This is perhaps the worst way to deal with the labor market
By Tom Conway
Library of Congress
Brad Greve has been a Scout leader for more than 20
years. The Davenport, Iowa retiree leads 50-mile canoe trips on Minnesota’s Boundary Waters that test teens’ mettle
while teaching them essential skills.
Greve told a story recently where two boys, despite being
warned repeatedly, let their canoe drift perilously close to a section of
stream that swept over rapids into a lake below. They just barely recovered and
made it to streambank.
That near-accident a few years ago, Greve said,
underscores the vulnerability of young teens. And it fuels Greve’s anger at
Republicans across the country who want to gut child labor laws and fill
dangerous jobs with still-maturing high schoolers.
A GOP bill in Iowa, for example, would allow 14-year-olds to work in industrial
freezers, meatpacking plants, and industrial laundry operations. The
legislation would also put 15-year-olds to work on certain kinds of assembly
lines, allow them to hoist up to 50 pounds, and allow employers to force kids
into significantly longer work days.
In some cases, it would even permit young teens to work mining and construction jobs and use power-driven meat
slicers and food choppers.
Make no mistake, this is dangerous work. Just three years
ago, a 16-year-old in Tennessee fell more than 11 stories to his death while
working construction on a hotel roof. Another 16-year-old lost an arm that same year while cleaning a
meat grinder at a Tennessee supermarket.
But these preventable tragedies mean nothing to legislators bent on helping employers pad their bottom lines at kids’ expense. “It’s about businesses wanting cheap labor or more labor than they can currently get because they don’t want to pay reasonable wages or give any benefits,” Greve said.
COVID-19 prompted millions of Americans to ditch jobs lacking decent working
conditions, sick leave, and affordable health care. The meatpacking industry,
among many others, hemorrhaged workers after deliberately putting them at risk to protect profits during
the pandemic.
Now, rather than provide the quality jobs needed to
attract adults, Greve observed, companies want their cronies to “throw them a
bone” and widen access to child labor.
Minnesota Republicans want to let 16- and 17-year-olds work construction. GOP
legislators in Ohio are pushing legislation to expand teens’ work hours. In 2022, labor
unions and Democratic officials in Wisconsin beat back a Republican proposal to lengthen
work days for teens there.
The Iowa legislation is particularly dangerous because it
would exempt employers from civil liability in the event of a youth’s injury or
death on the job — even in cases of employer negligence — if the teen was
participating in a school-approved “work-based learning program.”
Employers already flout child labor laws at record rates, according to the U.S. Department of
Labor.
After the 16-year-old fell off the hotel roof, for
example, Tennessee officials determined that the company not only illegally put
the teen in harm’s way but also worked him more hours than allowed and cheated dozens of other workers out of
overtime pay. Adding insult to injury, the company vowed to appeal the $122,000
fine it received for the teen’s death.
The poor, migrants, victims of trafficking, and other
at-risk youths will be especially impacted. Last year, the news agency Reuters
found migrant youths and other children as young as 12 working
at Alabama companies supplying the auto industry.
The New York Times reported
more recently that the illegal employment of minors from poor and migrant
families had reached epidemic proportions, reflecting a “new economy
of exploitation.” The paper found employers subjecting thousands of kids to
some of the deadliest jobs in the country, including work in slaughterhouses
and sawmills.
“Why would you want to weaken the law when you can see companies already taking advantage?” asked Greve. “The law should be strengthened.”
Tom
Conway is the international president of the United Steelworkers
Union (USW). This article was produced by the Independent
Media Institute and adapted for
syndication by OtherWords.org.