC that is pushing state legislatures for these easing of restrictions - Koch operated and funded Americans for Prosperity.
And, the age of consent for medical treatment (medical body autonomy) ranges from 12-14 depending on the state. Advocates for abortion rights see an abortion as medical treatment and therefore are against raising the age of body autonomy only in the case of abortion. They feel that it is in the best interest of the child. Comparing it to easing of child labor laws is disingenuous.