Source: Human Rights Watch
The US
Congress should promptly enact legislation introduced on April 16, 2015
that would provide needed protections for children working in US tobacco
farming, Human Rights Watch said today. Bills were introduced
simultaneously in the Senate by Senator Richard Durbin of Illinois and
in the House of Representatives by Representative David Cicilline of
Rhode Island.
The legislation would prohibit children under 18 from working in direct
contact with tobacco. Children working in tobacco are particularly
vulnerable to acute nicotine poisoning – marked by headaches, vomiting,
and dizziness – from contact with tobacco plants. Current US law allows
children as young as 12 – and even younger on small farms – to work in
agriculture for unlimited hours outside of the school day, with no
special provisions to protect them from nicotine exposure.
“Children shouldn’t be doing jobs that make them sick,” said Jo Becker,
children’s rights advocacy director at Human Rights Watch. “The
proposed legislation is a common-sense measure to protect children in
the US from the dangers of nicotine exposure.”
A 2014 Human Rights Watch report
documented conditions for children working on tobacco farms in four
states where 90 percent of US tobacco is grown: North Carolina,
Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia. Two-thirds of the children
interviewed reported vomiting, nausea, headaches, and dizziness while
working on tobacco farms, all symptoms consistent with acute nicotine
poisoning. Many worked 50 to 60 hours a week in extreme heat, and also
reported exposure to toxic pesticides.
Health studies have found that nicotine exposure during adolescence
causes mood disorders, attention deficit, and lasting cognitive
deficits. A US Labor Department bulletin
issued in March states that children and adolescents who handle tobacco
“may be more sensitive to chemical exposures, more likely to suffer
from GTS [nicotine poisoning], and may suffer more serious health
effects than adults.”
In recent months, key entities in the tobacco industry have adopted new
policies to keep children out of tobacco farming. In December 2014, the
two biggest US tobacco companies – Altria Group and Reynolds American –
independently announced that beginning in 2015 they would prohibit their
growers from employing children under 16. These companies manufacture
some of the best-selling cigarette brands in the world, including Camel, Marlboro, and Winston.
Two of the largest tobacco growers’ associations in the United States
adopted similar policies opposing the employment of children under 16 in
tobacco farming. Some multinational companies, including Philip Morris
International and Japan Tobacco International, already had child labor
policies in place that are more protective than US law.
“The tobacco industry is recognizing the dangers of tobacco farming for
children, but voluntary policies aren’t enough,” Becker said. “Industry
policies need to be backed by law and government enforcement.”
Even under the new policies, most tobacco companies allow 16- and
17-year olds to perform dangerous tasks that expose them to nicotine,
Human Rights Watch said. International labor law ratified by the US
prohibits hazardous work for children under 18.
The proposed legislation would apply only to children working for hire,
and would not affect children working on their family’s farm. Fifty
national and state organizations have endorsed the proposed bills.
“US child labor laws haven’t kept up with the known dangers of nicotine,
putting children’s health at risk,” Becker said. “Both the House and
Senate should act on these bills without delay.”