April 17, 2025

Testimony on HB 1225 Before the Florida House Education & Employment Committee

The remarks below were provided during the Florida House Education & Employment Committee on House Bill (HB) 1225, legislation that would further erode child labor protections in Florida.

I am here this week because it is Children’s Week, a time when we gather to honor Florida’s children and those who serve, educate, and protect them.

I’m truly disappointed that after the Legislature decided last year to maintain some protections for working teens, that we again have to discuss the need to limit child labor.

When HB 49 ultimately passed, it preserved some type of breaks, the existing curfew, and some daily and weekly work limits for 16- and 17-year-olds.

This bill [HB 1225] not only allows employers to schedule ALL 16- and 17-year-olds for unlimited hours without breaks — but also targets children as young as 14.

For most, that means they’re in their first year of high school. We don’t let kids this young drive cars and we’re worried about their social media consumption, so why are we OK with acting like they’re adults?

The choice to overschedule teens would lie with employers, not with the youth or their parents — nothing in this bill says Floridians can turn down added hours without fear of retaliation. And teens have a choice if they want to work more — the state child labor waiver. This calls the need for HB 1225 into question.

Our analysis shows there are over 110,000 teens under 18 in Florida’s labor force, over 95,000 of whom are already employed — which means that most teens who are looking for work already have it. And the vast majority of employed teens currently juggle work and school.

There is already an imbalance between work and school, and Florida’s absenteeism rates are soaring to their second-highest levels in 15 years, and so too are child labor violations.

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