States Attempt to Instill 'Work Ethic' by Rolling Back Child Labor Protections
It’s been a long time since the engines of American industry were
driven by tiny fingers. So when Newt Gingrich recently proclaimed,
“Young people ought to learn how to work,” and suggested that children
could develop a strong work ethic by working as janitors in their own
schools, many Americans probably missed the throwback to the early
twentieth century, when hundreds of thousands of children toiled in
factories. But after decades of campaigns against youth exploitation,
the right is rekindling vestiges of the sweatshop era with legislation
aimed at rolling back child labor laws.
While they didn’t go so far as to recruit tweens back to the factory
floor, throughout 2011 state legislators pushed bills to erode
regulation of youth employment. Maine Republicans sought to ease protections for young workers
with amicably named legislation to “Enhance Access to the Workplace for
Minors.” The original bill, introduced by State Representative David
Burns, would remove some limits on working hours for teenagers and
expand the number of days a youth under 20 could work for $5.25 an
hour—to about half a year. That would be a bargain for employers, who
pay adult Mainers a minimum wage of $7.50. Last summer, a more limited
teen labor bill passed, which only eased restrictions on working hours.
Sunday, January 15, 2012
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