Parents defend putting children to work on farms

By JIM SUHR   Tuesday, July 10, 2012
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In a June 20, 2012, photo ten-year-old Jacob Mosbacher guides a tractor through a bean field on his grandparents' property near Fults, Ill. Agriculture organizations and federal lawmakers from farm states succeeded last spring in convincing the U.S. Labor Department to drop proposals limiting farm work by children such as Jacob, whose parents say such questions of safety involving kids should be left to parents.

In a June 20, 2012, photo ten-year-old Jacob Mosbacher guides a tractor through a bean field on his grandparents' property near Fults, Ill. Agriculture organizations and federal lawmakers from farm states succeeded last spring in convincing the U.S. Labor Department to drop proposals limiting farm work by children such as Jacob, whose parents say such questions of safety involving kids should be left to parents.

— As he watched his 10-year-old son ease a tractor across a soybean field, Dennis Mosbacher acknowledged the risks of farming.

But Mosbacher said the U.S. Labor Department was misguided in its attempts to protect children from farm accidents and he's relieved the agency dropped its plans this spring and has promised not to take up the matter again.

"You can't make a rule to stop every accident," Mosbacher said after his son Jacob hopped off the 40-year-old, 60-horsepower tractor at their farm near the tiny southern Illinois town of Fults. "There's always a risk in life, no matter what you do."

Labor Department officials don't deny that, but they note that children performing farm work are four times more likely to be killed than those employed in all other industries combined.

Under the Labor Department's failed proposal, paid farm workers would have to be 16 to use power equipment, such as tractors. They would have to be 18 to work at grain elevators, silos and feedlots. The rules would not have applied to children working at farms owned by their parents, but they would have limited the paid jobs youngsters could do on their neighbors' and relatives' farms.

John Myers, chief of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Administration's surveillance and field investigations branch, said it's unfortunate the agency dropped its proposal in the face of intense opposition from agricultural groups. Agency officials have said they will not take up the matter again as long as Barack Obama is president.

"I have not seen any youth working in other industries that are at higher risk," Myers said. "(Farming) may be an accepted risk for the parent, but the question is to put that risk on the child. That's the question that's not being adequately addressed.

"If society says you have to be 16 to operate a car, I don't see how you can say it's any less sound advice that you have to be 16 to operate farm equipment," he added. "I suspect this will not be addressed again, and I suspect we will continue to have youths dying on farms each year in situations that were perfectly preventable."

The lack of action also troubles Cheryl Monen, who lives in the small northwestern Iowa community of Lester.

Had such child labor rules been in place a year ago, her 17-year-old son might still be alive.

Jordan Monen was into his second summer working on a cattle farm in July 2011 when he climbed into the bucket of a payloader and was hoisted up to fix the top railing on a cattle shed's sliding door. The machine lunged forward and smashed the teen's face between the railing and the back of the bucket. He then hit a cement feed trough as he tumbled to the ground.

The boy was taken to a hospital, where he was declared dead of severe head trauma.

A year later, his mother remains haunted about her decision to let her son take the job.

"I feel so guilty about it now. I just had not put it together how terribly dangerous it was and the risks he was in," Monen said. "I really struggle with that. Now, I really wish I never suggested he get a job."

Monen now thinks anyone younger than 18 should be barred from working on a farm "because they don't recognize the dangers." She also said children shouldn't be allowed to work on farms and ranches not owned by their parents.

"If they wanna have their own kids in there, go for it," she said.

The push for tougher restrictions came at a time when fewer children are being injured on farms.

For every 1,000 U.S. farms, agriculture-related injuries to workers younger than 20 dropped by nearly half from 2001 to 2009, from 13.5 injuries to 7.2 injuries, according U.S. government figures. Injuries were most common among children ages 10 to 15, but they also dropped by nearly half during that period.

Farming groups attribute such declines to farmers' and ranchers' greater awareness of risks, but they add that it's vital children begin farm work at an early age so safety requirements become engrained in them. Agriculture groups also note that rural children looking for summer jobs often have no option other than farm work and enhancing regulations could dampen kids' enthusiasm for becoming farmers.

"We're the first to recognize that farming can be dangerous, but broad, sweeping intervention is not the best way to go about addressing it," said Kristi Boswell, the congressional relations chief for the American Farm Bureau Federation, which opposed the Labor Department's push.

Debbie Mosbacher said the proposed federal rules didn't reflect the reality on farms, where children grow up understanding the dangers and are eased into risky chores.

She noted that for Jacob, that meant riding on the tractor in his father's lap when he was 4 and feeding livestock when the cattle still towered over him. Last year, he started driving the riding lawnmower.

When it comes to farm kids pitching in, "a lot of times, yes, it's a necessity," she said. "A 10-year-old may not be able to load a 70-pound bale. But everyone's got a job to do, and if you wait until they're 18 to teach them it won't be something that's instinctive in them."

reader COMMENTS
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(19)
DwightKSchrute
Jul 10, 2012 at 11:17 p.m.
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rprp - it's generally a good idea to not speak if you don't know what you're talking about.

wislady
Jul 10, 2012 at 9:13 p.m.
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I spent most of my life on working farms, until 6 years ago. I had 1 sister and 4 brothers, and we all helped with the farm chores.

It is dangerous work, even when people are careful. My father was always preaching safety, but still got himself caught in a power take off. Fortunately, he was able to get his jack knife from a pocket and cut himself loose. Farming teaches young people personal responsibility and instills a work ethic. We worked hard, but we had a lot of fun too.

Even with all the machinery, and animals, I think it is no more dangerous than growing up in a large city. Just take a look at Madison, Milwaukee, and Chicago...I would take a farm any day!

Hardtobelieve
Jul 10, 2012 at 6:58 p.m.
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I grew up on a farm and started driving a tractor at 9 years old. Farm life was the best life you could ever imagine. We milked cows at 4:30 in the morning BEFORE we got ready for school. I know plenty of older and middle age farmers that have gotten their sweatshirt strings wrapped around a power takeoff shaft, etc. I was taught properly and can now appreciate hard work. I was the only boy out of 5 kids and my Dad depended on my help.

rprp
Jul 10, 2012 at 6:39 p.m.
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Farmers get to many benefits now and this is one that should be change to get rid of child labour in this country. Shame on you farmers.

garyprimer
Jul 10, 2012 at 6:25 p.m.
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Glad you had five summers.
That may well be more than some of the others here.

joeflint
Jul 10, 2012 at 4:45 p.m.
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Five summers of farm work, starting when I was 13, was one of the best experiences of my life. Inherently dangerous occupations are, inherently!, going to have greater risk. Farming can incrementally be made safer than today; blanket regulations, especially age restrictions, are not the answer.

garyprimer
Jul 10, 2012 at 4:28 p.m.
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TCB, what the hell are you talking about?

Uncle_Jesse
Jul 10, 2012 at 11:55 a.m.
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no seat belts on a tractor.....no age requirements , lots of kids gettin there heads rolled over , legs and arms caught in augurs , crushed in grain bins and silo's , OSHA ?.....whats good for one is good for the other .

TCB
Jul 10, 2012 at 11:43 a.m.
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gary what is your solution to this reprehensible behavior of these parents? Federal takeover of family farms? Jailing of parents? Unionizing of children who "work" but don't earn a living wage or annual COLA adjustments or free healthcare or a pension?

Maybe a this is what obama meant by shovel ready jobs? People who chose to exit the workforce, that have no farming skills, and are not related to the CEOs of the farm (also called owners)-these people-the 15% chronically unemployed could save the children from the CEOs (again-farm owners/parents) forcing them into servitude....

garyprimer
Jul 10, 2012 at 10:36 a.m.
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Vato, I disagree.
Have you read the paper lately?

frogger
Jul 10, 2012 at 10:19 a.m.
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Maybe some classes for the farm kids and instuctors to teach them properly then they pass the class. But then do you get a lousy instructor vs GPA who has been doing it well all his life? Or do you get GPa who has been doing it wrong all his life and get a good instructor?

garyprimer
Jul 10, 2012 at 9:50 a.m.
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Tim, a weekend of working on a farm or a childhood working on a farm
can be a great experience,
but operating dangerous machinery should not be allowed.
There is plenty of other work to do.
I have no doubt that a ten year old could learn to operate
a crane or a loader on a construction site,
but would you think that was a good idea
or allow them to do it?

westorbust
Jul 10, 2012 at 8:53 a.m.
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It's a valid concern. I knew children that were killed while working on farms. It's more about the judgment of parents, putting children in pretty dangerous situations. Children, on average, do not have the same life skills nor the ability to make the best judgment calls when it comes to working with machinery. Many adults have the same problem, which is passed on, causing death and injury. I think farm work is a good thing, but there are certain things kids probably shouldn't be doing, or if they do, need better training, which of course calls for regulation and more laws.
Sometimes doing the right thing means going against your own self interests. That goes for farms, businesses, corporations, or people.

tthompson
Jul 10, 2012 at 8:15 a.m.
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MOST kids could use a weekend of working on a farm.

Olderandornerier
Jul 10, 2012 at 7:54 a.m.
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Stupid comparison. Of course farming is more dangerous than working at a fast food joint. I worked on a farm when I was young, yes it is dangerous, but I learned a heck of a lot more doing that than flipping burgers.
So many family farms are corporations how do you draw the line between family farm and corporation? What if Dad, Uncle Joe, and Uncle Bill own a farm as a corp? Can you plow your Dad's land, but not Uncle Joe's? Can you feed Dads cattle, but not Uncle Bill's, even if they are in the same feedlot?

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