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The minimum drinking age in New York is 21. New York State raised its minimum drinking age from 18 to 19 years in 1982 and raised it from 19 to 21 years on December 1, 1985.

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6y ago
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15y ago

First you do not indicate of what age you are legal for? I have complied several areas for you to read, hopefuly, one will cover what you are seeking:

Working

Minors not yet 14 may not be employed at any time, neither after school nor during vacation. Minors 14 and 15 years old may work after school hours and during vacations, but not in factory work. They may do delivery and clerical work in any enclosed office of a factory, and in dry cleaning, tailor, shoe repair, and similar service stores. Minors 16 and 17 years of age, if not attending school, may work full time throughout the year. Factory work is permitted for minors 16 years of age or older.The following exceptions apply: Minors 12 years of age or older may be employed in the hand harvest of berries, fruits, and vegetables. Minors 11 years of age or older may work outside school hours as newspaper carriers to deliver, or sell and deliver newspapers, shopping papers, or periodicals to homes or business places. Minors 14 years of age and older may be engaged in street trades work, i.e. selling newspapers or periodicals on streets or public places. Minors 12 years of age or older may work outside school hours for their parents or guardians either on the home farm or at other outdoor work not connected with a business. There is no minimum age for child performers at theatrical, radio, or television performances or for child models.According to state law, no one under the age of 18 may be employed in or assist in: Any occupation at construction work, including wrecking, demolition, roofing, or excavating operation and the painting or exterior cleaning of a building structure from an elevated surface.Any occupation involved in the operation of circular saws, bandsaws, and guillotine shears. Any occupation in or about a slaughter and meat­packing establishment, or rendering plant. Any occupation involved in the operation of power­driven woodworking, metal­forming, metal­punching, metal­shearing, bakery and paper products machines. Any occupation involved in the operation of power­driven hoisting apparatus.Any occupation involved in the manufacture of brick, tile, and kindred products. Any occupation involving exposure to radioactive substances or ionizing radiation, or exposure to silica or other harmful dust. Logging occupations and occupations in the operation of any saw mill, lath mill, shingle mill, or cooperage­stock mill. As a helper on a motor vehicle. The care or operation of a freight or passenger elevator, except that minors over l6 may operate automatic, push­button control elevators. Work in manufacturing, packing, or storing of explosives, or in the use or delivery of explosives.Operating or using any emery, tripoli, rouge, corundum, stone, silicon carbide, or any abrasive, or emery polishing or buffing wheel, where articles of the baser metals or iridium are manufactured. Adjusting belts to machinery or cleaning, oiling, or wiping machinery.Packing paints, dry colors, or red or white leads. Preparing any composition in which dangerous or poisonous acids are used. Operating steam boilers subject to Section 204 of the Labor Law. Any occupation in or in connection with a mine or quarry. In penal or correctional institutions, if such employment relates to the custody or care of prisoners or inmates. These prohibitions do not apply to minors younger than 18 who are apprentices individually registered in apprenticeship programs duly registered with the Commissioner of Labor or to student­learners enrolled in recognized cooperative vocational training programs, or to trainees in approved on­the­job training programs.They do not apply to minors 16 to 18 years old who have completed training as a student learner or trainee in an on­the­job training program, or has completed a training program given by a public school or a nonprofit institution, which includes safety instruction approved by the Commissioner of Labor. There are regulations governing the approval of these safety instructions.State regulations forbid minors under the age of 16 from being employed in or assisting in: Operating or assisting in operating any machinery unless all moving parts other than keys, levers, or handles are so guarded as to prevent any part of the person or clothing of the operator from touching them.Any occupation in or in connection with a factory, except in delivery and clerical employment in an enclosed office of a factory or in dry cleaning stores, shoe repair shops, and similar service stores. Federal law requires that any delivery work for retail stores, which is performed by 14­ and 15­ year­olds be made on foot, by bicycle, or via bus. It also forbids them from working in a place where processing (such as laundering or dry cleaning) takes place. The operation of washing, grinding, cutting, slicing, pressing, or mixing machinery. Painting or exterior cleaning in connection with the maintenance of a building or structure.Any employment in institutions in the Department of Mental Health. (However, participation in recreation and leisure activities, social skills development, companionship and/or entertainment as part of an organized volunteer program approved by the Commissioner of Mental Health does not constitute employment or assistance in employment and may be performed by youthful volunteers at least 14 years of age.) Industrial homework. Places of entertainment as a rope or wire walker or gymnast unless the minor is protected by the use of safety devices or protective equipment, which comply with the provisions of the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Act. Peddling; drug traffic; or any practice, exhibition, or place dangerous or injurious to life, limb, or morals.New York State recently adopted regulations for prohibited occupations in agriculture for 14 and 15 year­olds. Contact the Division of Labor Standards for further information.Click on the link below for federal prohibited occupations.FEDERAL PROHIBITED OCCUPATIONS School Compulsory Attendance Ages: "...a minor who becomes six years of age on or before the first of December in any school year…until the last day of session in the school year in which the minor becomes sixteen years of age" or completion of high school. Any board of education can vote to raise the compulsory attendance age in their school district from 16 to 17 if the minor is not employed. New York Education Law § 3205 Driving The minimum driving age in NYS is 16, Operator, Class D: Issued to drivers age 18 or over, or to drivers age 17 with Driver Education. Valid for passenger cars and trucks with a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 26,000 lbs. or less. Taxi and Livery, Class E: Issued to drivers age 18 or over. Valid for the same vehicles that a class D driver can drive, plus for-hire vehicles that carry 14 passengers or less. Junior License, Class DJ: Issued to drivers under the age of 18, with restrictions. Read the DMV brochure, Learner Permits and Junior Licenses. Valid for passenger cars and trucks with a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 10,000 lbs. or less. A class DJ driver can drive a vehicle that tows another vehicle (for example a trailer) with a GVWR of 3,000 lbs. or less.Junior Motorcycle License, Class MJ: for motorcycle drivers under the age of 18, with restrictions. Read the DMV brochure, Learner Permits and Junior Licenses. Commercial, Class A, Class B and Class C (CDL): Drivers age 21 or over can apply for a Class A driver license or any CDL with a hazardous materials endorsement. Drivers age 18 or over can apply for a Class B or Class C driver license. Valid for the same vehicles that a Class E driver can drive plus buses and trucks that have a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 26,001 lbs. or more. There are several endorsements and restrictions for different types of vehicles and cargos. See the important information about changes for CDL drivers that .Graduated Licensing Law: A new graduated licensing law begins in NYS on September 1, 2003. The law affects how drivers under the age of 18 ("junior drivers") receive senior driving privileges and changes the restrictions on junior drivers. Junior drivers are drivers who have a driver license or a learner permit of Class DJ or Class MJ.On September 1, 2003, these new rules began for all junior drivers:A junior driver cannot operate a vehicle that has more than two passengers who are under the age of 21 unless a parent, a guardian, or a driving instructor also rides in the vehicle. There is an exception to this rule if the passengers are immediate family members.When the law requires supervision of the junior driver, only the supervising driver can ride in the front seat. The supervising driver must be 21 years of age or older and must have a valid driver license.All passengers that ride with a junior driver must use the correct safety restraints (seat belts, child safety seats, or child restraint systems).These new rules apply to junior drivers who have learner permits that were issued on or after September 1, 2003:A driver with a Class DJ or Class MJ learner permit must bring to the road test a completed form MV-262 (Certification of 20 Hours of Supervised Driving). The form certifies that the junior driver had a minimum of 20 hours of supervised driving experience. The supervising driver must be a driver qualified by the law to supervise a junior driver. A parent or a legal guardian of the junior driver must sign form MV-262.The DMV will issue a limited-use junior license to a junior driver who passes a road test during the first six months after the learner permit was issued. A limited-use junior license allows the junior driver to drive without supervision during specific hours of the day and within specific geographical boundaries. A supervising driver must supervise the junior driver at all other times. Six months after the learner permit of that driver was issued, the DMV will issue a normal junior license to replace the limited-use junior license.When a junior driver passes a road test more than six months after the learner permit was issued, the DMV issues a normal junior license. An additional change in the law began on September 1, 2003 and affects all drivers with a learner permit. The change in the law requires that a supervising driver must be 21 years of age or older. You must be 16 years of age or older to apply for a learner permit. If you are under the age of 18, your parent or your legal guardian must sign the consent section of your form MV-44 (Driver License Application). Your parent or legal guardian can sign the form before you bring it to a DMV office. Your parent or legal guardian is not required to go to the DMV office with you to sign form MV-44. You do not require consent if you are age 17 and you have form MV-285 (Driver Education Student Certificate of Completion).If you have a Class DJ junior license, and you complete a high school or college driver education course, you can change your Class DJ junior license to a Class D senior license when you are 17 years old.On your 18th birthday, your driver record indicates that you are a Class D driver. There is no need to wait until you have your new Class D driver license before you drive as a senior driver. You can drive as a senior driver on your 18th birthday.

The age of consent is the age at which one can legally consent to have sexual relations. The age of consent in New York is 17 years old. (See the NYS Penal Law Art. 130.) On their seventeenth birthdays, young men and women may decide for themselves if they wish to consent to have sexual intercourse or participate in other sexual activity. The day before their birthday, they would be incapable of consenting due to their tender age. The ability to consent to have sex does not give 17-year-olds the right to move away from, or cease to be under the supervision of, their parents or legal guardians. Parents of minors who leave home without permission can go to the Family Court and seek an order forcing the children to return home, unless the parents can be proven to be unfit.

Parents can move to have their 17-year-olds returned home specifically because the children are consenting to sexual intercourse or sexual behavior. Why? Although the children can now consent to sexual relations, the results of those sexual relations will be visited upon the 17-year-olds' parents. They will be financially responsible for the prenatal care and the health and well-being of any offspring born as a result of the 17-year-olds' decisions to engage in consensual sexual relations, at least until the 17-year-olds become adults at 18, and possibly longer. If one cannot consent to sexual relations before age 17, are children under age 17 guilty of rape or other sex offenses? The answer is yes and no.New York's law provides a number of exceptions to the age of consent rule. While a child under age 17 cannot legally consent to have sex, the older partner of that child may or may not face criminal charges, depending on the situation and the law's exceptions.No one may have sexual intercourse with a child under 11 years old. Hence, an 11-year-old who has sex with a 10-year-old would be guilty of rape in the first degree. That is an unlikely, but possible, scenario.A person age 18 or older cannot have sex with a person under 13 years old under any circumstance.However, if the child is at least 13 and younger than 15, and if the adult is less than four years older than the child at the time of the sexual conduct, then that would release the adult defendant of criminal responsibility. Because this is an affirmative defense, the defendant, who usually carries no burden of proof at trial, has the burden of proving the age difference beyond a preponderance of the evidence (which is far less than the prosecution's burden of proving its case beyond a reasonable doubt.) For example, if a 14-and-a-half-year-old girl agrees to have sex with a boy on his eighteenth birthday, the 18-year-old would have an affirmative defense of being less than four years older than the victim.Further, a 17-year-old would not be guilty of rape of a 12-year-old if the younger child agreed to the act. The 17-year-old might be guilty of a misdemeanor sexual offense, however.But if a 17-year-old turns 18 before his or her partner turns 14, then as of the older child's eighteenth birthday, the sexual relations would be considered rape. This can be very disconcerting to the children and parents. It presents a scenario where sexual behavior that was legal on one day is be completely illegal the next.Another exception falls where the defendant is accused of sexual abuse (touching another person sexually without consent). Proof of both a less-than-five-year gap between the ages of the actors, and the victim's age being at least 14, would act as an affirmative defense in an otherwise consensual situation. In other words, if it was a "no, don't touch me" situation, that would be sexual abuse. However, if it was a "please touch me" situation, and one actor in the situation is charged with sexual abuse but he or she proves both the age difference and that the other actor is 14, then there is an affirmative defense. The State of New York does not have an emancipation statute available or a court proceeding to remove the disability of minority. Rather, the status of a youth will turn on the specific facts of the case.According to caselaw, in the State of New York "emancipation" has been defined as the renunciation of parental rights to a child. Gittleman v. Gittleman, 81 A.D. 2d 632, 438 N.Y.S. 2d 130 (2d Dept. 1981); Wayne County Dept. of Soc. Serv. v. Schultz, 81 Misc. 2d 603, 366 N.Y.S. 2d 845 (Fam. Ct. Wayne County 1975).Also a minor is considered emancipated if the following events have occurred: 1) He or she is married. Cochran v. Cochran, 196 N.Y. 86, 89 N.E. 470 (1909); Matter of Williams, & 106 Misc. 2d 280, 431 N.Y.S. 2d 334 (Fam. Ct. Monroe County 1980); Bach v. Long Island Jewish Hospital, 49 Misc. 2d 207, 267 N.Y.S. 2d 289 (Sup. Ct.Nassau County 1966).2) He or she is in the armed services. Zuckerman v. Zuckerman, 154 A.D. 2d 666, 546 N.Y.S. 2d 666 (2d Dept. 1989); Fauser v. Fauser, 50 Misc. 2d 601, 271, N.Y.S. 2d 59 (Fam. Ct. Nassau County 1966).3) He or she has established a home and is financially independent. Roe v. Doe, 29 N.Y.2d 188, 272 N.E.2d 567, 324 N.Y.S.2d 71 (1971); Knoll v. Kilcher, 100 A.D. 2d 686, 473 N.Y.S. 2d 887 (3rd Dept. 1984); Giovagnioli v. Ft. Orange, 133 N.Y.S. 92 (3rd Dept. 1911); Rosemary v. George, 103 Misc.2d 1036, 427 N.Y.S.2d 553 (Fam. Ct. Dutchess County 1980); Bickford v. Bickford, 83 Misc. 2d 571, 371 N.Y.S. 2d 782 (Fam. Ct. Schenectady County 1975).4) His or her parent has failed to fulfill parental support obligations and the minor seeks emancipation. Gittleman, 81 A.D. 2d 632, 438 N.Y.S. 2d 130; Murphy v. Murphy, 206 Misc. 2d 228, 133 N.Y.S. 2d 796 (Sup. Ct. Broome County 1954). Age of Majority A minor is a person who does not have the legal rights of an adult. A minor is usually defined as someone who has not yet reached the age of majority. In most states, a person reaches majority and acquires all of the rights and responsibilities of an adult when he or she turns 18. Until a minor reaches the legal age of adulthood, he or she may not be responsible for his/her own actions (including the capacity to enter into a contract which is enforceable by the other party), for damages for negligence or intentional wrongs without a parent being liable, nor for punishment as an adult for a crime. Marriage with or without parental consent, driving, prosecution for crimes, the right to choose an abortion and liability for damages vary from state to state. Legal contracts A contract, otherwise valid, entered into by a minor, cannot be disaffirmed because of the minor's minority if the contract is to pay the reasonable value of necessaries. The meaning of the term "necessaries" depends on the facts of the individual case. It depends on many things, including the particular circumstances of the minor, the actual need, and the use to which the purchased article is to be put. However, the common-law classification of necessaries as including food, lodging, clothing, medicine, medical attention, and education is generally recognized to the extent such items are suited to the minor's social position and situation in life, even though such items are not absolutely needed. Uniform gift to minors actThe Uniform Gift to Minors Act (UGMA) is a law adopted by most states allowing an adult to contribute to a custodial account in a minor's name without having to establish a trust or name a legal guardian. Thus, minors can have securities bought and money invested in their names, but the custodian is responsible for managing the funds in the account. The custodian has a fiduciary duty to manage the account prudently, but once the minor reaches the age of majority, he/she has complete rights to the funds in the account. The assets are the legal property of the minor, and the parent has no legal control over the uses of the proceeds of the account. All withdrawals from the account are taxed at the minor's rate. Putting money into a UGMA account can negatively impact the chances for financial aid, since financial aid officers weigh children's assets much more heavily than parents' assets.If the custodian of the account dies, a new custodian must be named. The new custodian is appointed under the provisions of the applicable state UTMA or UGMA listed on the account. Typically, under the applicable UTMA/UGMA statute, the custodian may name a successor upon death. If a successor is not designated and the minor is over age 14, the minor may appoint a successor using a notarized letter. Otherwise, the minor's guardian becomes custodian or the court appoints one. State UGMA or UTMA laws vary, so local law should be consulted for specific requirements. Marriage - New York: 18, 16 with parental consent, 14 with parental and judicial consent. Code Section Dom. Rel. §§7, 15, 15a Minimum Legal Age With Parental Consent Male: 16; Female: 16 Minimum Legal Age Without Parental Consent Male: 18; Female: 18 Comments Minors under 16 must have approval of parents and court. Minors 16 and 17 must have only parental consent. No license to minors under 14. EmancipatedAt eighteen years of age, New Yorkers are considered emancipated, free to marry, vote, enter the workforce, and protect America's freedom by entering military service. 18 to purchase tobacco Tatto & Piercings - Amd S260.21, add S120.40, Pen L Makes piercing or branding the body of a child under the age of eighteen years by means of body piercing or branding instruments the class B misdemeanor of unlawfully dealing with a child in the second degree; makes the tattooing, branding or piercing of the body of a person who is intoxicated or under the influence of drugs the class B misdemeanor of unlawful body marking.18 years of age or older for tattoos.Piercings for those under 18 years of age must have parental authorization form signed by parents and parents must be present.

Abortion New York State, a woman of any age can get medical services, including an abortion, without parental notification. It is possible for minors to receive pregnancy termination services without notifying a parent or guardian. Regardless of a state's parental notification laws, there may be laws prohibiting abortions after a certain point in the pregnancy. You need to 18 for the following: Vote, tend bar, wait person where drinks are served, drinking, smoking, purchase of tobacco, join the military, gamble, casino, lottery, parimutal betting & slot machine (charity bingo & pull tabs do not have any age requirement).

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13y ago

New York has set it the age of consent at 17. Some states have set it at 16 or higher at 18. There is no difference based on gender.

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11y ago

17

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11y ago

21

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Q: What is the legal age to buy alcohol in new york?
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