U.S. Department of Labor Cracking Down on Violation of Breastfeeding Rule
Smaller employers with less than 50 eligible employees are exempt from the rule but only in the case that through allowing for a breastfeeding break, the employer would suffer significant expense or difficulty in its functioning. The rule is founded on research indicated that breastfed infants are less prone to illness than those fed with formula. The idea is that through encouraging breastfeeding, the healthcare system will experience less strain due to fewer incidence of disease in infants. Additionally, correlation has been shown between companies with liberal lactation policies and higher job satisfaction rankings.
The rule extends to mothers with children up to one year of age and must be provided with sufficient time to express and store the milk to take home. The breastfeeding area cannot be a bathroom and must be “shielded from view and free from intrusion from coworkers and the public.” Under the rule, employers are not required to compensate for the breaks unless the employer already provides compensated breaks in which case the nursing mother must be compensated in the same way as other employers.