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Teen Workers: Avoid 2005’s Five Worst Jobs this Summer

National Consumers League Warns Youth and Parents about Least Safe Summer Work; Landscaping/Groundskeeping Makes First-Time Appearance on List

Release Date: June 2, 2005
Contact: 202-835-3323,
media@nclnet.org

WASHINGTON, DC The National Consumers League (NCL) issued the 2005 Five Worst Teen Jobs today as Vice President for Fair Labor Standards Policy Darlene Adkins called for parents and teens alike to reconsider the serious dangers of many forms of summer employment.

As the summer job season gears up, NCL cautions teens and parents that every 30 seconds, a young worker is injured on the job, and one teen dies from a workplace injury every five days. According to the Department of Labor, fatalities among working youth climbed to 175 deaths in 2001.

 “Too many young people earn money during their summers off at a high personal cost. Working to help save for college, contribute to your family’s budget, or just to enjoy some spending cash is a great idea, but teenagers and their parents need to ask: is this safe work?” said Adkins. “These five worst jobs identify serious dangers that working youth can avoid.”

For the first time this year, working outside as helpers in landscaping, groundskeeping, and lawn services has made the list of dangerous jobs. Just last month, a Florida teen was electrocuted to death while trimming trees.

NCL compiles the five worst teen jobs each year using government statistics and reports, results from the Child Labor Coalition’s annual survey of state labor departments, and news accounts of injuries and deaths. Statistics and examples of injuries for each job on the list are detailed in a report available at www.nclnet.org/labor/childlabor

2005 Five Worst Teen Jobs

  1. Agriculture: Field Work and Processing. Agriculture is the most dangerous industry for young workers, accounting for 42 percent of all work-related fatalities of young workers between 1992 and 2000. According to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, among young agricultural workers aged 15-17, the risk of fatal injury is four times the risk for young workers in other workplaces.
  2. Construction and Work in Heights: Despite existing prohibitions that address specific types of hazardous construction work, it remains the third leading cause of death among young workers. According to NIOSH, youth 15-17 years of age working in construction had greater than seven times the risk for fatal injury as youth in other industries, and greater than twice the risk of workers 25-44 years of age working in construction.
  3. Outside Helper: Landscaping, Groundskeeping, and Lawn Service:  Landscaping, groundskeeping and lawn service work often involves the use of dangerous power tools, such as chain saws and machinery such as tractors, all-terrain vehicles, and mulchspreaders.  Workers also often work with pesticides, fertilizers, and other hazardous chemicals.  Fatality numbers are low, yet recent anecdotal evidence indicates that young workers are using tools and equipment that are prohibited for their use in this industry and are being injured as a result.
  4. Driver/Operator of Forklifts, Tractors and All Terrain Vehicles (ATVs):

 

Tractor-related accidents are the most prevalent cause of agricultural fatality in the United States.  Increasingly, tractors are being used in non-agricultural work as well, with resulting injuries and fatalities to young workers.  Workers of all ages are killed and seriously injured by forklifts.  Although most deaths involving driving/operating forklifts, nearly half of all forklift-related deaths were caused by working around them – being run over, struck by the machine or its cargo, or pinned by a forklift, or riding as a passenger.  Increasingly, ATVs are showing up in the workplace and follow the same risk of overturns and rollovers as tractors.  Persons under the age of 16 were the victims of 38 percent of all reported ATV-related deaths for all ages between 1982 and 2001.

  1. Traveling Youth Crews. Recruited to sell candy, magazine subscriptions, and other items door-to-door or on street corners, children as young as ten years old often work after dark, under dangerous conditions, and unsupervised by adults. For many, it is a job that requires traveling in vans to unfamiliar neighborhoods in distant cities, and often across state lines. Each year, thousands of mostly 16-24-year-olds join traveling sales crews that move rapidly around the country. Hazards include questionable transportation as well as crew leaders with criminal convictions and behavior. The watchdog group Parent Watch has compiled a list of dozens of felonies involving door-to-door salespeople, including 13 cases of rape or sexual assault, four cases of murder, and a number of deaths from traffic accidents attributed to faulty equipment or negligent driving—since 2000.

“It’s important for teens and parents to know that all jobs can be hazardous, not just the ones on this list,” said Adkins. To promote safe work, NCL has released tips for working teens and advice for parents. All materials are available online at http://nclnet.org/childlabor.

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The National Consumers League, founded in 1899, is America's pioneer consumer organization. Our mission is to protect and promote social and economic justice for consumers and workers in the United States and abroad. For more information, visit www.nclnet.org.

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