Third Teen Worker Killed In Industrial Accident As States Try To Loosen Child Labor Laws

Odusei@lemmy.world to politics @lemmy.world – 1134 points –
Third Teen Worker Killed In Industrial Accident As States Try To Loosen Child Labor Laws
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Everyone who works in any kind of hazardous environment should watch this. Don't shake hands with danger folks. You have the right to refuse to do something you feel unsafe doing. Your life and limb are not worth it. Take your safety protocols seriously and don't let stupid people teach you to be complacent. Call out others. Turn those assholes in to OSHA, underfunded as they are.

https://youtu.be/v26fTGBEi9E

Thank you for sharing. Unfortunately, a child's prefrontal cortex (the rational, decision-making center of the brain) isn't fully developed until around age 25. Therefore, they physically lack the ability to fully comprehend the consequences of their actions β€” hence labor laws. Again, I appreciate you sharing this information; however, it works counter to the science and may perpetuate a potentially dangerous culture of "why didn't they just call OSHA" instead of a "why are they hiring children."

I entirely agree with you, but a part of safety culture is to protect yourself and others. To be clear, no child should ever be hired or near these kinds of environments. Child labor, period, is a travesty and doubly so in an industrial or hazardous environment. These environments are barely suitable for adults, especially in the protein industry. If you are working in a place like this where children are hired, don't be a bystander and let it happen. Speak up and hang these assholes out to dry. Complacency and indifference needs to stop, naive a goal as it is.

Based on the teams I have worked with in the past, people in their twenties are definitely just as bad as teenagers. Even people who are far old enough to know better still play stupid games and win stupid prizes.

More safety PSA:

The one thing I at least try and make sure those under and around me understand is they don't have to say yes. It doesn't even occur to them that they can refuse. Workers are told to shut up and take it enough at it is, no matter the job. Workers are told to work 12-16 hour shifts and be glad they have a job at all. We live in a shitty world and if this comment prevents even one person getting hurt, no matter their age, that is enough for me.

Final point is there are plenty of tasks that can be done with appropriate safety measures, but if you are still not comfortable, just don't do it. Nobody can force you to get in a lift or climb that high ladder. Can you potentially lose your job? Maybe, but better than you getting hurt or hurting someone else.

I work for a woke-as-fuck sustainable packaging company, and it's ridiculous to me how some manufacturers work.

It is totally possible to make large profits and not put people at undue risk. I have no pity for companies that don't have even that basic respect for their employees.

I work at the corporate headquarters of an industrial contract service company. We have some plants that have been accident-free for close to a decade and others that can't make it 30 days. It's absolutely jarring!

It really does come down to site leadership, ya know? Totally fixable problem

That's the nice part about my job at the corporate office. I build reports and dashboards to help bring attention to problems site level management raises to the upper levels of management allowing actual action to occur. Just a couple of days ago I built a report to help bring attention to safety issues that the plant operator is dragging their feet about fixing so that upper management can apply the kind of pressure that plant-level folks in our company can't.

But mostly my job is nice because I've got a super cushy job as far as local tech work goes