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Related: About this forumAmerica is divided over major efforts to rewrite child labor laws
ECONOMY
America is divided over major efforts to rewrite child labor laws
At least 16 states have one or more bills to weaken their child labor laws, while 13 are seeking to strengthen them
By Lauren Kaori Gurley
March 31, 2024 at 8:29 a.m. EDT
As child labor violations soar across the country, dozens of states are ramping up efforts to update child labor laws with widespread efforts to weaken laws, but some to bolster them as well.
The push for changes to child labor laws arrives as employers particularly in restaurants and other service-providing industries have grappled with labor shortages since the beginning of the pandemic, and hired more teenagers whose wages are typically lower than adults.
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Labor experts attribute the spike in child labor violations, which have tripled over the past 10 years according to a Post analysis, to a tight labor market that has prompted employers to hire more teens, as well as migrant children arriving from Latin America. In 2023, teens aged 16 to 19 were working or looking for work at the highest annual rate since 2009, according to Labor Department data.
{snip}
By Lauren Kaori Gurley
Lauren Kaori Gurley is the labor reporter for The Washington Post. She previously covered labor and tech for Vice's Motherboard. Twitter https://twitter.com/laurenkgurley
America is divided over major efforts to rewrite child labor laws
At least 16 states have one or more bills to weaken their child labor laws, while 13 are seeking to strengthen them
By Lauren Kaori Gurley
March 31, 2024 at 8:29 a.m. EDT
As child labor violations soar across the country, dozens of states are ramping up efforts to update child labor laws with widespread efforts to weaken laws, but some to bolster them as well.
The push for changes to child labor laws arrives as employers particularly in restaurants and other service-providing industries have grappled with labor shortages since the beginning of the pandemic, and hired more teenagers whose wages are typically lower than adults.
Get a curated selection of 10 of our best stories in your inbox every weekend.
Labor experts attribute the spike in child labor violations, which have tripled over the past 10 years according to a Post analysis, to a tight labor market that has prompted employers to hire more teens, as well as migrant children arriving from Latin America. In 2023, teens aged 16 to 19 were working or looking for work at the highest annual rate since 2009, according to Labor Department data.
{snip}
By Lauren Kaori Gurley
Lauren Kaori Gurley is the labor reporter for The Washington Post. She previously covered labor and tech for Vice's Motherboard. Twitter https://twitter.com/laurenkgurley
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America is divided over major efforts to rewrite child labor laws (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Mar 2024
OP
Child labor should get special retirement accounts, they are deprived of youth and growth
bucolic_frolic
Mar 2024
#2
Lovie777
(15,006 posts)1. GQP will make it worst........................
actually, it's already happening.
bucolic_frolic
(46,995 posts)2. Child labor should get special retirement accounts, they are deprived of youth and growth
and happiness that will diminish any upward mobility they can ever muster. Child labor is far worse than asking a 65 year old to work another 6 months, in my opinion. There are days I just don't know what's wrong with the world.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)3. Well, we wouldn't need those nasty old brown people coming in
if we just put all those shiftless brats to work as soon as they could reach the machinery.
So what id rhwy seop ou od axhool? People born to poverty and ignorance should stay there.
(Yes, these are real arguments)