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Headline News
Workplace Breastfeeding Programs Common Among “100 Best Companies for
Working Mothers”
For companies wishing to be recognized for their support of working mothers,
the message was clear: consider implementing a workplace breastfeeding program. During her
keynote presentation at a LifeCare-sponsored workplace breastfeeding forum in New York in
September, Carol Evans, CEO of Working Mother Media, told attendees that 99 percent of Working
Mother magazine’s “100 Best Companies for Working Mothers” have a workplace lactation
program, compared to 19 percent of all companies nationwide. (Working
Mother annually recognizes companies that offer best-in-class work-life benefits
for working mothers via its “100 Best” list.)
Evans was joined by Minna Elias, New York Chief of Staff for Congresswoman
Carolyn B. Maloney, and Carol Ann Friedman, Director of LifeCare’s Mothers at Work®
program. The three came together to educate and enlighten New York area employers on issues
surrounding workplace breastfeeding and the benefits it offers.
Evans told attendees that companies with workplace breastfeeding programs
and other work-life programs “are way ahead of others in terms of meeting the needs of today’s
working mother.” This can be an extremely important advantage in a company’s recruitment
and retention efforts, especially since women with children represent one of the fastest
growing segments of the American workforce.
Elias discussed advances on the federal level, including legislation passed
by Congresswoman Maloney to ensure a woman’s right to breastfeed her child on federal property.
She also described Maloney’s pending bill, the Breastfeeding Promotion Act (HR 285), which
amends the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to protect breastfeeding, enacts performance standards
for breast pumps, provides tax incentives for businesses that establish private lactation
areas in the workplace, and allows breastfeeding equipment to be tax deductible for families.
Friedman reported on the health benefits of breastfeeding, the significant
amount of money companies with lactation programs save, and elements of successful workplace
breastfeeding programs.
Several statesincluding California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia,
Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Minnesota, Tennessee, Texas, and Washingtonhave enacted workplace
breastfeeding laws. Several othersincluding Indiana, Kentucky, New York, Rhode Island,
and Wisconsinhave pending legislation.
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