Veteran Tributes, Child Labor, Coalfield Jobs On House Agenda

Tuesday, with a decorum of honor and duty, the House broke from routine.

During the regular West Virginia Legislative session, on the House of Delegates floor, resolutions like H.C.R. 53 – U. S. Navy Quartermaster Third Class Lawrence Earl Boggs Memorial Bridge – are often accepted en masse, without debate. 

But Tuesday, with a decorum of honor and duty, the House broke from routine. Del. Bill Ridenour, R-Jefferson, a retired Marine Corps officer and a retired defense intelligence officer, read aloud, in detail, the heroic service records of Mountain State veterans who are nominated to have bridges named after them. A full list of the memorial bridge resolutions can be found here.

As to bills on third reading, House Bill 5159, relates generally to child labor. 

The proposal eliminates the requirement that 14 or 15 year olds obtain a work permit. Instead, parental permission and a Department of Labor age certificate is needed for children ages 14 and 15 to work.

Del. Larry Rowe, D-Kanawha, opposed a bill he and other delegates said takes school input out of the child labor equation.

“I think that it’s really the parents’ rights to have their children employed, and that’s what we’re judging here,” Rowe said. “And what goes out the window is the education of the child is the socialization that teenagers need in order to survive in this world. It involves a duty, I think of the school system, to make certain that the education is being completed as it’s supposed to be. So I will be voting against this bill.” 

But Del. Todd Longanacre, R-Greenbrier, noted that code changes in the bill were procedural, and said that 14 year olds should have the freedom to work.

“We probably worked when we were 12, 13, 14 years out on a farm baling hay, digging post holes, whatever we were doing.” Longanacre said. “If there’s one thing kids need today in our society is to start learning work ethic at an earlier age, not at a later age. This is a good bill. Let’s let those kids get to work.”

The child labor bill passed 83-16 and now goes to the Senate.   

House Bill 5223 would create the Southern Coalfield Resiliency and Revitalization Program.

The bill sponsor, Del. Adam Vance, R-Wyoming, said that unlike previous coalfield commissions and authorities that were never funded or executed, this program would charge the Department of Economic Development with actively recruiting and retaining businesses geared for and/or needed in Boone, Logan, McDowell, Mingo and Wyoming counties.

“There is no funding,” Vance said. “They just come together as a council, they’ll discuss things that these five counties need economically for development stuff, and then they’ll bring those in, and they’ll reach out to those companies. And they’ll find land that’s successful, find companies that want to come into these areas, and then they’ll just reach out and try to get them to come in and hopefully we can expand on that.”

The bill passed 90-5 and also now goes to the Senate. 

Law And Order, Child Care Access And A Women’s Bill Of Rights, This West Virginia Week

On this West Virginia Week, the state legislature had Child Care Advocacy Day, centering on an issue leaders flagged as a top priority at the start of the session. But with the session more than halfway through, action still remains to be seen.

On this West Virginia Week, the state legislature had Child Care Advocacy Day, centering on an issue leaders flagged as a top priority at the start of the session. But with the session more than halfway through, action still remains to be seen.

We also hear about law and order issues facing the state, a bill that narrows definitions of gender, as well as updates on Corridor H and the loss of manufacturing jobs in the Northern Panhandle. 

Chris Schulz is our host this week. Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert.

West Virginia Week is a web-only podcast that explores the week’s biggest news in the Mountain State. It’s produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Chris Schulz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Jack Walker, Liz McCormick, and Randy Yohe.

Learn more about West Virginia Week.

Younger Teens Would No Longer Need Work Permits Under Bill

A bill under review in the West Virginia House of Delegates would eliminate work permits for 14 and 15-year-olds, instead requiring the teenagers to receive a state-issued age certificate and parental consent.

The West Virginia House of Delegates is considering a bill that would eliminate work permits for 14 and 15-year-olds.

Currently, 14 and 15-year-olds must obtain a permit to work in West Virginia. These permits are ultimately under the purview of the state superintendent of schools.

But House Bill 5159 would eliminate these work permits, and instead require that 14- and 15-year-olds just receive proof of their age in the form of an age certificate.

Additionally, it would be up to the state Commissioner of Labor to distribute those certificates.

At a meeting of the House Committee on Government Organization Monday, Del. Kayla Young, D-Kanawha, expressed concern that the bill would remove parental authority over youth employment.

During the meeting, members of the committee proposed an amendment that would require parental consent for an age certificate to be issued to a teenager.

The amendment passed, and Del. Pat McGeehan, R-Hancock, said it “tightens up a loophole” in the pending legislation.

For the most part, members of the committee spoke favorably of the bill, citing drawn-out experiences of helping their own children secure employment.

Young, however, voiced concern that removing work permits would still place employers and teenagers at risk.

Young pointed to an incident in Alabama in which a 15-year-old fell off a ladder on his first day at a roofing company and died. Last week, the U.S. Department of Labor found that the company had violated child labor laws.

“The parental consent absolutely helps. However, I still just think this is too onerous, and repealing laws that I think are good laws to have,” she said.

The bill ultimately received majority support from members of the committee, with delegates voting to send it to the House floor with the recommendation that it pass.

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