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Monday, November 9th, 2009

Breastfeeding 1-2-3

Arkansas Breastfeeding Coalition

A majority of U.S. states have state laws protecting breastfeeding in public or exempting it from indecency laws. Even if a state does not have a breastfeeding law on the books that does not mean that breastfeeding in public is illegal in that state. It simply means that a private business owner may have the right to ask a mother to cover up or to leave the premises.

Arkansas is one of the remaining states without any breastfeeding laws. The Arkansas Breastfeeding Coalition is hoping to change that fact. The ABC has drafted proposed legislation, which you can read here.

According to an on-line breastfeeding support group, the Women’s Caucus is considering sponsoring the legislation and there are other legislators interested in co-sponsorship. Arkansas mothers can help by spreading the word about the proposed legislation and writing positive letters to their state legislators. According to a La Leche League article on enacting breastfeeding legislation, the following is the best way to support state legislation:

Contact a local legislator, and find out if they might be interested in sponsoring a breastfeeding bill. Give the legislator information on other bills, and ideas for bills. Refer the legislator to others that can give more information. Help to get information out to the community about the bill. Encourage positive, informative letters to legislators, rather than angry, upset letters. Nurse-ins, demonstrations, or other activities that might appear fanatical hinder rather than help with this. However, rallies where reputable speakers and breastfeeding information is distributed can help to educate everyone about the importance of breastfeeding.

La Leche League also notes that a short “snail mail” letter is best. E-mails and phone calls are more effective when time is of the essence, such as when the bill is up for vote.

I hope we hear good news from Arkansas in 2007!

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Comments

6 Responses to “Arkansas Breastfeeding Coalition”
  1. Working Mom in AR says:

    Why would we not also want to have something silimar to the law in OK when the employers are asked to provide a quite private place for working mothers to pump. It is very hard to go back to work and try to find a secure, private, sanitary location to pump. I also belive that the employer should agree that he mother can use her breaks and lunch time to pump if needed to maintain her milk supply.
    Just something to think about. Protecting our rights in public is great, but think about all the mothers that quit when they go back to work because they don’t have any place to pump. And try fining a place in an airport if your traveling away from your child to pump. It’s impossible.

  2. Angela says:

    Thanks for your comment! Absolutely it would be nice to have protections/provisions for working mothers. It seems like states enact breastfeeding legislation in bits and pieces — exempting breastfeeding from indecency laws, allowing a mother to breastfeeding in any place in which she is authorized to be, and making provisions for mothers in the workplace. The second two are probably the hardest to get passed because legislators may hesitate to put any restrictions on local businesses (even for a good cause and even if it’s not really a restriction!)

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Check out what others are saying about this post...
  1. [...] Like Arkansas, West Virginia has not enacted any state law pertaining to breastfeeding. Previous attempts to enact breastfeeding legislation died at the end of the 2005 and 2006 legislative sessions before they reached a final vote. [...]

  2. [...] In the new year breastfeeding legislation has been proposed or passed in several states including Arkansas, Indiana, New York, West Virginia and Wisconsin. Oregon joins that list with the introduction of House Bill 2372. The Oregon legislation would require employers with 25 or more employees to provide unpaid breaks and a private location for nursing mothers to express milk. The Reluctant Lactivist, an Oregon nursing mother named Chris, notes that if the bill is enacted it would affect 10% of businesses employing 70% of Oregon workers. [...]

  3. [...] The Arkansas Breastfeeding Coalition’s draft breastfeeding legislation found a sponsor! Representative Pam Adcock introduced House Bill 2411. Originally the bill would have provided broad protection for a woman to breastfeed in any public or other place, but the House amended the bill so it would merely exempt breastfeeding from the Arkansas indecent exposure law. The amended bill reads: A woman is not in violation of [the indecent exposure law] for breastfeeding a child in a public place or any place where other individuals are present. [...]

  4. [...] to the Chairwoman of the Arkansas Breastfeeding Coalition, Governor Mike Beebe is expected to sign the bill within days and the new laws will become [...]



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