The Child Worker Who Feeds You
If youve eaten a burger and fries recently, theres a chance that the potatoes were picked by middle schoolers, working through the school day in a field in Idaho. The steer that became the beef patty may well have been killed at a slaughterhouse where teenagers work, and the bone saws used to process the meat could easily have been cleaned by a 13-year-old, wearing a bulky hard hat and oversized gloves. Its also quite possible that the burger was grilled, flipped and assembled by a child working at McDonalds on a school night, far later than federal law allows.
This sort of child laborculled from thousands of examples in U.S. Department of Labor investigationshas been mostly illegal in the U.S. since the 1930s, but that hasnt stopped a surprising number of companies from engaging in it. In February, the department announced that the nation is experiencing a sharp rise in child labor violations across all industries; since 2018, the agency has documented a 69-percent increase in children who were employed illegally.
The vast majority of employers committing this wave of violations have something in common: they grow, package, deliver, cook, sell and serve the nations food.
A FERN analysis of investigation data released by the Department of Labors Wage and Hour Division (WHD)which is tasked with enforcing federal child labor lawsfound that more than 75 percent of recent violations were committed by employers in the food industry. The agency uncovered more than 12,000 child labor violations in the nations food systemout of 16,000 total violations across all industriesbetween Jan. 1, 2018 and Nov. 23, 2022, the most recent date for which data were publicly available. Investigators found minors working illegally at vegetable farms in Texas and Florida, at dairy farms in Minnesota and New Hampshire and at poultry plants in Alabama and Mississippi. Children are involved in every step of the food supply chain, working illegally from farm to table.
Restaurants were by far the worst offenders. More than 64 percent of all the violations were committed by food service employers. Culprits ranged from regional pizza chains to high-end restaurants, and certain fast food chains were well represented. McDonalds franchises, for instance, committed 8.7 percent of the violations in the WHD data. The National Restaurant Association did not respond to multiple requests for comment, and McDonalds declined to comment for publication.
https://thefern.org/2023/04/the-child-workers-who-feed-you/