Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Breastfeeding Pilots' Claims Against Airline Seen As Advance

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 May, 2016 11:14 AM
    DENVER — Charges by four female pilots that Frontier Airlines' policies for pregnant women and new mothers are discriminatory could be seen as progress, an advocate says.
     
    Decades ago, flight attendants were pushing just to keep their jobs after they became pregnant, said Phoebe Taubman, senior staff attorney with the advocacy group A Better Balance.
     
    The discrimination claims filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission this week on behalf of the pilots by the American Civil Liberties Union address levelling the playing field for women who are entering the workforce in increasing numbers and new positions, Taubman said.
     
    "It's a very different workplace," said Taubman, who is not involved in the case.
     
    The pilots, with help from the ACLU and the New York law firm of Holwell Shuster & Goldberg, are pushing the airline to change policies on maternity leaves and make it easier for new mothers to pump breast milk in private after returning to work.
     
    "Each of us tried to work with Frontier to find a solution, but unfortunately our efforts went nowhere," one of the pilots, Brandy Beck, said in a statement Tuesday, a day after filing documents with the EEOC.
     
    "Because of Frontier's failure to address the needs of pilots who are breast-feeding on a policy level, each of us has been left to figure out these problems on her own," she said.
     
    Frontier said it complies with federal and state laws and with its agreement with its pilots association.
     
    "The duties of a commercial airline pilot present unique circumstances," Frontier added. "We have made good-faith efforts to identify and provide rooms and other secure locations for use by breast-feeding pilots during their duty travel."
     
    In documents filed with the EEOC on Monday, Beck, Shannon Kiedrowski, Erin Zielinski and Randi Freyer described their struggles to get Frontier to provide places for them to pump breast milk during work days that can last more than 12 hours and include flights of up to five hours on schedules lasting up to five days.
     
     
    Frontier has designated a room for breast-milk pumping at its hub at Denver International Airport, but the pilots said it was not always convenient to their gates and that such rooms were not always available at other airports.
     
    Kiedrowski told the EEOC she has pumped in an airplane restroom. On one occasion, she was given a written reprimand and told that leaving the flight deck to pump raised safety issues, she said.
     
    Kiedrowski is the most senior of the four, having joined Frontier in 2002. Beck has been with Frontier since 2003, and Zielinski and Freyer since 2013.
     
    Jeff Nowak, a Chicago attorney who has represented employers in such cases, said the EEOC has said employers must accommodate "lactation issues" as they would any employee's medical needs. He said the Denver airport room provided for pumping might be considered adequate accommodation.
     
    Nowak is not involved in the Frontier case,
     
    The pilots also described to the EEOC failed attempts to get assignments outside the cockpit that would have let them work longer and continue earning while pregnant. Frontier, they said, requires pregnant pilots to go on maternity leave following the 32nd week of pregnancy.
     
    Taubman, of A Better Balance, said that such forced-leave policies are not uncommon and stem from concern about an employee going into labour while on the job. However, she said alternate duties can help an employer by retaining the experience and expertise of a worker, who gains critical earnings.
     
    Taubman added that airline and airport managers need to consider the needs of working women customers who are travelling and may need a place to pump milk or breast feed. "We work a lot in the context of the workplace, but it's broader than that," she said.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Rona Shareholders Overwhelmingly Approve $3.2-Billion Lowe's Takeover

    More than 99.9 per cent of votes cast, representing 70.22 per cent of Rona's 106.9 million common shares, supported the deal first announced nearly two months ago.

    Rona Shareholders Overwhelmingly Approve $3.2-Billion Lowe's Takeover

    New Charges For Man Accused Of Sexually Exploiting More Than 2,000 Boys Online

    New Charges For Man Accused Of Sexually Exploiting More Than 2,000 Boys Online
    A New Brunswick man suspected of sexually exploiting more than 2,000 young people online now faces new charges.

    New Charges For Man Accused Of Sexually Exploiting More Than 2,000 Boys Online

    Omar Elabi, Montreal Man Arrested In Alleged Online Threat Case Released Under Strict Conditions

    Omar Elabi, 20, was freed under a list of strict conditions today after being detained since Tuesday.

    Omar Elabi, Montreal Man Arrested In Alleged Online Threat Case Released Under Strict Conditions

    Israel's Transgender Activist Asks To Go To Women's Prison

    Israel's Transgender Activist Asks To Go To Women's Prison
    JERUSALEM — A transgender Israeli teenager, jailed for refusing to join the military as a conscientious objector, petitioned the army on Thursday to be moved to a women's prison.

    Israel's Transgender Activist Asks To Go To Women's Prison

    Forget Glass, Now Transparent Wood To Brighten Homes!

    Forget Glass, Now Transparent Wood To Brighten Homes!
      he researchers believe that the material, described in the journal Biomacromolecules, also could find application in solar cell windows.

    Forget Glass, Now Transparent Wood To Brighten Homes!

    Ghomeshi's Lawyer Marie Henein Rejects Suggestions She Betrayed Women

    Jian Ghomeshi's lawyer says she was just doing her job in representing the former CBC radio star in a high-profile sexual assault case, and that she was thrilled with the result.

    Ghomeshi's Lawyer Marie Henein Rejects Suggestions She Betrayed Women