By
Chantel Lott MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The age a youth must reach to legally work on a
farm rose recently, and some farmers may need to reconsider
who they employ. U.S.
law now states that any youth under the age of 14 cannot be
employed on a farm. Youth
16 and 17 years old are required to have training before
they operate machinery or handle pesticides. At 15, youth
cannot work in jobs declared hazardous, such as operating
machinery or working with pesticides that contain "danger,"
"poison" or "warning" on the label. Only at 16 can youth
work in these capacities if they are trained to correctly
use the pesticides and to properly operate farm machinery
such as harvesters and sprayers. A certificate must be
issued to the youth at the time of training by the approved
training office. "The
most common violation occurs when the employer, uninformed
of the regulations, hires a youth to work with chemicals and
machinery. The employer's biggest mistake is not being
familiar with the applicable laws and entering a situation
of great liability," said Herb Willcutt, associate
specialist of agriculture and biological engineering at
Mississippi State University. The
U.S. Secretary of Labor classifies jobs working with
agricultural machinery and pesticides as hazardous. In some
cases, ladders used to pick fruit are also
included. The
revisions to the law apply to youth who in the past have had
less regulation. However, the revisions did not change the
provision that allows youth to work in any capacity deemed
appropriate on a farm owned or operated by their
parents. "Only a
few years ago, youth ages 14 and 15 could work on a farm
outside school hours in non-hazardous jobs. Youth ages 12
and 13 could do the same with written permission from their
parents. Those youth under the age of 12, could harvest
crops outside school hours between June 1 and Oct. 15 as
long as it totaled less than eight weeks that year,"
Willcutt said. The new
legal revisions also restrict work on the farm during school
hours and supply federal money for migrant workers under age
21 to attend school. "The
fines are stringent for those caught in violation of these
laws. Farmers should become familiar with the child labor
laws and avoid the added anxiety that occurs when there is
an accident," Willcutt said. For
more information visit the web at
http://protectingkids.gov. Released:
Feb. 12, 2001
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Law
changes ages for young farm workers
Contact: Herb Willcutt, (662) 325-3103
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:25:37
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/agnews/an01/010212hw.htm
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