Child labor remains a key state legislative issue in 2024
https://www.epi.org/blog/child-labor-remains-a-key-state-legislative-issue-in-2024-state-lawmakers-must-seize-opportunities-to-strengthen-standards-resist-ongoing-attacks-on-child-labor-laws/
Posted February 7, 2024 at 12:35 pm by Nina Mast
State lawmakers must seize opportunities to strengthen standards, resist ongoing attacks on child labor laws
Child labor remains a top issue in 2024 state legislative sessions amid soaring violations and widespread abuse of child labor laws in multiple sectors of the economy. On one hand, the coordinated, industry-backed effort to roll back child labor protections state by state has continued to expand. At the same time, some state legislators are proposing legislation to strengthen the rights of young workers and the laws designed to safeguard their health and education.
Since 2021, 28 states have introduced bills to weaken child labor laws, and 12 states have enacted them. By contrast, 14 states have introduced bills to strengthen child labor protections already in 2024up from 11 states in all of 2023as more state lawmakers recognize the need to address increasing violations and threats to current state and federal standards.
Attacks on child labor laws continue trend of weakening important state standards, with eventual goal of diminishing federal child labor laws
From the 1800s onward, states have often led the way on child labor regulation. Today, many important policy tools for preventing exploitative forms of child laborsuch as work permit requirements for young teens and hours standards for older teensremain under state purview because the federal 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) has never been amended to include them. Many recent proposals to weaken child labor standards appear designed to eliminate any state standard that exceeds the FLSA, or even create state standards lower than or in contradiction to federal standards. This is an intentional tactic to generate pressure for subsequently lowering federal standards, reflecting long-standing interests of some industry groups.
FULL story at link above.