Child labor remains a key state legislative issue in 2024: State lawmakers must seize opportunities to strengthen standards, resist ongoing attacks on child labor laws

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Child labor remains a top issue in 2024 state legislative sessions amid soaring violations and widespread abuse of child labor laws in multiple sectors of the economy. On one hand, the coordinated, industry-backed effort to roll back child labor protections state by state has continued to expand. At the same time, some state legislators are proposing legislation to strengthen the rights of young workers and the laws designed to safeguard their health and education.

Since 2021, 28 states have introduced bills to weaken child labor laws, and 12 states have enacted them. By contrast, 14 states have introduced bills to strengthen child labor protections already in 2024—up from 11 states in all of 2023—as more state lawmakers recognize the need to address increasing violations and threats to current state and federal standards.

Attacks on child labor laws continue trend of weakening important state standards, with eventual goal of diminishing federal child labor laws 

From the 1800s onward, states have often led the way on child labor regulation. Today, many important policy tools for preventing exploitative forms of child labor—such as work permit requirements for young teens and hours standards for older teens—remain under state purview because the federal 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) has never been amended to include them. Many recent proposals to weaken child labor standards appear designed to eliminate any state standard that exceeds the FLSA, or even create state standards lower than or in contradiction to federal standards. This is an intentional tactic to generate pressure for subsequently lowering federal standards, reflecting long-standing interests of some industry groups.

In January 2024 alone, eight states introduced or took new actions on bills to roll back child labor protections (see Figure A). For example:

  • Florida lawmakers are debating a bill (recently passed by the House) that would eliminate long-standing state guidelines on work hours for teens, allowing employers to schedule 16- and 17-year-olds for unlimited hours—including during the school year—and eliminate meal or rest breaks.
  • Kentucky lawmakers introduced a bill to allow nonprofits to hire 12- and 13-year-olds (federal law prohibits most non-agricultural employment for children under 14), and a bill to prohibit the state’s labor commissioner from setting standards on child labor that exceed minimum protections under the FLSA, effectively repealing state standards that require meal and rest breaks for minor workers and that limit work hours for 16- and 17-year-olds.
  • Two other states—Indiana and New Jersey—have also introduced bills to extend the number of hours minors can be scheduled to work, either during the summer or year-round.
  • Two states—Missouri and West Virginia—have introduced new bills to eliminate youth work permits, and a Georgia bill introduced in 2023 and recommitted in 2024 would also eliminate youth work permits and allow 14-year-olds to do landscaping work on the grounds of workplaces where they are otherwise prohibited from working (like factories and mills).
Figure A

Twenty-eight states have introduced bills to weaken child labor protections since 2021: Map of state legislation rolling back child labor protections, 2021–2024

State Bill status Bill status indicator Select bill supporters Work permit details Work permit indicator Hours Hours indicator Alcohol Service Alcohol service indicator Hazardous work Hazardous work indicator Subminimum wage Subminimum wage indicator Other Other indicator
Alabama Enacted* 5 SB 53 (2024): Eliminates work permit requirement for 14-15 year-olds — introduced 1 HB 176 (2022): Lowers age to serve alcohol from 21 to 18 3
Alaska
Arizona Failed 1 HB 2727 (2021): Establishes a subminimum wage of $8.50 for student employees — failed 5
Arkansas Enacted 5 HB 1410 (2023): Drafted by the Foundation for Government Accountability HB 1410 (2023): Eliminates age verification and parent/guardian permission requirements  1
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Washington D.C.
Florida Pending 4 HB 49 (2024): Drafted by the Foundation for Government Accountability; SB 460 (2024): Drafted by the Associated Builders and Contractors and Florida Home Builders Association HB 49/SB 1596 (2024): Eliminates hours restrictions for 16-17 year-olds during the school year — passed House 2 SB 460/HB 917 (2024): Expands hazardous work for 16-17 year-olds on or near roofs in violation of federal hazardous occupation order (amended out) — in committee 4
Georgia Pending 4 HB 501 (2023): Eliminates work permits — in committee 1 HB 501 (2023): Allows 14 year-olds to work in landscaping on grounds of factories and other prohibited workplaces — in committee 4
Hawaii
Idaho Failed 1 SD 1308 (2022): Lowers the minimum age to serve alcohol from 19 to 17
Illinois Mixed 3 SB 1996 (2023): Illinois Manufacturers’ Association; Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce HB 1258 (2023): Reduces hours per week but removes limit of 8 hours per day for minors under 16 — introduced 2 SB 1996 (2023): Expand manufacturing apprenticeships to 16-17 year-olds — passed Senate; HB 4285 (2023): Expands permitted work for minors under 16 in otherwise prohibited workplaces — in committee 4
Indiana Pending 4 SB 146 (2024): Indiana Restaurant and Lodging Association SB 146 (2024): Increases maximum hours for minors under 16 in violation of federal law (amended out), lowers the age to serve alcohol, establishes employer civil immunity when a minor is injured or killed while employed in a work-based learning program (amended out) — passed Senate; HB 1093 (2024): Extends hours, allows night work for minors, eliminates all hours restrictions for 16-17 year-olds — passed House 2 SB 146 (2024): Lowers the age to serve alcohol from 19 to 18 — passed Senate 3 HB 1189 (2022): Allows exempted minors to work on farms during school hours — failed; SB 146 (2024): Establishes employer civil immunity when a minor is injured or killed while employed in a work-based learning program (amended out) — passed Senate; HB 1093 (2024): Eliminates hazardous work protections for 16-17 year-olds working on farms, allows exempted minors to work on farms during school hours — passed House 4 HB 1093 (2024): Establishes exemptions to child labor protections for performers, newspaper carriers, and homeworkers who make wreaths — passed House 6
Iowa Enacted* 5 SF 2190 (2022): Iowa Restaurant Association; HF 2198 (2022): Dubuque Area Chamber of Commerce; SF 542 (2023): Americans for Prosperity, Home Builders Association of Iowa, Iowa National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), Iowa Hotel and Lodging Association, Iowa Restaurant Association, Opportunity Solutions Project (Foundation for Government Accountability); HF 2056 (2024): Americans for Prosperity; SF 2109 (2024): Iowa Grocery Industry Association, Iowa Hotel & Lodging Association, Iowa Restaurant Association SF 542 (2023): Eliminates work permits — enacted 1 SF 542 (2023): Extends work hours — enacted 2 SF 542 (2023): Lowers age for alcohol service in restaurants — enacted 3 SF 1290 (2022): Allows minors to operate power-driven pizza dough rollers in violation of federal law — enacted; SF 542 (2023): Lifts restrictions on hazardous work, limits state agencies’ ability to impose penalties for future employer violations — enacted 4 HF 2198 (2022): Lowers minimum age of child care workers; increases staff-to-child ratios — enacted; HF 2056 (2024): Lowers minimum age in child care settings again — in committee; SF 2019 (2024): Allows 14 year-olds to drive up to 25 miles to work — in committee
Kansas
Kentucky Enacted* 5 HB 252 (2022): Lowers the age to serve alcohol from 20 to 18 — enacted SB 128 (2024): Allows nonprofits to hire 12-13 year-olds in “work programs” — in committee; HB 255 (2024): Bars labor commissioner from setting child labor standards above FLSA — in committee 6
Louisiana
Maine Failed 1 LD 559 (2023): Maine Tourism Association, Maine Chamber of Commerce LD 559 (2023): Extends work hours for some youth during the school year — failed 2 LD 1332 (2023): Establishes a youth subminimum wage — failed 5
Maryland
Massachusetts Pending 4 S 1168 (2023): Establishes a training wage for minors who work fewer than 20 hours per week
Michigan Enacted 5 HB 5696 and HB 5726 (2022): Lowers age to work at liquor stores; HB 4232 (2022): Lowers age to serve alcohol 3
Minnesota Mixed 3 SF 1102 (2023): Extends work hours — introduced 2 SF 3054 (2022): Increases the maximum alcohol by volume of alcoholic beverages served by an establishment employing minors — failed SF 375 (2023): Lifts restrictions on hazardous work — in committee; SF 3176 (2023): Lifts restrictions on hazardous work in long-term care settings — in committee; SF 3240 (2023): Lifts restrictions on hazardous work in construction — in committee 4
Mississippi
Missouri Pending 4 SB 175 (2023) and SB 1057 (2024): Drafted by Foundation for Government Accountability SB 175 (2023): Eliminates work permits — failed; SB 1057 / HB 2271 (2024): Eliminates work permits — in committee 1
Montana
Nebraska Pending 4 LB 15 (2023): Nebraska Chamber of Commerce and Industry; Nebraska Grocery Industry Association  LB 15 (2023): Establishes youth subminimum wage — in committee 5
Nevada
New Hampshire Enacted* 5 SB 345 (2022): New Hampshire Lodging and Restaurant Association, New Hampshire Liquor Commission SB 345 (2022): Extends work hours; HB 1519 (2023): Extends work hours for minors when school is in session — in committee 2 SB 345 (2022): Lowers age to bus tables where alcohol is served — enacted 3 HB 57 (2023): Establishes a subminimum wage of $8 for minors for the first 6 months of employment — failed
New Jersey Enacted* 5 A 4222 (2022): New Jersey Chamber of Commerce, New Jersey Business and Industry Association A 4222 (2022): Extends work hours and increases time before break — enacted; S 1282/A 2474 (2022): Extends hours for 14-15 YOs to 11 pm between Memorial Day and October 1 — failed; S 494 (2024): Extends hours for 14-15 YOs to 11 pm between Memorial Day and October 1 — introduced 2
New Mexico Enacted 5 HB 255 (2021): Lowers the minimum age for alcohol service from 19 to 18 — enacted 3
New York Pending 4 A 1798 (2023): Allows 14-15 YOs in religious communities to do otherwise prohibited hazardous work under supervision by someone age 18 or older 4
North Carolina Enacted 5 HB 661 (2021): Lowers the minimum age beer and wine wholesalers from 21 to 18 — enacted 3
North Dakota
Ohio Enacted* 5 SB 30 (2023): Americans for Prosperity, Pickerington Area Chamber of Commerce, Ohio NFIB, Ohio Restaurant Association SB 30 (2023): Extends work hours — passed Senate 2 SB 102 (2021): Lowers the minimum age for alcohol service from 19 to 18 — enacted 3
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania Introduced 2 HB 460 (2023): Lowers age for junior driver’s license to 15 so that young people can get to work — introduced 6
Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota Failed 1 HB 1180 (2023): Extends work hours — failed 2
Tennessee Enacted 5 HB 1212 (2023): Allows 16-and 17-year-olds to work in establishments where over 25% of revenue comes from alcohol sales — enacted 3
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia Failed 1 HB 1669 (2023): Establishes a subminimum wage for minors — failed 5
Washington
West Virginia Enacted* 5 HB 5159/SB 559 (2024): Eliminates work permit requirement for 14-15 YOs — in committee 1 HB 2025 (2021): Lowers the minimum age for alcohol service from 18 to 16 — enacted 3 HB 5162 (2024): Expands hazardous work for 16-17 year-olds through youth apprenticeship program — in committee 4
Wisconsin Mixed 3 AB 286 (2023): Tavern League of Wisconsin; SB 332 (2022): Wisconsin Grocers Association; Wisconsin Independent Businesses, Inc.; Wisconsin NFIB; Association of Wisconsin Tourism Attractions; Wisconsin Hotel and Lodging Association  SB 436 (2023): Eliminates work permits for minors under 16 — failed in House 1 SB 332 (2022): Extends work hours — vetoed by Governor 2 AB 286 (2023): Allows 14 year-olds to serve alcohol — in committee 3
Wyoming

Note: "Enacted*" indicates that a state has enacted a bill, but other bills in that state have failed or are pending legislative action. "Mixed" indicates that a state has multiple bills at different stages of the legislative process, but none have been enacted. Bill statuses are as of February 7, 2024.

Source: EPI analysis of state legislative activity and news related to child labor legislation.

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Three more states are considering proposals allowing employers to hire children for hazardous jobs, in possible violation of federal standards

In 2023, at least five states—Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, and New York—introduced legislation to expand youth employment in hazardous occupations or workplaces. The Iowa bill, which was enacted, expanded hazardous employment for children as young as 14—in violation of federal law. The bill also set up a “work-based learning” program under which 16-year-olds can perform hazardous work like roofing and demolition that is generally prohibited under federal law for anyone younger than 18.

In January 2024, three more states—Florida, Indiana, and West Virginia—introduced bills to weaken protections against hazardous work that may violate federal standards, often under the guise of expanding teen access to “career education.” For example:           

  • In Florida, a “career and technical education” bill would have allowed employers to hire 16- and 17-year-olds for work in roofing, in violation of federal orders that prohibit work in occupations known to be particularly dangerous for young workers. Upon mounting opposition spurred by sustained organizing by in-state advocates, the bill has so far been amended to allow an exemption from hazardous work protections only in residential building construction. However, teens are at risk for high rates of injury or fatality on any construction site, and in its current form the bill likely still risks violating federal law.
  • A bill in Indiana proposed allowing 16- and 17-year-olds enrolled in “work-based learning programs” to perform particularly hazardous work that is prohibited for minors under federal law, adopting similar language as Iowa’s law enacted in 2023. The bill also proposed establishing complete employer immunity from civil liability in the event of workplace injuries or fatalities of youth enrolled in such programs (again adopting language that was proposed in an early version of 2023 legislation in Iowa), meaning the families of children injured or killed on the job would have no recourse to seek damages. And the bill also proposed allowing employers to schedule 14- and 15-year-olds for later evening shifts and longer workweeks during the school year—in violation of federal law. However, after advocates sounded the alarm about the dangers of these provisions, they were eliminated from the bill. The bill still includes a provision to lower the age to serve alcohol and a last-minute amendment will create a 10-minute grace period before civil penalties can be assessed for violations. The Senate passed the bill on February 6.

Iowa is considering further dangerous child labor rollbacks

Iowa lawmakers have introduced a bill to weaken standards related to child-to-staff ratios at child care centers, expanding even further on a 2022 law that allowed child care centers to assign teen workers sole responsibility for more toddlers. The new House bill would allow 16-year-olds to care for four infants, or seven toddlers, or 10 three-year-olds without direct supervision. Iowa also introduced a bill to allow minors as young as 14 to obtain a special driver’s license to drive up to 25 miles to or from work without an adult in the vehicle, despite data showing the importance of graduated driving license programs and despite Iowa having the highest share of young driver fatalities in 2020.

Fourteen states are considering measures to strengthen weak and outdated child labor laws

In response to effective organizing by in-state advocates, proposals to strengthen child labor protections are gaining momentum. Fourteen states have introduced proactive child labor bills so far in 2024, up from 11 states in 2023 (see Figure B).

  • Four states have introduced bills requiring high school students to be educated about their workplace rights (Illinois, Maryland, New York, Rhode Island).
  • Four states have introduced bills to strengthen enforcement of child labor laws (Colorado, Iowa, Nebraska, Virginia).
  • Two states have introduced bills to eliminate provisions in state law that allow certain minors to be paid below the minimum wage (New Jersey, Rhode Island).
  • Six states have introduced bills to safeguard the rights of child performers or mandate that child influencers receive a share of the profits made from monetized social media content featuring them or using their likeness (Arizona, California, Georgia, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio).
Figure B

Fourteen states have proposed measures to address weak and outdated child labor laws in 2024 alone : Map of state legislation strengthening child labor protections, 2021–2024

State Bill status Bill status indicator Workers’ rights education Workers’ rights education indicator Child performers Child performers indicator Enforcement Enforcement indicator Hazardous work Hazardous work indicator Work hours Work hours indicator Subminimum wage Subminimum wage indicator
Alabama
Alaska
Arizona Introduced 2 HB 2564 (2024): Protects child performers, requires parents to set up trust in their name and deposit a share of earnings into it 2
Arkansas Enacted 5 SB 390 (2023): Increases penalties for child labor violations; extends statute of limitations for penalty assessment from 2 to 3 years — enacted 3
California Enacted* 5 AB 800 (2023): Establishes Workplace Readiness Week to educate high school students about their workplace rights — enacted 1 SB 764 (2024): Requires parents to set aside earnings for children featured in monetized social media videos, maintain records related to their earnings, and share them with the minor. Minors not properly compensated can enforce provisions in court — passed Senate 2 AB 1228 (2023): Bill would have established joint liability for fast food franchises but these provisions were amended before passage — enacted 3
Colorado Enacted* 5 HB 1196 (2023): Allows injured victims of illegal child labor to sue for damages — enacted; HB 1095 (2024): Increases penalties (and uses them for wage theft enforcement), allows aggrieved children to sue for damages, makes violations subject to open records requests — introduced 3
Connecticut
Delaware
Washington D.C.
Florida
Georgia Introduced 2 HB 838 (2024): Requires parents to set up a trust for child performers and deposit a share of earnings into it 2
Hawaii Introduced 2 SB 1607 (2023): Requires talent agencies and minors working in theatrical employment to receive training on sexual harassment and nutrition and eating disorders 2
Idaho
Illinois Enacted* 5 HB 4417 (2024): Establishes Workplace Readiness Week to educate high school students about their workplace rights — in committee 1 SB 1782 (2023): Requires parents to set aside earnings for children featured in monetized social media videos, allows child to take legal action if not properly compensated — enacted 2
Indiana
Iowa Pending 4 SF 2100 (2024): Makes illegally employed minors injured or killed at work eligible for extra worker’s comp, imposes $5000 civil penalty on employer — introduced 3
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland Pending 4 HB 160 (2024): Establishes Workplace Readiness Week to educate high school students about their workplace rights — in committee 1
Massachusetts
Michigan Pending 4 HB 4932 (2023): Eliminates waiver for night work among 16-17 year-olds; increases criminal penalties; allows victims to sue for damages; adds retaliation protections — in committee 3 HB 4932 (2023):Eliminates waiver for night work among 16-17 year-olds — in committee 5
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri Pending 4 HB 1998 (2024): Requires parents to set aside earnings for children featured in monetized social media videos, maintain records related to their earnings, and share them with the minor. Minors not properly compensated can enforce provisions in court — in committee 2 HB 1536 (2024): Restricts work hours for 16-17 year-olds — in committee 5
Montana Enacted 5 HB 112 (2023): Establishes criminal penalties for labor trafficking of a minor — enacted 3
Nebraska Pending 4 1 LB 827 (2024): Expanded workplace protections for child performers — in committee 2 LB 906 (2023): Increases penalties for child labor violations and broadens DOL power — in committee 3
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey Mixed 3 S 3717 (2023): Establishes Workplace Readiness Week to educate high school students about their workplace rights — failed 1 S 4067/A 5690 (2023): Eliminates exemptions that allow minors to be paid less than minimum wage, makes minors eligible for overtime — failed; A 2888 (2024): Eliminates exemptions that allow minors to be paid less than minimum wage, makes minors eligible for overtime — introduced 6
New Mexico
New York Mixed 3 A 8108 (2023): Establishes Workplace Readiness Week to educate high school students about their workplace rights — in committee 1 A 9235 (2022): Establishes new penalties for violations of oppressive agricultural child labor — failed 3 A 9235 (2022): Increases the minimum age for farm work from 12 to 16 years of age — failed 4
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio Pending 4 H 376 (2024): Requires parents to set aside earnings for children featured in monetized social media videos, maintain records related to their earnings, and share them with the minor. Minors not properly compensated can enforce provisions in court — in committee 2
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania Pending 4 2 HB 1354 (2023): Increases criminal penalties for first and repeat violations — passed House; HB 1714 (2023: Increases criminal penalties but requires reporting on violations and enforcement to ICE and HHS — in committee 3
Rhode Island Pending 4 H 7019 (2024): Establishes Workplace Readiness Week to educate high school students about their workplace rights — in committee 1 H 7172 (2024): Eliminates provision allowing some minors to be paid a subminimum wage — in committee 6
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas Enacted 5 HB 2459 (2023): Increases maximum penalty for child labor violations — enacted 3
Utah
Vermont
Virginia Mixed 3 HB 100 (2024): Increases civil penalties for child labor violations; sets minimum penalty — passed House 3 HB 876 (2022): Bans child labor on tobacco farms — failed 4
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

Notes: "Enacted*" indicates that a state has enacted a bill, but other bills in that state have failed or are pending legislative action. "Mixed" indicates that a state has multiple bills at different stages of the legislative process, but none have been enacted.

Source: EPI analysis of state legislative activity and news related to child labor legislation.

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Proactive proposals to strengthen enforcement include increasing civil and criminal penalties, establishing enhanced workers’ compensation and other legal remedies for children injured while employed illegally, bolstering state labor department authority, incentivizing reporting, and strengthening violation disclosure requirements. For example, a comprehensive new bill in Colorado proposes to:

  • deter violations of the law by increasing civil penalties and depositing them into a fund for wage theft enforcement;
  • incentivize reporting by creating anti-retaliation protections and removing criminal liability for parents and guardians who allow their child to work in violation of the law; and
  • enhance transparency by requiring the state to release information about violations to the public.

These proposals would build on legislation enacted last year in Colorado to allow the families of illegally employed children injured on the job to sue their employer for damages, expanding the legal remedies available to victims beyond the workers’ compensation system.

Federal laws set an important—but weak and increasingly outdated—floor for child labor standards. States continue to play essential roles in ensuring children who work can do so in safe, age-appropriate conditions that don’t jeopardize their long-term health, development, or education. To address the growing child labor crisis across the country, more state lawmakers in 2024 should take steps to guarantee strong labor standards, enforcement, and workers’ rights education for youth—policies that ensure children of all backgrounds can access positive first work experiences that lead to a lifetime of career success.