New Laws That Protect Pregnant and Nursing Employees Are Finally Here

The PUMP Act and the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act are now both in effect, giving pregnant people and new parents the support they need in the workplace. It's about time.

<p>MaaHoo / Stocksy</p>

MaaHoo / Stocksy

As of June 27, 2023, there are two new laws in the United States that protect people who are nursing and pregnant people in the workplace. These laws were a long time coming and critical.

The Providing Urgent Maternal Protection (PUMP) Act went into effect in April 2023. It requires businesses to provide adequate space and accommodations for nursing parents. Businesses will now face penalties if they do not comply with the new regulations.

Two months later, the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act went into effect. It requires employers to grant reasonable accommodations for pregnant workers. Both of these new laws were passed by the 117th Congress, a body made up of just over 25% of women with an additional 11 openly LGBTQIA+ members. President Biden signed both of these bills in December of 2022.

Public policy and laws in the United States have not historically supported pregnant people or people who have recently given birth. Pregnant workers have never had the guarantee to be able to continue to earn income and have a healthy and safe pregnancy at the same time. Both laws are a huge victory for pregnant workers and families.

Related: AAP Changes Breastfeeding Guidelines, Calls For More Support



The PUMP act for nursing employees was created to address the gaps in the 2010 Break Time Law and will protect around 9 million more employees who need to express milk at work and were excluded from the 2010 law.



What is The PUMP Act?

The PUMP Act for nursing employees was created to address the gaps in the 2010 Break Time Law so that all employees with a need to express milk can receive the full benefits of the law. This will further protect around 9 million employees who have been previously excluded from the 2010 law. It's the first bill focused solely on nursing to receive a vote on both the House and Senate floors.

It extends protections to cover salaried and other categorized employees, including teachers and nurses. The PUMP Act requires employers to provide a "reasonable amount" of break time and a dedicated space to express milk as frequently as needed for up to a year after the birth of their child. A bathroom cannot be used as that dedicated space—and that space must be blocked from view and free from any intrusion.

The PUMP Act also provides greater clarity on when pumping time is paid or unpaid. The break time to express milk does not have to be paid. But if an employer does provide paid breaks, anyone expressing milk while on a compensated break must also be paid.

All employers, no matter the size of their business are required to comply with the Pump Act. The law allows workers to sue if their employer doesn't comply.

Related: Reducing Disparities Around Breastfeeding in Black Communities Could Produce Healthier Parents and Children

What is the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act?

The purpose of the PWFA is "to eliminate discrimination and promote women's health and economic security by ensuring reasonable workplace accommodations for workers whose ability to perform the functions of a job are limited by pregnancy, childbirth or a related medical condition." The adoption of "reasonable accommodations"was drawn directly from its usage in the Disabilities Act of 1990, albeit for pregnant workers and on a temporary basis.

Related: I Was Laid Off When Six Months Pregnant—Here&#39;s Why We Need Better Protections for Working Parents

Reasonable accommodations are defined as temporary light duty or similar arrangements—think more frequent bathroom breaks or an option to sit. The PWFA requires employers with 15 or more workers to provide arrangements for job applicants and employees with conditions related to pregnancy or childbirth. It also prohibits employers from discriminating against a job candidate or employee because of their need for pregnancy-related accommodation.

Bipartisan support for pregnant workers closes loopholes in Pregnancy Discrimination Act

This is the first time since 1978, when the Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA) was passed, that the direly needed new policy was able to make it through both the House and the Senate. The PDA made it illegal for a worker to be fired or treated differently while they were pregnant but left open many loopholes for employers to refuse to grant reasonable accommodations for pregnant workers. In the decades since, waves of discrimination lawsuits have been filed in a wild landscape of state-specific protections and piecemeal judicial rulings. Often, by the time these workers saw their day in court, they were no longer pregnant and either had to leave their job—sacrificing their income and economic security—or worked through unsafe conditions.

Michelle McGrain, Director of Congressional Relations and Economic Justice at the National Partnership for Women and Families, shares with Parents the essential breakdown of the PWFA. "If an employer provides similar accommodations to people for non-pregnancy related reasons, for example, if you've had surgery and you need an accommodation, then it also has to provide those accommodations for pregnant workers."

McGrain notes that the PWFA is really just a simple fix for the holes left from the PDA, where employers now have a proactive responsibility to offer these accommodations and they don't have to offer them if it would have an adverse impact on their business.

The PWFA has been introduced in every Congress since 2011, and it passed the House in May 2021. It then sat in general silence with the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee for months. It passed in December 2022 after the religious exemption language was added, which will impact those who work for religious employers.

With every new election cycle, we continue to see the expansion of representatives who have historically been denied voice and access to our federal government and policymaking. Taking in this important win for pregnant workers, parents, and families, we can see directly what happens when we have greater Congressional diversity: Stronger policies that support all parents and families. Perhaps we can now look toward the next steps in bridging the gaps between family values and legislative national policy: paid sick days for pregnant workers and paid parental leave.

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Read the original article on Parents.