12-Year-Olds Picking Tobacco ( Immigration and Labor )
* Video at link
By Rayner Ramirez February 4, 2014
Harvesting tobacco exposes workers to as much nicotine as smoking a pack a day of cigarettes. So why is it legal for kids as young as 12 to do this work?
You might think that the days were gone when elementary school kids would work long hours in the field picking crops, but that's the reality at farms across the country.
The minimum age required for children to work in agriculture is 12 years old, but a Fusion investigation found kids as young as 8 and 10 years working in tobacco fields in North Carolina.
The presence of children in the agricultural sector isn't a secret. Roughly 400,000 children work in agriculture every summer in the United States, according to The Association of Farmworker Opportunity Program.
Studies show these children face a high risk of dropping out of school, getting injured, or experiencing other serious health issues like heat exhaustion or green tobacco poisoning. Efforts to be better regulate the child labor have been pushed back by the farm lobby.
in full:
http://www.theinvestigativefund.org/investigations/immigrationandlabor/1921/12-year-olds_picking_tobacco/