Department of Labor to ban children from doing chores on family farm

From the Daily Caller.

Excerpt:

A proposal from the Obama administration to prevent children from doing farm chores has drawn plenty of criticism from rural-district members of Congress. But now it’s attracting barbs from farm kids themselves.

The Department of Labor is poised to put the finishing touches on a rule that would apply child-labor laws to children working on family farms, prohibiting them from performing a list of jobs on their own families’ land.

Under the rules, children under 18 could no longer work “in the storing, marketing and transporting of farm product raw materials.”

“Prohibited places of employment,” a Department press release read, “would include country grain elevators, grain bins, silos, feed lots, stockyards, livestock exchanges and livestock auctions.”

The new regulations, first proposed August 31 by Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, would also revoke the government’s approval of safety training and certification taught by independent groups like 4-H and FFA, replacing them instead with a 90-hour federal government training course.

The Family Research Council comments:

[Labor Department] Secretary Hilda Solis is convinced that “children employed in agriculture are some of the most vulnerable workers in America,” so she and her team wrote 200 pages of rules dictating what kids can and cannot do on American farms.

The list is so over the top that it bans anyone under 18 from working in grain elevators, feed lots, silos, stockyards, and livestock auctions. Operating power tools like screwdrivers, milk machines, or tractors? Also off-limits. Any work that “inflicts pain on an animal” is also outlawed, even though the department doesn’t stipulate what that means. Would branding or tagging cattle be taboo? What about veterinary work?

Apparently, these activities are all at Solis’s discretion. Her department’s press release is clear, “[The government] charges the secretary of labor with prohibiting employment of youth in occupations that she finds and declares to be particularly hazardous for them.” Notice there is no mention of families or the parents’ responsibility to keep children safe. Under this policy, even kids’ chore charts will be dictated by a Washington bureaucrat. Solis insists that her agency is “working to prevent unnecessary child injuries or deaths.”

[…]The bottom line is that these decisions belong to the family–not the Feds. The government doesn’t need to swoop in and rescue children from their own relatives. In this or any legislation, family rights are the last things Washington should put out to pasture.

How does it help us if children don’t get experience in agriculture and develop a work ethic working with their parents on the family farm?

One thought on “Department of Labor to ban children from doing chores on family farm”

  1. We have four foster children, when they leave us three of them will have property of their own. I make them work with me in the field for two hours every day when not at school, if not how will they learn to work their own land when they grow up. The nanny state is getting worse in the west, TTL over here we can still teach children how to be adults.

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