An Act ensuring tuition equity at the Stockbridge School of Agriculture
S. 920 targets ending child labor in federal contracting by requiring contractors to comply with child-labor laws, conduct due diligence, and face enforcement and reporting.
S. 920 targets ending child labor in federal contracting by requiring contractors to comply with child-labor laws, conduct due diligence, and face enforcement and reporting.
S. 920 is a Senate bill introduced on March 10, 2025, titled the Preventing Child Labor Exploitation in Federal Contracting Act. The measure appears to target protections against child labor in connection with federal contracting.
The actual text of S. 920 is not included here, so specific statutory language is not available. Provisions typically associated with this policy area might include:
- Prohibiting use of child labor in activities covered by federal contracts.
- Requiring prime contractors and subcontractors to comply with applicable child labor laws and industry standards.
- Implementing supplier due diligence and verification requirements for supply chains related to federal contracts.
- Establishing reporting, auditing, and transparency measures regarding labor practices in contracts.
- Providing enforcement mechanisms, penalties, or contract remedies for violations.
- Protecting whistleblowers and outlining procedures for addressing alleged violations.
- Setting timelines for compliance and potential phased implementation.
Note: The above potential provisions are not confirmed in the provided text and are listed as common elements in similar legislation.
If you’d like, I can tailor this summary to emphasize potential economic impacts, enforcement scenarios, or align it with comparable existing laws for comparison.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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