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Denny Rehberg, GOP Congressman And Senate Hopeful, Blasts Child Labor Regulations

Denny Rehberg Child Labor

First Posted: 02/ 2/2012 2:21 pm Updated: 02/ 2/2012 3:36 pm

WASHINGTON -- In a speech expounding on the rift between rural America and Washington D.C., Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont.) vowed Thursday to use his funding powers to stop the Obama administration from implementing new child-labor rules pertaining to agricultural work, accusing the "urban" Labor Department of meddling in a "rural" industry it doesn't understand.

"This is one of those situations where I think the Department of Labor is overstepping its boundaries, its knowledge base, and frankly I think you're sitting around watching reruns of "Blazing Saddles" and that's your interpretation of what goes on in the West," Rehberg, who holds the Labor Department's purse strings for the House of Representatives, said as he lectured a labor official during a hearing Thursday. "And it's not anymore."

Last year, the Labor Department proposed new rules governing what kinds of potentially dangerous tasks minors can and cannot perform on farms and in grain facilities. Although child and worker advocates said the new rules were long overdue, the proposals created an uproar among farmers and agricultural trade groups, who argued that the rules could hurt family-farming traditions.

Although the original proposals largely exempted family farms, the Labor Department bowed yesterday to the farming industry, further widening the exemptions it had already put forward. But that didn't stop Rehberg and GOP members of the House agriculture subcommittee from piling on the department Thursday, using the hearing as an opportunity to put forth their rural bona fides.

Rehberg, a six-term congressman who's running to unseat Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.), said he's a fifth-generation Montana rancher whose great grandfather, born in 1873, started breaking horses at age 11. Rehberg said he has "taken all the glamour" out of his ranching operation. "I don't rope and I don't tie and I don't brand with a hot iron," he went on, adding that he uses modern equipment that he said is virtually incapable of hurting children.

"You can't get hurt," Rehberg fumed. "It's impossible. You could have a five-year-old out there running it."

Rehberg added that he's previously employed a 10-year-old neighbor to herd cashmere goats with what he described as a Kawasaki youth motorcycle. "Now would that be exempt under this rule?" Rehberg demanded of Nancy J. Leppink, a deputy administrator in the Labor Department.

But neither Leppink nor Rehberg seemed entirely sure where motorcycle goat-herding would fall under the new rules.

"I've come to the conclusion in my 11 years in Congress that it isn't necessarily a difference in philosophy between Republicans and Democrats -- there's a difference in philosophy between urban and rural," Rehberg said. "I can assure you, as chairman of the appropriations subcommittee on labor, that you haven't seen the last of this. I will have a rider on my appropriations bill that I write for the House of Representatives that will keep you from implementing this rule."

This isn't the first time Rehberg has used his chairman's perch to take aim at workplace regulations. The budget Rehberg proposed in September would have scuttled several safety protections put forth by the Labor Department, including a rule designed to prevent construction workers from falling from rooftops and another rule meant to reduce repetitive-motion injuries.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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WASHINGTON -- In a speech expounding on the rift between rural America and Washington D.C., Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont.) vowed Thursday to use his funding powers to stop the Obama administration from ...
WASHINGTON -- In a speech expounding on the rift between rural America and Washington D.C., Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont.) vowed Thursday to use his funding powers to stop the Obama administration from ...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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Margo Arrowsmith 07:57 AM on 02/03/2012
My parents were Conservatives and owned and ran small weekly newspapers in the 50's and 60's and there were few laws about what kids could do. They also put both of us kids to work.  My older brother, a teenager at the time, worked the newspaper printing press, but I was not allowed near the machinery, as it was too dangerous, to me and frankly, to the expensive machinery. 


Even then,  Read More...
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Papa Swamp
Research Peon, apex predator, ocean freak.
09:06 AM on 02/05/2012
More kids are injured or killed playing sports than farming accidents. Another law to kill what is left of US small farms. So instead we will import our food from other countries where kids do work on farms with less safety and have zero child labor laws. Brilliant!
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
04:06 AM on 02/06/2012
If we need child labor to make the balance sheet balance we're doing something very wrong.
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
03:33 AM on 02/07/2012
I'm curious about source(s) of the statistics behind your first statement. In my research, the numbers were vague and included significant disclaimers about the difficulty of obtaining and verifying accuracy of both the numbers and causes of injuries and deaths of child farm workers.
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richj45
politically correct linux vegetarian
08:24 AM on 02/05/2012
We have head of households out of work and the Repubs want to start hiring children to shrink the jobs market even further..
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
01:55 AM on 02/06/2012
Now you're catching on.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
paganmist
Girl gamer geek armchair activist
06:52 PM on 02/04/2012
Let's say you're a pedo. There are a lot of those in this world. How would you go about fulfilling your needs?

1) Find a place where there are a lot of children who aren't watched over and snatch one. The problem there is that you'd have to engage in kidnapping and possibly murder as well, and you're not THAT evil, you just "love children." Also, you'd probably get caught.

2) Get a job in a place where there are a lot of children who aren't watched over and snatch one. Same problem as #1.

2) Get a job in a place where there are a lot of children, and their parents have told them to behave and follow your instructions.

JACKPOT.

With all the child abuse that goes on in churches, and day cares, and schools, and recreation centers, committed by people who receive direct training that tells them to be good to children.

What makes anyone think that children in the workplace won't experience similar or worse abuse by people who aren't even remotely obligated to be good to adults, much less children?

Business is cut-throat even for adults. This would be like throwing children to the wolves.
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Papa Swamp
Research Peon, apex predator, ocean freak.
09:03 AM on 02/05/2012
this is about kids working on their family farm…not at some local business.
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
04:00 AM on 02/06/2012
Actually, it's about 'some local business' too. Attempting to keep businesses from getting around the intent of child labor laws.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
B Wood
02:10 PM on 02/04/2012
Meanwhile Rehberg supports Arizona's immigration laws. If he is so "rural" where are farmers going to get labor?
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John Denney
07:02 PM on 02/04/2012
When I was a kid, it was teen-age boys' summer jobs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
B Wood
09:38 AM on 02/05/2012
Not so easy to make that happen today.
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
11:36 PM on 02/05/2012
Relying on immigrant labor depresses wages of Americans.

Americans WILL work in the fields if the pay is not 'third world'.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
B Wood
09:24 AM on 02/06/2012
Just saying they WILL is no assurance of that. That totally ignores demographic reality.

So are the same people who are behind Arizona's immigration laws promoting fair wage laws?

Agriculture is built on cheap labor and mechanization. We are also importing more and more food. If our labor costs dramatically increase more products will come from Mexico, Brazil, etc.
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pjmqone05
"What lies in the shadow of the statue?"
12:55 PM on 02/04/2012
When I hear Republician from Montana I know that nothing intelligent is going to come from their mouth. Its people like this and their longing for the good old days that is holding our country back.
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John Denney
07:05 PM on 02/04/2012
What, Detroit is progress?
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richj45
politically correct linux vegetarian
08:27 AM on 02/05/2012
actually Detroit is making progress thanks to Obama.. U.S. auto sales are way up..
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HST
Conservatism = selfishness
11:05 PM on 02/03/2012
How dare Obama and the big government Democrats keep children from working!

Next thing you know the youngsters willl want a five day work week, extra pay for overtime and benefits.

Those kids should be thankful someone was generous enough to give them a job.

Just imagine all the additional jobs that would be created if businesses didn't have to follow worker safety rules.
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richj45
politically correct linux vegetarian
08:29 AM on 02/05/2012
Yeah.. and this pregnancy leave too.. Imagine women shirking their duties and taking time off to deliver babies.. another Obama scheme..
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l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
10:32 PM on 02/03/2012
Newt wants to put kids to work as janitors and this clown wanst to put them to work on the farm. No mention of education or how the kids really benefit from this even though it's cheaper to pay kids than adults.

If they keep it up we'll be back to 1812 in no time.
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John Denney
07:13 PM on 02/04/2012
My Dad attended a one-room country school house. The kids had to bring in the coal to feed the heating stove, sweep the floors, clean the chalkboards and erasers, and pump water from the well out back for their drinking water.

They were called, "The Greatest Generation."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l78lancer
Wisdom is the principal thing
08:34 PM on 02/04/2012
I hear you. Kudos to your dad - so did my grandmother. Fact is that it's a different time. Schools, are different, laws are different, equipment is different, even education is different. Whatever happened 50 -70 years ago is wonderful, but doesn't apply to today. What worked in a one-room school house won't work in a school with 5000 students today. I appreciate what my grandmother did and what I learned from her. Some of the things I learned from her and my parents is to think for yourself and don't jsut follow the crowd. We need different solutions for a different generation we can learn from them, but it doesn't mean we we need to repeat what they did..
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richj45
politically correct linux vegetarian
08:31 AM on 02/05/2012
Vote for Romney and we might go back to those times..
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westronandnan
07:21 PM on 02/03/2012
There are jobs in manufacturing, textile mills, the garment industry, argriculture and even the coal mines that these children can do. I know they can do them because they did them before we entered a period of reform led by progressives who fought to have the children in school not toiling for substandard pay in substandard working conditions --- never knowing the joys of childhood.

God help us. These ignoranuses want us to retreat to a bygone era of daylight to dark work for substandard wages and inadequate school houses where children are taught the Bible, pray and learn readin', 'riting and 'rithmatic with an anti-science twist to protect the religious dogma of a backward church culture.

All the while, the wealthy take advantage of this working class culture to multiply their wealth as the country enters The Gilded Age Revisited. Ol' Mark Twain could write a sequel.
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Papa Swamp
Research Peon, apex predator, ocean freak.
09:08 AM on 02/05/2012
this is only about farming…specifically the family farm. Kill off the farm in the US so we have to import our food from a country that has zero regulation and high child labor, death and injury rates…Brilliant!
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KenGirard
"American" is my religion. I have faith in it.
05:33 PM on 04/26/2012
This allows kids to do any and every job on their parent's farm.
The kids under 16 can't get hired by non-family members to drive non-rollover protected tractors, handle tobacco, or work inside silos and grain bins.
The day they turn 16, all those jobs are open to them.
04:26 PM on 02/03/2012
This man's lives in a fantasy world of the old West where rangers and farmers worked the fields with their whole family. He now wants to bring back child labor where young children may be able to work the fields possibly injure themselves but, hey what the heck, kids need to be pushed back into the labor force and start earning a living, who cares if they loose an arm or worse. I'll never understand the way some if not most republicans think, they truly live in a parallel universe.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John Denney
07:17 PM on 02/04/2012
City kid, huh? Given a live chicken, could you make dinner?
11:06 AM on 02/05/2012
God no, but I can make reservations at a good restaurant, though.
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KenGirard
"American" is my religion. I have faith in it.
05:46 PM on 04/26/2012
In a heartbeat. Never worked a farm in my life. never lived outside the city. Just read a lot of books, and learned the hard way as to what works best. Lots of "So that is what they meant" moments.
For fun I used to wander into the woods for a week with a backpack, 2 knives, no food, and 1 gallon of water. I normally come home with all kinds of food. I will admit, it is harder in the winter, and possum is not my best dish.
There are lots of us here in the city just like me... and we have no desire to let kids under 16 do the more dangerous jobs on someone else's farm. If they want to do that, do it where Mom and Dad can teach them.
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Gelceea
Life without liberty has no value.
03:43 PM on 02/03/2012
I think the light just came on. I think I understand why so many favor redistribution, finally.
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Gelceea
Life without liberty has no value.
03:20 PM on 02/03/2012
I loved having a job in my youth. I have worked on a farm. You can get hurt doing anything, but working doesn't up the odds. The notion that we need new child labor laws is absoluty ridiculous. I urge you to reconsider your intolerance. Teaching a child the value of work is an excellent thing to do. The things they might do instead could be by far more dangerous.
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Colin Daniel
08:24 AM on 02/05/2012
There is nothing wrong with children having the opportunity to work during the school breaks and limited time during the school term. However the work place must be safe and they should not be exploited. A balance must be struck between a child having the opportunity to be educated and understand the world of business.
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KenGirard
"American" is my religion. I have faith in it.
05:52 PM on 04/26/2012
And these bills do not say kids can't work on a farm. They say here are a couple of task on the farm we think are too dangerous for them to do untill they are 16, such as operate a non-roll-over protected tractor (But they can operate one with protection), handle tabacco, and work inside a silo or grain bin. This means 99% of the work on a farm can still be done by the 10 year old you hired from 3 farms over, and 100% can be done by your own kids on your farm.
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gdauth
Dogs rule
03:05 PM on 02/03/2012
He is from Montana, he must have inhaled too much methane from the cow poop.
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fruitbot
01:07 PM on 02/04/2012
I'm from Montana and that's offensive. Denny Rehberg is a creep, but not because he's from Montana.
02:31 PM on 02/07/2012
I'm from NY and that"s offensive. This isn't about pushing children into slave labor it is a chance for rural kids to make a few dollars and about farm families working together to make a living.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CeePeeDee
"Morning in America" began the end of our era.
11:52 PM on 03/28/2012
As has been pointed out, this is not about the family farm.
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gdauth
Dogs rule
03:00 PM on 02/03/2012
Yes, let's hear it for what's his name. Put the little slackers to work, let them earn their bread and water. To the coal mines with the little beggars. Because they are small they are ideal for certain jobs, like cleaning out storm drains, sewers and cesspools.
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
03:37 AM on 02/07/2012
don't forget chimneys.
01:42 PM on 02/03/2012
Will this Congressman personaly explain to a greving parent why their child was crushed by a tractor or is injured in any of the mutitude of other ways that suposedly trained adults are injured or killed every year.This does not include all the toxic and highly flamable chemicals you will find on any farm,even well run farms have times when something goes wrong.
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gdauth
Dogs rule
03:00 PM on 02/03/2012
Whe do you think that he would care?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gelceea
Life without liberty has no value.
03:25 PM on 02/03/2012
Such an explanation would be far less likely than the explanation that they died from being run over by a car, or their heart failed after a drug overdose, or they threw their life away doing nothing of much value. Work is an excellent thing to learn.
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KenGirard
"American" is my religion. I have faith in it.
06:02 PM on 04/26/2012
Yep, and these bills do nothing at all from preventing kids under 16 from doing that.
All they say is here is a couple of task that are too dangerous for kids under 16 to do, but they can still do the other 99% of the work that is done on a farm, and 100% of the work done on their parent's farm.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mary Sue Mc Cormick
God..Family..Country Always
01:41 PM on 02/03/2012
I would ask just low the gop/tp can sink to, but the question is moot now. Apparently it will sink to sub-human levels! I have always thought they were capable of inhumane treatment of people and I was correct. Sad, isn't it, that even children are not safe with a repub?
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gdauth
Dogs rule
03:02 PM on 02/03/2012
Well Mittens said that he is not concerned with the poor, I am sure that extends to poor kids also.
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Gelceea
Life without liberty has no value.
03:26 PM on 02/03/2012
Low, is failing to teach our youth the value of hard work.
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
12:03 AM on 02/06/2012
The need for hard work is passing with time.

The old world is becoming older and more distant all the time.
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
03:40 AM on 02/07/2012
As though the fellows making these suggestions ever had calloused hands themselves, from a 40-80 hour week of hard physical labor.