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Child labor lost. (Kiddie Umpire Crackdown).


THE MOST SUCCINCT critic of overly restrictive child labor laws Federal and state legislation that protects children by restricting the type and hours of work they perform.

The specific purpose of child labor laws is to safeguard children against harm generally associated with child labor, such as exposure to hazardous, unsanitary, or
 in the U.S. turns out to be a kid himself.

"It kind of stinks," 12-yearold Brian Clennon told the Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune

Daily newspaper published in Chicago. The Tribune is one of the leading U.S. newspapers and long has been the dominant voice of the Midwest. Founded in 1847, it was bought in 1855 by six partners, including Joseph Medill (1823–99), who made the paper
, "because there's absolutely no point to [working] if you're not going to get paid."

Brian and 35 other kids from Darien, Illinois, had planned (and trained) to make some summer pocket money as Little League umpires, calling 10 games for $10 per game. The Illinois Department of Labor, responding to an anonymous complaint, decided to rescue the children from this backbreaking back·break·ing  
adj.
Demanding great exertion; arduous and exhausting.



backbreak
 labor. After a February audit, the department accused the Darien Youth Club of 180 violations, threatening a $900,000 fine.

The umpires' parents are now stepping up to the plate, petitioning for a change in state law. Catherine Glennon, Brian's mom, doesn't see it as a child labor child labor, use of the young as workers in factories, farms, and mines. Child labor was first recognized as a social problem with the introduction of the factory system in late 18th-century Great Britain.  issue. "The kids want to do it," she told the Tribune, "It's interesting and fun. They want to make the money, and there aren't a lot of opportunities for these kids to do that." Federal law prohibits the employment of children under age 14, with a slightly lower threshold for agricultural jobs. Enforcement primarily falls to the states, and a few states follow federal law to the letter. Others have their own rules, some looser and some stricter than federal standards.

When asked to defend the Illinois umpire bust, the state Labor Department The Department of Labor (DOL) administers federal labor laws for the Executive Branch of the federal government. Its mission is "to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, to improve their working  employee in charge of the case reminded the Tribune of recent news stories about a few parents who became violent at their kids' sporting events. "This can be very physically and psychologically dangerous for these kids," she said. "It's something everyone understands."

What everyone in Darien understands is that Illinois must not have much need for child labor laws, since the department has time to pursue complaints about kiddie kid·die or kid·dy  
n. pl. kid·dies Slang
A small child.


kiddie
Noun

Informal a child
 umpires. That's good news overall, but for kids in Brian's situation, well, it just kind of stinks.
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Title Annotation:playball
Author:Rimensnyder, Sara
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2002
Words:320
Previous Article:Letters.
Next Article:Disappearing divide. (The Poor get Connected).(more people going online)(Brief Article)
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