Sec. 31-18. Hours of labor of minors, elderly and handicapped persons in certain other establishments.
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Sec. 31-18. Hours of labor of minors, elderly and handicapped persons in certain other establishments. (a) No public restaurant, cafe, dining room, barber shop,
hairdressing or manicuring establishment, amusement or recreational establishment,
bowling alley, shoe-shining establishment, billiard or pool room or photograph gallery
shall employ or permit to work any person under eighteen years of age (1) between the
hours of ten o'clock in the evening and six o'clock in the morning, or any of the persons
described below under conditions herein set forth more than nine hours in any day: (A)
Persons sixty-six years of age or older, except with their consent; (B) handicapped
persons, so designated by medical or governmental authority, except with their consent
and after certification by a physician that the extended hours of work will not be injurious
to their health; (C) disabled veterans, as defined under state or federal law, except with
their consent and after certification by a physician that the extended hours of work will
not be injurious to their health; provided any such person may be permitted to work in
any such establishment one day in a week for not more than ten hours on such day, but
not more than six days or forty-eight hours in any one week, and provided further,
persons between sixteen and eighteen years of age may be employed in any amusement
or recreational establishment, restaurant, cafe or dining room, or employed in any theater
until twelve o'clock midnight unless such persons are regularly attending school in
which case such minors may be employed until eleven o'clock in the evening on days
which precede a regularly scheduled school day and until twelve o'clock midnight during any regular school vacation season and on days which do not precede a regularly
scheduled school day, and (2) more than (A) six hours in any regularly scheduled school
day unless the regularly scheduled school day immediately precedes a nonschool day
or eight hours in any other day, and (B) thirty-two hours in any calendar week during
which the school in which such person is enrolled is in session or forty-eight hours in
any other calendar week during which the school in which such person is enrolled is
not in session. Notwithstanding any provision of this section, the number of hours such
person participates in a work experience that is part of an approved educational plan,
cooperative program or school-to-work program shall not be counted against the daily
or weekly limits set forth in this section.
(c) The provisions of this section shall not apply to any person under eighteen years of age who has graduated from a secondary educational institution.
(d) Any person who violates any provision of this section shall be fined not more than two hundred dollars for each offense.
(1949 Rev., S. 7349; 1963, P.A. 160; 1971, P.A. 479; P.A. 73-83, S. 2, 3; 73-84; 73-616, S. 63; P.A. 77-204; P.A. 81-114; P.A. 85-28, S. 5; P.A. 97-263, S. 9; P.A. 98-210, S. 5.)
History: 1963 act extended applicability to cover amusement or recreational establishments, bowling alleys, shoe-shining establishments and billiard or pool rooms; 1971 act added provision re employment of minors between sixteen and eighteen years old who do not regularly attend school, in restaurants, cafes or dining rooms; P.A. 73-83 deleted provision prohibiting employment of women for more than nine hours a day in specified establishments and extended nine-hour limit to persons sixty-six or older, handicapped persons and disabled veterans; P.A. 73-84 allowed employment of persons sixteen to eighteen years old who do not regularly attend school, in restaurants, cafes and dining rooms until midnight rather than eleven p.m. as was previously the case; P.A. 73-616 extended midnight limit for employment of minors in eating establishments to persons who regularly attend school, during vacations and days which do not precede school days; P.A. 77-204 made provisions re minors between sixteen and eighteen years old applicable to those employed as ushers in nonprofit theaters; P.A. 81-114 allowed minors who regularly attend school to work in restaurants, cafes or theaters until eleven o'clock in the evening on days preceding school days and replaced alphabetic Subdiv. indicators with numeric indicators; P.A. 85-28 exempted persons who have graduated from a secondary educational institution from the employment restrictions placed on minors; P.A. 97-263 increased the amount of fine from one hundred to two hundred dollars; P.A. 98-210 allowed employment of persons between sixteen and eighteen years of age who do not regularly attend school, in amusement and recreational establishments and for-profit theaters until midnight rather than ten p.m. as was previously the case, limited employment of persons between sixteen and eighteen years of age who regularly attend school, in public restaurants, cafes, dining rooms, barber shops, bowling alleys, hairdressing, manicuring, amusement, recreational or shoe shining establishments while school is in session, deleted the exemption for hotel establishments, created an exemption for graduates under eighteen years of age, replaced the term "minor" with the term "person" throughout the section and added alphabetic Subsec. indicators and numeric Subdiv. indicators.
Former statute a valid exercise of police power. 126 C. 678. Women entertainers within statute. Id.
Constitutionality. 14 CS 485. Prohibition of employment of females between designated hours in certain establishments held to be valid exercise of police powers. Id.