Govt takes "Family" out of Family Farms

Discussion in 'Politics' started by ChkitOut, Apr 25, 2012.

  1. Obama working to make America lazy and stupid, one child at a time. :p

    http://dailycaller.com/2012/04/25/r...ry-about-labor-dept-rule-banning-farm-chores/


    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.”
     
  2. Lucrum

    Lucrum

    More unnecessary government intrusion.
     
  3. Owens opposes youth farm labor rule
    April 14, 2012
    By CHRIS MORRIS - Staff Writer (cmorris@adirondackdailyenterprise.com) , Adirondack Daily Enterprise
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    Congressman Bill Owens says a U.S. Department of Labor regulation is making it difficult for farmers to employ teens under the age of 16.

    Owens, D-Plattsburgh, said the regulation would allow a farmer to hire a 14-year-old to pick berries in a field, but it bars those teen workers from using farm equipment, even a wheelbarrow, to bring the berries to a processing center.

    "That's an absurd outcome," Owens said. "I understand if a 14-year-old can't operate a 15-ton tractor; I get that. But to operate a wheelbarrow? Spray down a cow's stall? Clean it up? Use a leaf blower to clean up hay from a barn? Clearly that's not common sense from the Department of Labor."

    "I think it's just one of these situations where you have a good intention that's badly implemented, which is why I'm opposing it," he added.

    Owens has co-sponsored legislation in the House of Representatives that would prohibit the labor department from implementing the regulation. Owens said a growing group of bipartisan lawmakers has signed onto the bill.

    "The Department of Labor been unwilling to modify it," he said in a phone interview.

    According to Owens, the labor rule changes the description of a "hazardous job," and the agency also changed the description of a family farm to exclude farms owned by corporations or limited liability companies. He said the new regulation, which was approved by the labor department last year, doesn't take into account that many corporations and LLCs are family farms.

    The issue of youth labor regulations was raised at a hearing on the 2012 Farm Bill that the House Agriculture Committee's in Saranac Lake last month. Michele Ledoux of the Adirondack Beef Company told the committee said the youth labor rules cut "at the heart of family tradition by preventing young people from working on their family's farm.

    "We have taught them how to work safely around machines and animals," Ledoux said, "so that they have grown up to be as safety-conscious as my husband and I."

    Owens attended a conference with farmers in Albany on Thursday. He said farmers also pointed out that the labor regulation bars family farms that are corporations or LLCs from letting teens participate in farm labor training, although kids can watch during safety courses and other instructional sessions.

    "The way kids learn is by watching and doing," Owens said. "Imagine saying to a manufacturer, 'You can do on-the-job training, but they can only watch.'"

    Owens said he recognizes that farm work does involve "a level of danger," but he noted that small farms in New York state are already struggling to find workers and that the number of farm-related injuries is on the decline.

    Owens said the bill to reverse the youth labor regulations, introduced last week, is picking up steam and could cruise through the Agriculture Committee.

    ---
     
  4. pspr

    pspr

    Big Government. Isn't it wonderful. Let no area of our lives escape government rules and regulations. We are not capable of thinking for ourselves and making decisions about our families. Government knows best and can make better decisions for us. We should turn over all of our incomes and property to government and let them make all of our decisions in life for us. We will be better off without having to make decisions on our own. We can all become flower children without a care in the world. Government will control our lives.

    Seig Heil
     
  5. 377OHMS

    377OHMS

    The beacon of freedom is brighter abroad these days. Our lives here are becoming downright Orwellian. The 9/11 terrorists seem to have won. They induced us to ruin our own free society.
     
  6. Isn't that the "Fundamental Transformation of the USA" which Odumbo promised (and Libtards cheered)?