North Dakota’s Proposed Breastfeeding Bill
“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.
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.
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…
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!
“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.