Lactation Breaks, Always Commendable, Are Now Law

Working Mother magazine's "Best Companies for Hourly Workers" all support employees who want to pump breast milk on the job, something health reform will start requiring of companies with more than 50 employees.

May 12, 2010 | Source: Womens eNews | by Molly M. Ginty

Working Mother magazine’s “Best Companies for Hourly Workers” all support employees who want to pump breast milk on the job, something health reform will start requiring of companies with more than 50 employees.

Jenny Aguilar and her baby met their goal.

“When I had my son Luke in January 2009, my aim was to feed him nothing but breast milk for a year,” says Aguilar, 27, a child-care program administrator in Folsom, Calif. “I knew this would be healthiest for both of us, but I knew many companies discourage breast pumping on the job. Luckily, my boss was not only cooperative, but let me use her office to express my milk whenever needed.”

Aguilar’s employer, Children’s Creative Learning Centers, ranks No. 1 on Working Mother magazine’s first “Best Companies for Hourly Workers,” a list released in April. It won this honor in part because it encourages employees to breastfeed, which lowers a woman’s risk of diabetes, heart disease and breast cancer while protecting her infant from infections, obesity and diabetes.

Since recent health-reform legislation requires companies to permit lactation breaks for U.S. workers, other firms may soon follow suit and establish the same practices that Working Mother has singled out for special praise.

Sixty-one percent of hourly workers such as Aguilar are female, reports the U.S. Department of Labor. And as Working Mother noted when it published its first “Best Companies for Hourly Workers” last month, these wage-earners often have poor benefits, unpredictable shifts and difficulty maintaining work-life balance. Working Mother’s list of winners took benefits, training, advancement programs, child care, flexibility programs and paid time off into account.

New health-reform legislation requires companies with more than 50 employees to give hourly-wage workers unpaid lactation breaks on the job.

Passed by Congress in March and signed into law by President Obama in April, the “Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act,” the formal name for health-reform legislation, requires companies to provide “reasonable break times” for pumping breast milk, a private place other than a bathroom in which to do this, and a sink and clean water with which women can wash their hands and breast pumps afterward. The date of implementation depends on the Department of Labor, which must first issue guidelines to clarify certain aspects of the law.