The Beautiful Letdown

A breastfeeding blog that dabbles in tandem, extended nursing, gentle parenting and much more

North Dakota’s Proposed Breastfeeding Bill

March2

Mod­est” and “Discreet”

Those are two words that cause many breast­feed­ing moms to cringe.  Breast­feed­ing is a sen­si­tive topic for many women.  It is also one of those top­ics that can be eas­ily sen­sa­tion­al­ized.  How many tv news reports have you seen about the lat­est breast­feed­ing study, the lat­est for­mula study, or some sort of extreme breast­feed­ing behav­ior?  It def­i­nitely makes news.

It has been mak­ing news quite a bit in North Dakota in the past month or so.  North Dakota is one of a small hand­ful of states that does not have a law to sup­port a mother’s right to breast­feed in pub­lic.  There is a bill which has passed House and is wait­ing to be heard in the Sen­ate.  Great, right?  End of post.

Unfor­tu­nately, no.  The bill which was intro­duced pro­tected a woman’s right to breast­feed in pub­lic and gave women the right to pump on work breaks.  After mov­ing through com­mit­tee and being heard in the leg­is­la­ture, the bill was changed.  It now allows a woman to breast­feed in pub­lic in a “mod­est and dis­creet” fashion.

There are those who think that we should take what we can get.  Not every­one under­stands nurs­ing or nurs­ing in pub­lic.  This might be the best that we can do.  We should sup­port it because some­thing is bet­ter than noth­ing is what they are say­ing.  Unfor­tu­nately, the bill as it stands now doesn’t pro­vide the pro­tec­tion and sup­port a breast­feed­ing bill should pro­vide.  What is mod­est?  What is dis­creet?  Is pub­lic nurs­ing itself immod­est?  Should a mom be required to wear a nurs­ing tank top?  Should the mom and baby have to be cov­ered with a blan­ket?  Should the mother be fac­ing away from the room or any peo­ple who might walk past?  Should the mother be using the bath­room?  Who defines mod­est and dis­creet?  Is it the mother, the busi­ness owner, the leg­is­la­ture, or in an extreme sit­u­a­tion the police?

Let me be clear that while I think the words mod­est and dis­creet are inap­pro­pri­ate for a breast­feed­ing bill, I do not think that women should actively work to be immod­est or inde­screet.  Women should be focused on their babies and the needs of their hun­gry chil­dren.  Breast­feed­ing is not a show nor is it a lewd act when done out­side of one’s house.  It is an act of par­ent­ing and a mother choos­ing to feed her child.

I do not think that the North Dakota leg­is­la­ture should pass some­thing that is as open to inter­pre­ta­tion and unclear as this bill is in its cur­rent state.  It is a dis­ap­point­ment to say the least, and it does not do much (if any­thing) to sup­port moth­ers or babies.

4 Comments to

“North Dakota’s Proposed Breastfeeding Bill”

  1. On March 3rd, 2009 at 5:52 am Susan Says:

    I agree. I can’t see how some­one could breast­feed in a way that was inde­cent (unless they did some­thing like breast­feed top­less) and even if they did then that would surely be cov­ered by other laws with­out the need to insert “mod­est” and “discreet”.

    In Eng­land we have legal pro­tec­tion until the baby is one (in Scot­land it is up to 2) but I there is also pro­tec­tion through the sex­ual dis­crim­i­na­tion laws which makes the spe­cific breast­feed­ing laws a bit redun­dant as they imply that one your baby is over the spec­i­fied age that you don’t have legal protection.

    Hav­ing said that, nobody has ever objected to me breast­feed­ing in pub­lic and I am still doing it at 22 months. It would be inter­est­ing to know what pro­prtion of peo­ple do have prob­lems with peo­ple object­ing to it.

  2. On March 3rd, 2009 at 7:19 am Shannon Says:

    Hmm thats all kinds of fun. Yet another rea­son I am glad I live in Vermont…Anywhere I am legally allowed to be I can breast­feed my babe. Then again there are annual naked runs and naked bike rides too…so no one really tends to bat an eye­lash when you are breastfeeding…

  3. On March 9th, 2009 at 9:56 pm Michelle Fry Says:

    I used to think pub­lic breast­feed­ing was wierd…and then I became a mom! I tried not to do it for a long time, not want­ing to “offend” any­one, but soon didn’t care! It was too hard to time our “out­ings” against Toby’s nurs­ing schedule…he had to eat! I soon became com­fort­able breast­feed­ing in public–I nursed him at the park, at church, at a funeral, etc…and if any­one noticed, I didn’t care!

  4. On March 30th, 2009 at 10:01 am Paul Rapoport Says:

    Mod­est” and “dis­creet” must be defeated. They are sim­ply ways for men to con­tinue to delib­er­ately mis­un­der­stand women and con­trol their bod­ies to the detri­ment of all.