Skip to main content Skip to office menu Skip to footer
Capital IconMinnesota Legislature

Seeking balance, bill looks for teens to call it an earlier work night

They can vote and buy tobacco. But, if HF701 becomes law, 18-year-old students won’t be allowed to work past 11 p.m. on school nights.

Current law prohibits students age 17 and younger from working past 11 p.m. on school nights, but a proposal by Rep. Mary Murphy (DFL-Hermantown) would change the current threshold of student workers to “18 or older.” It also would bar students from working before 5 a.m.

The bill, Murphy said, is “fixing a glitch.”

The House Commerce and Regulatory Reform Committee approved the bill Wednesday and sent it to the House Job Growth and Energy Affordability Policy and Finance Committee. Its companion, SF226, sponsored by Senate Minority Leader Tom Bakk (DFL-Cook), awaits action by the Senate Jobs and Economic Growth Finance and Policy Committee.

Rebecca Brenna, a mother of an 18-year-old, said her son landed a job just before the holiday rush. The department store scheduled her son to work until 12:30 a.m., which she said was “difficult” to balance for the teen waking up at 6 a.m. for an eight-hour school day.

“He did have to do that for four or five times a week,” Brenna said.

The bill would not change current law, whereby students with a note from their parents or guardians can work until 11:30 p.m. on a night before a school day and after 4:30 a.m. on a school day.


Related Articles


Priority Dailies

Ways and Means Committee OKs proposed $512 million supplemental budget on party-line vote
(House Photography file photo) Meeting more needs or fiscal irresponsibility is one way to sum up the differences among the two parties on a supplemental spending package a year after a $72 billion state budg...
Minnesota’s projected budget surplus balloons to $3.7 billion, but fiscal pressure still looms
(House Photography file photo) Just as Minnesota has experienced a warmer winter than usual, so has the state’s budget outlook warmed over the past few months. On Thursday, Minnesota Management and Budget...

Minnesota House on Twitter