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  • 1.  NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    Posted 09-01-2006 12:22
    Interesting and I think, important, article in today's New York Times.
    Regards,
    Bernardo


    The New York Times
    September 1, 2006

    On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    By JODI KANTOR

    When a new mother returns to Starbucks' corporate headquarters in Seattle
    after maternity leave, she learns what is behind the doors mysteriously
    marked "Lactation Room."

    Whenever she likes, she can slip away from her desk and behind those doors,
    sit in a plush recliner and behind curtains, and leaf through InStyle
    magazine as she holds a company-supplied pump to her chest, depositing her
    breast milk in bottles to be toted home later.

    But if the mothers who staff the chain's counters want to do the same, they
    must barricade themselves in small restrooms intended for customers,
    counting the minutes left in their breaks.

    "Breast milk is supposed to be the best milk, I read it constantly when I
    was pregnant," said Brittany Moore, who works at a Starbucks in Manhattan
    and feeds her 9-month old daughter formula. "I felt bad, I want the best for
    my child," she said. "None of the moms here that I know actually
    breast-feed."

    Doctors firmly believe that breast milk is something of a magic elixir for
    babies, sharply reducing the rate of infection, and quite possibly reducing
    the risk of allergies, obesity, and chronic disease later in life.

    But as pressure to breast-feed increases, a two-class system is emerging for
    working mothers. For those with autonomy in their jobs - generally,
    well-paid professionals - breast-feeding, and the pumping it requires, is a
    matter of choice. It is usually an inconvenience, and it may be an
    embarrassing comedy of manners, involving leaky bottles tucked into
    briefcases and brown paper bags in the office refrigerator. But for
    lower-income mothers - including many who work in restaurants, factories,
    call centers and the military - pumping at work is close to impossible,
    causing many women to decline to breast-feed at all, and others to quit
    after a short time.

    It is a particularly literal case of how well-being tends to beget further
    well-being, and disadvantage tends to create disadvantage - passed down in a
    mother's milk, or lack thereof.

    "I feel like I had to choose between feeding my baby the best food and
    earning a living," said Jennifer Munoz, a former cashier at Resorts Atlantic
    City Casino who said she faced obstacles that included irregular breaks and
    a refrigerator behind a locked door. She said she often dumped her milk into
    the toilet, knowing that if she did not pump every few hours, her milk
    supply would soon dwindle.

    The casino denies discouraging Ms. Munoz from pumping. "We have policies and
    procedures in place to accommodate the needs of all of our employees," Brian
    Cahill, a Resorts spokesman, said.

    Nearly half of new mothers return to work within the first year of their
    child's life. But federal law offers no protection to mothers who express
    milk on the job - despite the efforts of Representative Carolyn B. Maloney,
    Democrat of New York, who has introduced such legislation. "I can't
    understand why this doesn't move," she said. "This is pro-family,
    pro-health, pro-economy."

    Meanwhile, states are stepping in. Twelve states have passed laws protecting
    pumping mothers - Oklahoma's law, the newest, will take effect in November.
    But like Oklahoma's, which merely states that an employer "may provide
    reasonable break time" and "may make a reasonable effort" to provide
    privacy, most are merely symbolic.

    Public health authorities, alarmed at the gap between the breast-feeding
    haves and have-nots, are now trying to convince businesses that supporting
    the practice is a sound investment. "The Business Case for Breastfeeding,"
    an upcoming campaign by the Department of Health and Human Services, will
    emphasize recent findings that breast-feeding reduces absenteeism and
    pediatrician bills.

    In corporate America, lactation support can be a highly touted benefit,
    consisting of free or subsidized breast pumps, access to lactation
    consultants, and special rooms with telephones and Internet connections for
    employees who want to work as they pump, and CD players and reading material
    for those who do not. According to the nonprofit Families and Work
    Institute, a third of large corporations have lactation rooms.

    Even without these perks, professional women can usually afford a few months
    of maternity leave during which to breast-feed. When they return, they can
    generally find an office for the two or three 20-minute sessions per workday
    typically necessary. Even bathrooms - the pumping spots of last resort - are
    more inviting at an accounting firm than in a fast-food restaurant.

    Wealthier women can spend their way out of work-versus-pumping dilemmas,
    overnighting milk home from business trips and buying $300 pumps that
    extract milk quickly, along with gizmos that allow them, in what seems like
    a parody of maternal multitasking, to pump while driving to and from work.

    In contrast, said Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, an associate professor of
    pediatrics at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and a
    member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on breast-feeding,
    her patients cannot afford a basic $50 breast pump - an investment, she
    said, that "could prevent a lifetime of diseases." The academy urges women
    to breast-feed exclusively for six months and to continue until the child
    turns 1.

    Many of her patients learn about breast-feeding through the government
    nutrition program Women, Infants, and Children, which distributes nursing
    literature to four million mothers, and also provides classes and lactation
    consultants.

    Because of this and similar efforts, 73 percent of mothers now breast-feed
    their newborns, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    But after six months, the number falls to 53 percent of college graduates,
    and 29 percent of mothers whose formal education ended with high school. In
    a study of Oklahoma mothers who declined to breast-feed, nearly a third
    named work as the primary reason. Others, like Ms. Moore of Starbucks, find
    the early days of breast-feeding frustrating, and their impending return to
    work means they have little incentive to continue.

    "Sometimes my co-workers will sneak in two or three smoking breaks" before
    she can steal away to pump, said Laura Kruger Rowe, who works at a Starbucks
    in Rochester.

    The company, known for its generous benefits, has no breast-feeding policy,
    but will "work with partners to accommodate their needs on a case-by-case
    basis," said Valerie O'Neil, a spokeswoman.

    As at Starbucks, the gap between working mothers can play out within a
    single organization. At many law firms, lawyers can pump in their offices,
    while secretaries use bathroom stalls; in the Army, which also has no policy
    on the matter, officers are less likely to encounter problems than enlisted
    soldiers, who have less autonomy and a more complex chain of command.

    "They're scared to death to even talk to their employers," Dr. Barbara L.
    Philipp, an associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University School of
    Medicine, said of the housekeepers and fast-food servers whose children she
    treats. They may fear the kind of harassment that Laura Walker, a former
    server at a Red Lobster restaurant in Evansville, Ind., said she faced.

    According to the complaint Ms. Walker filed with the Equal Opportunity
    Employment Commission, the restaurant ignored a note she brought from her
    nurse explaining her need to pump. The managers cut her hours, assigned her
    to the worst tables and ridiculed her - for instance, jiggling the
    restaurant's milk containers and joking that they were for her. Eventually
    Ms. Walker's milk ducts clogged, landing her in the hospital with mastitis.

    Officials of the restaurant chain said they did assist Ms. Walker.

    "We at Red Lobster work with all new mothers to accommodate their needs so
    they can take care of their child," said Wendy Spirduso, a spokeswoman.
    "That occurred multiple times in this case," she said, declining to go into
    detail because of a confidential settlement Ms. Walker reached with the
    company.

    Shortly after Marlene Warfield, a dental hygienist in Tacoma, Wash., began
    pumping on the job, she said her boss wore a Halloween costume consisting of
    a large silver box - his interpretation of a pump, perhaps - with a cutout
    labeled "insert breast here." When he instructed Ms. Warfield to leave her
    pump at home, she said, she quit her job- and consulted the local human
    rights commission, which found nothing illegal about the dentist's actions.

    In contrast, higher-paid women can often pump without anyone knowing - or
    with everyone knowing. Nina Wurster, who works in human resources for the
    Advisory Board, a consulting group in Washington, conducts phone interviews
    from the lactation room. "I just say, sorry about the background noise and I
    keep going," she said. But breast-feeding is now so accepted in white-collar
    circles that some women are completely matter-of-fact about it, pumping
    right in their open cubicles.

    "It's been great," said Melany Richmond, an electrical engineer at Zilog, a
    semiconductor company, in Bellevue, Wash. "I put a little sign up - it says
    'Do Not Disturb,' with a little 'Moo' on the bottom."

    Pumping breast milk has one benefit that cannot be quantified: it makes
    working mothers feel less guilt-ridden about leaving their children. "There
    is a lot of satisfaction in knowing I am doing right by him," Ms. Wurster
    said of her son, James.

    Dr. Philipp recalled a small furor about whether Jane Swift, the former
    governor of Massachusetts who gave birth to twins, would breast-feed after
    returning to work.

    "That's a great thing to do, but she had her own office and could set her
    own schedule," Dr. Philipp said. "The one I want to know about is the lady
    cleaning her office."


  • 2.  NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    Posted 09-02-2006 07:01
    Dear All: Hey, the secret is out organisations are "classed." The simultaneity of race, gender and class...we have been talking about this in GDO but we really need to find ways to consistently hold it in our research. Interestingly, many of those women at the counters are women of color (as I saw on my last visit to the USA).

    Stella

    Professor Stella M. Nkomo
    Bateman Distinguished Professor of Business Leadership
    Graduate School of Business
    University of South Africa
    Office Phone: +27 11 652 0365
    Cell Phone: +27 82 416 6308
    Fax: +27 11 652 0240

    Mailing Address:
    P O Box 392
    Pretoria 0003
    South Africa

    Federal Express or DHL Address:
    First Street Extension
    Midrand
    South Africa

    >>> Bernardo Ferdman <bferdman@ALLIANT.EDU> 09/01/06 18:33 PM >>>
    Interesting and I think, important, article in today's New York Times.
    Regards,
    Bernardo


    The New York Times
    September 1, 2006

    On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    By JODI KANTOR

    When a new mother returns to Starbucks' corporate headquarters in Seattle
    after maternity leave, she learns what is behind the doors mysteriously
    marked "Lactation Room."

    Whenever she likes, she can slip away from her desk and behind those doors,
    sit in a plush recliner and behind curtains, and leaf through InStyle
    magazine as she holds a company-supplied pump to her chest, depositing her
    breast milk in bottles to be toted home later.

    But if the mothers who staff the chain's counters want to do the same, they
    must barricade themselves in small restrooms intended for customers,
    counting the minutes left in their breaks.

    "Breast milk is supposed to be the best milk, I read it constantly when I
    was pregnant," said Brittany Moore, who works at a Starbucks in Manhattan
    and feeds her 9-month old daughter formula. "I felt bad, I want the best for
    my child," she said. "None of the moms here that I know actually
    breast-feed."

    Doctors firmly believe that breast milk is something of a magic elixir for
    babies, sharply reducing the rate of infection, and quite possibly reducing
    the risk of allergies, obesity, and chronic disease later in life.

    But as pressure to breast-feed increases, a two-class system is emerging for
    working mothers. For those with autonomy in their jobs - generally,
    well-paid professionals - breast-feeding, and the pumping it requires, is a
    matter of choice. It is usually an inconvenience, and it may be an
    embarrassing comedy of manners, involving leaky bottles tucked into
    briefcases and brown paper bags in the office refrigerator. But for
    lower-income mothers - including many who work in restaurants, factories,
    call centers and the military - pumping at work is close to impossible,
    causing many women to decline to breast-feed at all, and others to quit
    after a short time.

    It is a particularly literal case of how well-being tends to beget further
    well-being, and disadvantage tends to create disadvantage - passed down in a
    mother's milk, or lack thereof.

    "I feel like I had to choose between feeding my baby the best food and
    earning a living," said Jennifer Munoz, a former cashier at Resorts Atlantic
    City Casino who said she faced obstacles that included irregular breaks and
    a refrigerator behind a locked door. She said she often dumped her milk into
    the toilet, knowing that if she did not pump every few hours, her milk
    supply would soon dwindle.

    The casino denies discouraging Ms. Munoz from pumping. "We have policies and
    procedures in place to accommodate the needs of all of our employees," Brian
    Cahill, a Resorts spokesman, said.

    Nearly half of new mothers return to work within the first year of their
    child's life. But federal law offers no protection to mothers who express
    milk on the job - despite the efforts of Representative Carolyn B. Maloney,
    Democrat of New York, who has introduced such legislation. "I can't
    understand why this doesn't move," she said. "This is pro-family,
    pro-health, pro-economy."

    Meanwhile, states are stepping in. Twelve states have passed laws protecting
    pumping mothers - Oklahoma's law, the newest, will take effect in November.
    But like Oklahoma's, which merely states that an employer "may provide
    reasonable break time" and "may make a reasonable effort" to provide
    privacy, most are merely symbolic.

    Public health authorities, alarmed at the gap between the breast-feeding
    haves and have-nots, are now trying to convince businesses that supporting
    the practice is a sound investment. "The Business Case for Breastfeeding,"
    an upcoming campaign by the Department of Health and Human Services, will
    emphasize recent findings that breast-feeding reduces absenteeism and
    pediatrician bills.

    In corporate America, lactation support can be a highly touted benefit,
    consisting of free or subsidized breast pumps, access to lactation
    consultants, and special rooms with telephones and Internet connections for
    employees who want to work as they pump, and CD players and reading material
    for those who do not. According to the nonprofit Families and Work
    Institute, a third of large corporations have lactation rooms.

    Even without these perks, professional women can usually afford a few months
    of maternity leave during which to breast-feed. When they return, they can
    generally find an office for the two or three 20-minute sessions per workday
    typically necessary. Even bathrooms - the pumping spots of last resort - are
    more inviting at an accounting firm than in a fast-food restaurant.

    Wealthier women can spend their way out of work-versus-pumping dilemmas,
    overnighting milk home from business trips and buying $300 pumps that
    extract milk quickly, along with gizmos that allow them, in what seems like
    a parody of maternal multitasking, to pump while driving to and from work.

    In contrast, said Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, an associate professor of
    pediatrics at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and a
    member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on breast-feeding,
    her patients cannot afford a basic $50 breast pump - an investment, she
    said, that "could prevent a lifetime of diseases." The academy urges women
    to breast-feed exclusively for six months and to continue until the child
    turns 1.

    Many of her patients learn about breast-feeding through the government
    nutrition program Women, Infants, and Children, which distributes nursing
    literature to four million mothers, and also provides classes and lactation
    consultants.

    Because of this and similar efforts, 73 percent of mothers now breast-feed
    their newborns, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention..
    But after six months, the number falls to 53 percent of college graduates,
    and 29 percent of mothers whose formal education ended with high school. In
    a study of Oklahoma mothers who declined to breast-feed, nearly a third
    named work as the primary reason. Others, like Ms. Moore of Starbucks, find
    the early days of breast-feeding frustrating, and their impending return to
    work means they have little incentive to continue.

    "Sometimes my co-workers will sneak in two or three smoking breaks" before
    she can steal away to pump, said Laura Kruger Rowe, who works at a Starbucks
    in Rochester.

    The company, known for its generous benefits, has no breast-feeding policy,
    but will "work with partners to accommodate their needs on a case-by-case
    basis," said Valerie O'Neil, a spokeswoman.

    As at Starbucks, the gap between working mothers can play out within a
    single organization. At many law firms, lawyers can pump in their offices,
    while secretaries use bathroom stalls; in the Army, which also has no policy
    on the matter, officers are less likely to encounter problems than enlisted
    soldiers, who have less autonomy and a more complex chain of command.

    "They're scared to death to even talk to their employers," Dr. Barbara L.
    Philipp, an associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University School of
    Medicine, said of the housekeepers and fast-food servers whose children she
    treats. They may fear the kind of harassment that Laura Walker, a former
    server at a Red Lobster restaurant in Evansville, Ind., said she faced.

    According to the complaint Ms. Walker filed with the Equal Opportunity
    Employment Commission, the restaurant ignored a note she brought from her
    nurse explaining her need to pump. The managers cut her hours, assigned her
    to the worst tables and ridiculed her - for instance, jiggling the
    restaurant's milk containers and joking that they were for her. Eventually
    Ms. Walker's milk ducts clogged, landing her in the hospital with mastitis.

    Officials of the restaurant chain said they did assist Ms. Walker.

    "We at Red Lobster work with all new mothers to accommodate their needs so
    they can take care of their child," said Wendy Spirduso, a spokeswoman.
    "That occurred multiple times in this case," she said, declining to go into
    detail because of a confidential settlement Ms. Walker reached with the
    company.

    Shortly after Marlene Warfield, a dental hygienist in Tacoma, Wash., began
    pumping on the job, she said her boss wore a Halloween costume consisting of
    a large silver box - his interpretation of a pump, perhaps - with a cutout
    labeled "insert breast here." When he instructed Ms. Warfield to leave her
    pump at home, she said, she quit her job- and consulted the local human
    rights commission, which found nothing illegal about the dentist's actions.

    In contrast, higher-paid women can often pump without anyone knowing - or
    with everyone knowing. Nina Wurster, who works in human resources for the
    Advisory Board, a consulting group in Washington, conducts phone interviews
    from the lactation room. "I just say, sorry about the background noise and I
    keep going," she said. But breast-feeding is now so accepted in white-collar
    circles that some women are completely matter-of-fact about it, pumping
    right in their open cubicles.

    "It's been great," said Melany Richmond, an electrical engineer at Zilog, a
    semiconductor company, in Bellevue, Wash. "I put a little sign up - it says
    'Do Not Disturb,' with a little 'Moo' on the bottom."

    Pumping breast milk has one benefit that cannot be quantified: it makes
    working mothers feel less guilt-ridden about leaving their children. "There
    is a lot of satisfaction in knowing I am doing right by him," Ms. Wurster
    said of her son, James.

    Dr. Philipp recalled a small furor about whether Jane Swift, the former
    governor of Massachusetts who gave birth to twins, would breast-feed after
    returning to work.

    "That's a great thing to do, but she had her own office and could set her
    own schedule," Dr. Philipp said. "The one I want to know about is the lady
    cleaning her office."

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
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    Please refer to http://www.unisa.ac.za/disclaimer for full details.
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  • 3.  NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    Posted 09-03-2006 06:51
    Hi everyone,
    I had to laugh and then cringe when I read the phrase "The Business Case for Breastfeeding." Has it really come to this, that business values are the appropriate yardstick for making this choice? I ask this rhetorically, since it's pretty obvious there is a "business case" for everything-- I just hadn't seen it explicitly applied to breastfeeding. I know this has been used as an effective approach to get business people to listen, as in the corporate social responsibility movement saying that adopting these policies and programs is good for the bottom line. It's becoming so taken for granted that people can now say "The business case for X" and others just accept it without challenging the premise.
    Joy

    S M Nkomo wrote:
    Dear All:  Hey, the secret is out organisations are "classed."  The simultaneity of race, gender and class...we have been talking about this in GDO but we really need to find ways to consistently hold it in our research.  Interestingly, many of those women at the counters are women of color (as I saw on my last visit to the USA).   Stella  Professor Stella M. Nkomo Bateman Distinguished Professor of Business Leadership Graduate School of Business University of South Africa Office Phone:  +27 11 652 0365 Cell Phone:  +27 82 416 6308 Fax:  +27 11 652 0240  Mailing Address: P O Box 392 Pretoria 0003 South Africa  Federal Express or DHL Address: First Street Extension Midrand South Africa    
    Bernardo Ferdman <bferdman@ALLIANT.EDU> 09/01/06 18:33 PM >>>         
     Interesting and I think, important, article in today's New York Times. Regards, Bernardo     The New York Times September 1, 2006  On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System   By JODI KANTOR  When a new mother returns to Starbucks' corporate headquarters in Seattle after maternity leave, she learns what is behind the doors mysteriously marked "Lactation Room."   Whenever she likes, she can slip away from her desk and behind those doors, sit in a plush recliner and behind curtains, and leaf through InStyle magazine as she holds a company-supplied pump to her chest, depositing her breast milk in bottles to be toted home later.   But if the mothers who staff the chain's counters want to do the same, they must barricade themselves in small restrooms intended for customers, counting the minutes left in their breaks.  "Breast milk is supposed to be the best milk, I read it constantly when I was pregnant," said Brittany Moore, who works at a Starbucks in Manhattan and feeds her 9-month old daughter formula. "I felt bad, I want the best for my child," she said. "None of the moms here that I know actually breast-feed."  Doctors firmly believe that breast milk is something of a magic elixir for babies, sharply reducing the rate of infection, and quite possibly reducing the risk of allergies, obesity, and chronic disease later in life.   But as pressure to breast-feed increases, a two-class system is emerging for working mothers. For those with autonomy in their jobs - generally, well-paid professionals - breast-feeding, and the pumping it requires, is a matter of choice. It is usually an inconvenience, and it may be an embarrassing comedy of manners, involving leaky bottles tucked into briefcases and brown paper bags in the office refrigerator. But for lower-income mothers - including many who work in restaurants, factories, call centers and the military - pumping at work is close to impossible, causing many women to decline to breast-feed at all, and others to quit after a short time.  It is a particularly literal case of how well-being tends to beget further well-being, and disadvantage tends to create disadvantage - passed down in a mother's milk, or lack thereof.  "I feel like I had to choose between feeding my baby the best food and earning a living," said Jennifer Munoz, a former cashier at Resorts Atlantic City Casino who said she faced obstacles that included irregular breaks and a refrigerator behind a locked door. She said she often dumped her milk into the toilet, knowing that if she did not pump every few hours, her milk supply would soon dwindle.  The casino denies discouraging Ms. Munoz from pumping. "We have policies and procedures in place to accommodate the needs of all of our employees," Brian Cahill, a Resorts spokesman, said.   Nearly half of new mothers return to work within the first year of their child's life. But federal law offers no protection to mothers who express milk on the job - despite the efforts of Representative Carolyn B. Maloney, Democrat of New York, who has introduced such legislation. "I can't understand why this doesn't move," she said. "This is pro-family, pro-health, pro-economy."  Meanwhile, states are stepping in. Twelve states have passed laws protecting pumping mothers - Oklahoma's law, the newest, will take effect in November. But like Oklahoma's, which merely states that an employer "may provide reasonable break time" and "may make a reasonable effort" to provide privacy, most are merely symbolic.  Public health authorities, alarmed at the gap between the breast-feeding haves and have-nots, are now trying to convince businesses that supporting the practice is a sound investment. "The Business Case for Breastfeeding," an upcoming campaign by the Department of Health and Human Services, will emphasize recent findings that breast-feeding reduces absenteeism and pediatrician bills.  In corporate America, lactation support can be a highly touted benefit, consisting of free or subsidized breast pumps, access to lactation consultants, and special rooms with telephones and Internet connections for employees who want to work as they pump, and CD players and reading material for those who do not. According to the nonprofit Families and Work Institute, a third of large corporations have lactation rooms.  Even without these perks, professional women can usually afford a few months of maternity leave during which to breast-feed. When they return, they can generally find an office for the two or three 20-minute sessions per workday typically necessary. Even bathrooms - the pumping spots of last resort - are more inviting at an accounting firm than in a fast-food restaurant.   Wealthier women can spend their way out of work-versus-pumping dilemmas, overnighting milk home from business trips and buying $300 pumps that extract milk quickly, along with gizmos that allow them, in what seems like a parody of maternal multitasking, to pump while driving to and from work.  In contrast, said Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on breast-feeding, her patients cannot afford a basic $50 breast pump - an investment, she said, that "could prevent a lifetime of diseases." The academy urges women to breast-feed exclusively for six months and to continue until the child turns 1.  Many of her patients learn about breast-feeding through the government nutrition program Women, Infants, and Children, which distributes nursing literature to four million mothers, and also provides classes and lactation consultants.  Because of this and similar efforts, 73 percent of mothers now breast-feed their newborns, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.. But after six months, the number falls to 53 percent of college graduates, and 29 percent of mothers whose formal education ended with high school. In a study of Oklahoma mothers who declined to breast-feed, nearly a third named work as the primary reason. Others, like Ms. Moore of Starbucks, find the early days of breast-feeding frustrating, and their impending return to work means they have little incentive to continue.  "Sometimes my co-workers will sneak in two or three smoking breaks" before she can steal away to pump, said Laura Kruger Rowe, who works at a Starbucks in Rochester.   The company, known for its generous benefits, has no breast-feeding policy, but will "work with partners to accommodate their needs on a case-by-case basis," said Valerie O'Neil, a spokeswoman.  As at Starbucks, the gap between working mothers can play out within a single organization. At many law firms, lawyers can pump in their offices, while secretaries use bathroom stalls; in the Army, which also has no policy on the matter, officers are less likely to encounter problems than enlisted soldiers, who have less autonomy and a more complex chain of command.  "They're scared to death to even talk to their employers," Dr. Barbara L. Philipp, an associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University School of Medicine, said of the housekeepers and fast-food servers whose children she treats. They may fear the kind of harassment that Laura Walker, a former server at a Red Lobster restaurant in Evansville, Ind., said she faced.   According to the complaint Ms. Walker filed with the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission, the restaurant ignored a note she brought from her nurse explaining her need to pump. The managers cut her hours, assigned her to the worst tables and ridiculed her - for instance, jiggling the restaurant's milk containers and joking that they were for her. Eventually Ms. Walker's milk ducts clogged, landing her in the hospital with mastitis.   Officials of the restaurant chain said they did assist Ms. Walker.  "We at Red Lobster work with all new mothers to accommodate their needs so they can take care of their child," said Wendy Spirduso, a spokeswoman. "That occurred multiple times in this case," she said, declining to go into detail because of a confidential settlement Ms. Walker reached with the company.  Shortly after Marlene Warfield, a dental hygienist in Tacoma, Wash., began pumping on the job, she said her boss wore a Halloween costume consisting of a large silver box - his interpretation of a pump, perhaps - with a cutout labeled "insert breast here." When he instructed Ms. Warfield to leave her pump at home, she said, she quit her job- and consulted the local human rights commission, which found nothing illegal about the dentist's actions.  In contrast, higher-paid women can often pump without anyone knowing - or with everyone knowing. Nina Wurster, who works in human resources for the Advisory Board, a consulting group in Washington, conducts phone interviews from the lactation room. "I just say, sorry about the background noise and I keep going," she said. But breast-feeding is now so accepted in white-collar circles that some women are completely matter-of-fact about it, pumping right in their open cubicles.  "It's been great," said Melany Richmond, an electrical engineer at Zilog, a semiconductor company, in Bellevue, Wash. "I put a little sign up - it says 'Do Not Disturb,' with a little 'Moo' on the bottom."   Pumping breast milk has one benefit that cannot be quantified: it makes working mothers feel less guilt-ridden about leaving their children. "There is a lot of satisfaction in knowing I am doing right by him," Ms. Wurster said of her son, James.  Dr. Philipp recalled a small furor about whether Jane Swift, the former governor of Massachusetts who gave birth to twins, would breast-feed after returning to work.  "That's a great thing to do, but she had her own office and could set her own schedule," Dr. Philipp said. "The one I want to know about is the lady cleaning her office."  --------------------------------------------------------------------------- This message (and attachments) is subject to restrictions and a disclaimer.   Please refer to http://www.unisa.ac.za/disclaimer for full details. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- <<<<gwavasig>>>> <<<< gwavasig >>>>   

    --  Joy E. Beatty Assistant Professor Department of Management Studies School of Management University of Michigan - Dearborn 313-583-6524 jebeatty@umd.umich.edu 


  • 4.  NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    Posted 09-03-2006 10:31
    Hello Fellow GDOers!
    I'm usually a just a lurker on this list, and disinclined to "blow my own horn," but Joy's message motivated me to alert you all to (what I think is) an interesting critique of the "Business Case" Discourse. It is the chapter I contributed to the Konrad, Prasad, & Pringle (2006) Handbook of Workplace Diversity (Sage), "Diversity: Making Space for a Better Case" (:75 - 94). I'd love to hear any reactions and/or comments you might have on my work.

    Debbie Litvin

    Deborah R. Litvin, Ph.D.
    Asst. Professor of Management, Coordinator of International Business Programs
    Francis E. Girard School of Business and International Commerce
    Merrimack College
    315 Turnpike St.
    North Andover, MA 01845
    978 837 5000 x 4136
    deborah.litvin@merrimack.edu




    -----Original Message-----
    From: Gender & Diversity in Organizations Division Listserv on behalf of Joy Beatty
    Sent: Sun 9/3/2006 6:51 AM
    To: GDO-L@AOMLISTS.PACE.EDU
    Cc:
    Subject: [SPAM] Re: NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System


    Hi everyone,
    I had to laugh and then cringe when I read the phrase "The Business Case for Breastfeeding." Has it really come to this, that business values are the appropriate yardstick for making this choice? I ask this rhetorically, since it's pretty obvious there is a "business case" for everything-- I just hadn't seen it explicitly applied to breastfeeding. I know this has been used as an effective approach to get business people to listen, as in the corporate social responsibility movement saying that adopting these policies and programs is good for the bottom line. It's becoming so taken for granted that people can now say "The business case for X" and others just accept it without challenging the premise.
    Joy

    S M Nkomo wrote:


    Dear All: Hey, the secret is out organisations are "classed." The simultaneity of race, gender and class...we have been talking about this in GDO but we really need to find ways to consistently hold it in our research. Interestingly, many of those women at the counters are women of color (as I saw on my last visit to the USA).

    Stella

    Professor Stella M. Nkomo
    Bateman Distinguished Professor of Business Leadership
    Graduate School of Business
    University of South Africa
    Office Phone: ყ 11 652 0365
    Cell Phone: ყ 82 416 6308
    Fax: ყ 11 652 0240

    Mailing Address:
    P O Box 392
    Pretoria 0003
    South Africa

    Federal Express or DHL Address:
    First Street Extension
    Midrand
    South Africa



    Bernardo Ferdman <bferdman@ALLIANT.EDU> <mailto:bferdman@ALLIANT.EDU> 09/01/06 18:33 PM >>>


    Interesting and I think, important, article in today's New York Times.
    Regards,
    Bernardo


    The New York Times
    September 1, 2006

    On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    By JODI KANTOR

    When a new mother returns to Starbucks' corporate headquarters in Seattle
    after maternity leave, she learns what is behind the doors mysteriously
    marked "Lactation Room."

    Whenever she likes, she can slip away from her desk and behind those doors,
    sit in a plush recliner and behind curtains, and leaf through InStyle
    magazine as she holds a company-supplied pump to her chest, depositing her
    breast milk in bottles to be toted home later.

    But if the mothers who staff the chain's counters want to do the same, they
    must barricade themselves in small restrooms intended for customers,
    counting the minutes left in their breaks.

    "Breast milk is supposed to be the best milk, I read it constantly when I
    was pregnant," said Brittany Moore, who works at a Starbucks in Manhattan
    and feeds her 9-month old daughter formula. "I felt bad, I want the best for
    my child," she said. "None of the moms here that I know actually
    breast-feed."

    Doctors firmly believe that breast milk is something of a magic elixir for
    babies, sharply reducing the rate of infection, and quite possibly reducing
    the risk of allergies, obesity, and chronic disease later in life.

    But as pressure to breast-feed increases, a two-class system is emerging for
    working mothers. For those with autonomy in their jobs - generally,
    well-paid professionals - breast-feeding, and the pumping it requires, is a
    matter of choice. It is usually an inconvenience, and it may be an
    embarrassing comedy of manners, involving leaky bottles tucked into
    briefcases and brown paper bags in the office refrigerator. But for
    lower-income mothers - including many who work in restaurants, factories,
    call centers and the military - pumping at work is close to impossible,
    causing many women to decline to breast-feed at all, and others to quit
    after a short time.

    It is a particularly literal case of how well-being tends to beget further
    well-being, and disadvantage tends to create disadvantage - passed down in a
    mother's milk, or lack thereof.

    "I feel like I had to choose between feeding my baby the best food and
    earning a living," said Jennifer Munoz, a former cashier at Resorts Atlantic
    City Casino who said she faced obstacles that included irregular breaks and
    a refrigerator behind a locked door. She said she often dumped her milk into
    the toilet, knowing that if she did not pump every few hours, her milk
    supply would soon dwindle.

    The casino denies discouraging Ms. Munoz from pumping. "We have policies and
    procedures in place to accommodate the needs of all of our employees," Brian
    Cahill, a Resorts spokesman, said.

    Nearly half of new mothers return to work within the first year of their
    child's life. But federal law offers no protection to mothers who express
    milk on the job - despite the efforts of Representative Carolyn B. Maloney,
    Democrat of New York, who has introduced such legislation. "I can't
    understand why this doesn't move," she said. "This is pro-family,
    pro-health, pro-economy."

    Meanwhile, states are stepping in. Twelve states have passed laws protecting
    pumping mothers - Oklahoma's law, the newest, will take effect in November.
    But like Oklahoma's, which merely states that an employer "may provide
    reasonable break time" and "may make a reasonable effort" to provide
    privacy, most are merely symbolic.

    Public health authorities, alarmed at the gap between the breast-feeding
    haves and have-nots, are now trying to convince businesses that supporting
    the practice is a sound investment. "The Business Case for Breastfeeding,"
    an upcoming campaign by the Department of Health and Human Services, will
    emphasize recent findings that breast-feeding reduces absenteeism and
    pediatrician bills.

    In corporate America, lactation support can be a highly touted benefit,
    consisting of free or subsidized breast pumps, access to lactation
    consultants, and special rooms with telephones and Internet connections for
    employees who want to work as they pump, and CD players and reading material
    for those who do not. According to the nonprofit Families and Work
    Institute, a third of large corporations have lactation rooms.

    Even without these perks, professional women can usually afford a few months
    of maternity leave during which to breast-feed. When they return, they can
    generally find an office for the two or three 20-minute sessions per workday
    typically necessary. Even bathrooms - the pumping spots of last resort - are
    more inviting at an accounting firm than in a fast-food restaurant.

    Wealthier women can spend their way out of work-versus-pumping dilemmas,
    overnighting milk home from business trips and buying $300 pumps that
    extract milk quickly, along with gizmos that allow them, in what seems like
    a parody of maternal multitasking, to pump while driving to and from work.

    In contrast, said Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, an associate professor of
    pediatrics at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and a
    member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on breast-feeding,
    her patients cannot afford a basic $50 breast pump - an investment, she
    said, that "could prevent a lifetime of diseases." The academy urges women
    to breast-feed exclusively for six months and to continue until the child
    turns 1.

    Many of her patients learn about breast-feeding through the government
    nutrition program Women, Infants, and Children, which distributes nursing
    literature to four million mothers, and also provides classes and lactation
    consultants.

    Because of this and similar efforts, 73 percent of mothers now breast-feed
    their newborns, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention..
    But after six months, the number falls to 53 percent of college graduates,
    and 29 percent of mothers whose formal education ended with high school. In
    a study of Oklahoma mothers who declined to breast-feed, nearly a third
    named work as the primary reason. Others, like Ms. Moore of Starbucks, find
    the early days of breast-feeding frustrating, and their impending return to
    work means they have little incentive to continue.

    "Sometimes my co-workers will sneak in two or three smoking breaks" before
    she can steal away to pump, said Laura Kruger Rowe, who works at a Starbucks
    in Rochester.

    The company, known for its generous benefits, has no breast-feeding policy,
    but will "work with partners to accommodate their needs on a case-by-case
    basis," said Valerie O'Neil, a spokeswoman.

    As at Starbucks, the gap between working mothers can play out within a
    single organization. At many law firms, lawyers can pump in their offices,
    while secretaries use bathroom stalls; in the Army, which also has no policy
    on the matter, officers are less likely to encounter problems than enlisted
    soldiers, who have less autonomy and a more complex chain of command.

    "They're scared to death to even talk to their employers," Dr. Barbara L.
    Philipp, an associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University School of
    Medicine, said of the housekeepers and fast-food servers whose children she
    treats. They may fear the kind of harassment that Laura Walker, a former
    server at a Red Lobster restaurant in Evansville, Ind., said she faced.

    According to the complaint Ms. Walker filed with the Equal Opportunity
    Employment Commission, the restaurant ignored a note she brought from her
    nurse explaining her need to pump. The managers cut her hours, assigned her
    to the worst tables and ridiculed her - for instance, jiggling the
    restaurant's milk containers and joking that they were for her. Eventually
    Ms. Walker's milk ducts clogged, landing her in the hospital with mastitis.

    Officials of the restaurant chain said they did assist Ms. Walker.

    "We at Red Lobster work with all new mothers to accommodate their needs so
    they can take care of their child," said Wendy Spirduso, a spokeswoman.
    "That occurred multiple times in this case," she said, declining to go into
    detail because of a confidential settlement Ms. Walker reached with the
    company.

    Shortly after Marlene Warfield, a dental hygienist in Tacoma, Wash., began
    pumping on the job, she said her boss wore a Halloween costume consisting of
    a large silver box - his interpretation of a pump, perhaps - with a cutout
    labeled "insert breast here." When he instructed Ms. Warfield to leave her
    pump at home, she said, she quit her job- and consulted the local human
    rights commission, which found nothing illegal about the dentist's actions.

    In contrast, higher-paid women can often pump without anyone knowing - or
    with everyone knowing. Nina Wurster, who works in human resources for the
    Advisory Board, a consulting group in Washington, conducts phone interviews
    from the lactation room. "I just say, sorry about the background noise and I
    keep going," she said. But breast-feeding is now so accepted in white-collar
    circles that some women are completely matter-of-fact about it, pumping
    right in their open cubicles.

    "It's been great," said Melany Richmond, an electrical engineer at Zilog, a
    semiconductor company, in Bellevue, Wash. "I put a little sign up - it says
    'Do Not Disturb,' with a little 'Moo' on the bottom."

    Pumping breast milk has one benefit that cannot be quantified: it makes
    working mothers feel less guilt-ridden about leaving their children. "There
    is a lot of satisfaction in knowing I am doing right by him," Ms. Wurster
    said of her son, James.

    Dr. Philipp recalled a small furor about whether Jane Swift, the former
    governor of Massachusetts who gave birth to twins, would breast-feed after
    returning to work.

    "That's a great thing to do, but she had her own office and could set her
    own schedule," Dr. Philipp said. "The one I want to know about is the lady
    cleaning her office."

    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    This message (and attachments) is subject to restrictions and a disclaimer.
    Please refer to http://www.unisa.ac.za/disclaimer for full details.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    <<<<gwavasig>>>>
    <<<< gwavasig >>>>



    --
    Joy E. Beatty
    Assistant Professor
    Department of Management Studies
    School of Management
    University of Michigan - Dearborn
    313-583-6524
    jebeatty@umd.umich.edu


  • 5.  NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    Posted 09-03-2006 11:09
    Hi,

    For those who are interested, Tim Wise also attacks that argument. He
    points out that it ignores the reality of racism and the context of
    diversity's absence. It will not boost support for affirmative action
    and may backfire. Instead, AA supporters should use justice-based arguments

    Wise, T. J. (2005). Affirmative action: Racial preference in black and
    white. New York: Routledge.

    Cheers,
    David

    Litvin, Deborah wrote:
    > Hello Fellow GDOers!
    > I'm usually a just a lurker on this list, and disinclined to "blow my own horn," but Joy's message motivated me to alert you all to (what I think is) an interesting critique of the "Business Case" Discourse. It is the chapter I contributed to the Konrad, Prasad, & Pringle (2006) Handbook of Workplace Diversity (Sage), "Diversity: Making Space for a Better Case" (:75 - 94). I'd love to hear any reactions and/or comments you might have on my work.
    >
    > Debbie Litvin
    >
    > Deborah R. Litvin, Ph.D.
    > Asst. Professor of Management, Coordinator of International Business Programs
    > Francis E. Girard School of Business and International Commerce
    > Merrimack College
    > 315 Turnpike St.
    > North Andover, MA 01845
    > 978 837 5000 x 4136
    > deborah.litvin@merrimack.edu
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > -----Original Message-----
    > From: Gender & Diversity in Organizations Division Listserv on behalf of Joy Beatty
    > Sent: Sun 9/3/2006 6:51 AM
    > To: GDO-L@AOMLISTS.PACE.EDU
    > Cc:
    > Subject: [SPAM] Re: NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System
    >
    >
    > Hi everyone,
    > I had to laugh and then cringe when I read the phrase "The Business Case for Breastfeeding." Has it really come to this, that business values are the appropriate yardstick for making this choice? I ask this rhetorically, since it's pretty obvious there is a "business case" for everything-- I just hadn't seen it explicitly applied to breastfeeding. I know this has been used as an effective approach to get business people to listen, as in the corporate social responsibility movement saying that adopting these policies and programs is good for the bottom line. It's becoming so taken for granted that people can now say "The business case for X" and others just accept it without challenging the premise.
    > Joy
    >
    > S M Nkomo wrote:
    >
    >
    > Dear All: Hey, the secret is out organisations are "classed." The simultaneity of race, gender and class...we have been talking about this in GDO but we really need to find ways to consistently hold it in our research. Interestingly, many of those women at the counters are women of color (as I saw on my last visit to the USA).
    >
    > Stella
    >
    > Professor Stella M. Nkomo
    > Bateman Distinguished Professor of Business Leadership
    > Graduate School of Business
    > University of South Africa
    > Office Phone: ყ 11 652 0365
    > Cell Phone: ყ 82 416 6308
    > Fax: ყ 11 652 0240
    >
    > Mailing Address:
    > P O Box 392
    > Pretoria 0003
    > South Africa
    >
    > Federal Express or DHL Address:
    > First Street Extension
    > Midrand
    > South Africa
    >
    >
    >
    > Bernardo Ferdman <bferdman@ALLIANT.EDU> <mailto:bferdman@ALLIANT.EDU> 09/01/06 18:33 PM >>>
    >
    >
    > Interesting and I think, important, article in today's New York Times.
    > Regards,
    > Bernardo
    >
    >
    > The New York Times
    > September 1, 2006
    >
    > On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System
    >
    > By JODI KANTOR
    >
    > When a new mother returns to Starbucks' corporate headquarters in Seattle
    > after maternity leave, she learns what is behind the doors mysteriously
    > marked "Lactation Room."
    >
    > Whenever she likes, she can slip away from her desk and behind those doors,
    > sit in a plush recliner and behind curtains, and leaf through InStyle
    > magazine as she holds a company-supplied pump to her chest, depositing her
    > breast milk in bottles to be toted home later.
    >
    > But if the mothers who staff the chain's counters want to do the same, they
    > must barricade themselves in small restrooms intended for customers,
    > counting the minutes left in their breaks.
    >
    > "Breast milk is supposed to be the best milk, I read it constantly when I
    > was pregnant," said Brittany Moore, who works at a Starbucks in Manhattan
    > and feeds her 9-month old daughter formula. "I felt bad, I want the best for
    > my child," she said. "None of the moms here that I know actually
    > breast-feed."
    >
    > Doctors firmly believe that breast milk is something of a magic elixir for
    > babies, sharply reducing the rate of infection, and quite possibly reducing
    > the risk of allergies, obesity, and chronic disease later in life.
    >
    > But as pressure to breast-feed increases, a two-class system is emerging for
    > working mothers. For those with autonomy in their jobs - generally,
    > well-paid professionals - breast-feeding, and the pumping it requires, is a
    > matter of choice. It is usually an inconvenience, and it may be an
    > embarrassing comedy of manners, involving leaky bottles tucked into
    > briefcases and brown paper bags in the office refrigerator. But for
    > lower-income mothers - including many who work in restaurants, factories,
    > call centers and the military - pumping at work is close to impossible,
    > causing many women to decline to breast-feed at all, and others to quit
    > after a short time.
    >
    > It is a particularly literal case of how well-being tends to beget further
    > well-being, and disadvantage tends to create disadvantage - passed down in a
    > mother's milk, or lack thereof.
    >
    > "I feel like I had to choose between feeding my baby the best food and
    > earning a living," said Jennifer Munoz, a former cashier at Resorts Atlantic
    > City Casino who said she faced obstacles that included irregular breaks and
    > a refrigerator behind a locked door. She said she often dumped her milk into
    > the toilet, knowing that if she did not pump every few hours, her milk
    > supply would soon dwindle.
    >
    > The casino denies discouraging Ms. Munoz from pumping. "We have policies and
    > procedures in place to accommodate the needs of all of our employees," Brian
    > Cahill, a Resorts spokesman, said.
    >
    > Nearly half of new mothers return to work within the first year of their
    > child's life. But federal law offers no protection to mothers who express
    > milk on the job - despite the efforts of Representative Carolyn B. Maloney,
    > Democrat of New York, who has introduced such legislation. "I can't
    > understand why this doesn't move," she said. "This is pro-family,
    > pro-health, pro-economy."
    >
    > Meanwhile, states are stepping in. Twelve states have passed laws protecting
    > pumping mothers - Oklahoma's law, the newest, will take effect in November.
    > But like Oklahoma's, which merely states that an employer "may provide
    > reasonable break time" and "may make a reasonable effort" to provide
    > privacy, most are merely symbolic.
    >
    > Public health authorities, alarmed at the gap between the breast-feeding
    > haves and have-nots, are now trying to convince businesses that supporting
    > the practice is a sound investment. "The Business Case for Breastfeeding,"
    > an upcoming campaign by the Department of Health and Human Services, will
    > emphasize recent findings that breast-feeding reduces absenteeism and
    > pediatrician bills.
    >
    > In corporate America, lactation support can be a highly touted benefit,
    > consisting of free or subsidized breast pumps, access to lactation
    > consultants, and special rooms with telephones and Internet connections for
    > employees who want to work as they pump, and CD players and reading material
    > for those who do not. According to the nonprofit Families and Work
    > Institute, a third of large corporations have lactation rooms.
    >
    > Even without these perks, professional women can usually afford a few months
    > of maternity leave during which to breast-feed. When they return, they can
    > generally find an office for the two or three 20-minute sessions per workday
    > typically necessary. Even bathrooms - the pumping spots of last resort - are
    > more inviting at an accounting firm than in a fast-food restaurant.
    >
    > Wealthier women can spend their way out of work-versus-pumping dilemmas,
    > overnighting milk home from business trips and buying $300 pumps that
    > extract milk quickly, along with gizmos that allow them, in what seems like
    > a parody of maternal multitasking, to pump while driving to and from work.
    >
    > In contrast, said Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, an associate professor of
    > pediatrics at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and a
    > member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on breast-feeding,
    > her patients cannot afford a basic $50 breast pump - an investment, she
    > said, that "could prevent a lifetime of diseases." The academy urges women
    > to breast-feed exclusively for six months and to continue until the child
    > turns 1.
    >
    > Many of her patients learn about breast-feeding through the government
    > nutrition program Women, Infants, and Children, which distributes nursing
    > literature to four million mothers, and also provides classes and lactation
    > consultants.
    >
    > Because of this and similar efforts, 73 percent of mothers now breast-feed
    > their newborns, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention..
    > But after six months, the number falls to 53 percent of college graduates,
    > and 29 percent of mothers whose formal education ended with high school. In
    > a study of Oklahoma mothers who declined to breast-feed, nearly a third
    > named work as the primary reason. Others, like Ms. Moore of Starbucks, find
    > the early days of breast-feeding frustrating, and their impending return to
    > work means they have little incentive to continue.
    >
    > "Sometimes my co-workers will sneak in two or three smoking breaks" before
    > she can steal away to pump, said Laura Kruger Rowe, who works at a Starbucks
    > in Rochester.
    >
    > The company, known for its generous benefits, has no breast-feeding policy,
    > but will "work with partners to accommodate their needs on a case-by-case
    > basis," said Valerie O'Neil, a spokeswoman.
    >
    > As at Starbucks, the gap between working mothers can play out within a
    > single organization. At many law firms, lawyers can pump in their offices,
    > while secretaries use bathroom stalls; in the Army, which also has no policy
    > on the matter, officers are less likely to encounter problems than enlisted
    > soldiers, who have less autonomy and a more complex chain of command.
    >
    > "They're scared to death to even talk to their employers," Dr. Barbara L.
    > Philipp, an associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University School of
    > Medicine, said of the housekeepers and fast-food servers whose children she
    > treats. They may fear the kind of harassment that Laura Walker, a former
    > server at a Red Lobster restaurant in Evansville, Ind., said she faced.
    >
    > According to the complaint Ms. Walker filed with the Equal Opportunity
    > Employment Commission, the restaurant ignored a note she brought from her
    > nurse explaining her need to pump. The managers cut her hours, assigned her
    > to the worst tables and ridiculed her - for instance, jiggling the
    > restaurant's milk containers and joking that they were for her. Eventually
    > Ms. Walker's milk ducts clogged, landing her in the hospital with mastitis.
    >
    > Officials of the restaurant chain said they did assist Ms. Walker.
    >
    > "We at Red Lobster work with all new mothers to accommodate their needs so
    > they can take care of their child," said Wendy Spirduso, a spokeswoman.
    > "That occurred multiple times in this case," she said, declining to go into
    > detail because of a confidential settlement Ms. Walker reached with the
    > company.
    >
    > Shortly after Marlene Warfield, a dental hygienist in Tacoma, Wash., began
    > pumping on the job, she said her boss wore a Halloween costume consisting of
    > a large silver box - his interpretation of a pump, perhaps - with a cutout
    > labeled "insert breast here." When he instructed Ms. Warfield to leave her
    > pump at home, she said, she quit her job- and consulted the local human
    > rights commission, which found nothing illegal about the dentist's actions.
    >
    > In contrast, higher-paid women can often pump without anyone knowing - or
    > with everyone knowing. Nina Wurster, who works in human resources for the
    > Advisory Board, a consulting group in Washington, conducts phone interviews
    > from the lactation room. "I just say, sorry about the background noise and I
    > keep going," she said. But breast-feeding is now so accepted in white-collar
    > circles that some women are completely matter-of-fact about it, pumping
    > right in their open cubicles.
    >
    > "It's been great," said Melany Richmond, an electrical engineer at Zilog, a
    > semiconductor company, in Bellevue, Wash. "I put a little sign up - it says
    > 'Do Not Disturb,' with a little 'Moo' on the bottom."
    >
    > Pumping breast milk has one benefit that cannot be quantified: it makes
    > working mothers feel less guilt-ridden about leaving their children. "There
    > is a lot of satisfaction in knowing I am doing right by him," Ms. Wurster
    > said of her son, James.
    >
    > Dr. Philipp recalled a small furor about whether Jane Swift, the former
    > governor of Massachusetts who gave birth to twins, would breast-feed after
    > returning to work.
    >
    > "That's a great thing to do, but she had her own office and could set her
    > own schedule," Dr. Philipp said. "The one I want to know about is the lady
    > cleaning her office."
    >
    > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    > This message (and attachments) is subject to restrictions and a disclaimer.
    > Please refer to http://www.unisa.ac.za/disclaimer for full details.
    > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    > <<<<gwavasig>>>>
    > <<<< gwavasig >>>>
    >
    >
    >
    > --
    > Joy E. Beatty
    > Assistant Professor
    > Department of Management Studies
    > School of Management
    > University of Michigan - Dearborn
    > 313-583-6524
    > jebeatty@umd.umich.edu
    >
    >

    --
    David A. Kravitz
    Associate Professor
    School of Management
    218 Enterprise Hall, MSN 5F5
    George Mason University
    4400 University Drive
    Fairfax, VA 22030-4444
    Telephone: 703-993-1781
    Fax: 703-993-1870
    E-mail: dkravitz@gmu.edu
    Web: http://www.som2.gmu.edu/dkravitz/index.htm


  • 6.  NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    Posted 09-03-2006 11:14
    thus, perhaps it is us in GDO who should stop this craziness and
    start talking/writing about "the people's case", "the mother's case" and
    so on... where/who is "the other" of the "business case"? and how come we
    don't talk about it as a matter of rights? why not start taking about
    these other "cases" in their own (not both (i.e., good for
    business and...) but also against "the business case"? we should remind
    ourselves that the latter "case" is based on a lot of untested assumptions
    (such as when it is said that the minimum wage cannot be raised because
    small companies will go out of business... a big untested assumption,
    while many people on minimum wage are on the verge of starvation).

    a part of the problem, as stella already mentioned, is the
    lack of conversation about class and simultaneity more generally, but we
    also need to have this conversation starting from "home" and ask ourselves
    who benefits when we pretend that we are detached scientists and continue
    to make "the business case", most of the time implicitly. in the "classed,
    gendered, raced, sexualized" system where we exist as scholars to be a
    "detached scientist" is making "the business case" in favor of those who
    already benefit the most. for whom do we want to speak?

    with much hope for the future,

    marta and linda



    On Sun, 3 Sep 2006, Joy Beatty wrote:

    > Hi everyone,
    > I had to laugh and then cringe when I read the phrase "The Business Case for Breastfeeding." Has it really come to this, that
    > business values are the appropriate yardstick for making this choice? I ask this rhetorically, since it's pretty obvious
    > there is a "business case" for everything-- I just hadn't seen it explicitly applied to breastfeeding. I know this has been
    > used as an effective approach to get business people to listen, as in the corporate social responsibility movement saying
    > that adopting these policies and programs is good for the bottom line. It's becoming so taken for granted that people can now
    > say "The business case for X" and others just accept it without challenging the premise.
    > Joy
    >
    > S M Nkomo wrote:
    >
    > Dear All: Hey, the secret is out organisations are "classed." The simultaneity of race, gender and class...we have been talking about this in GDO but we really need to find ways to consistently hold it in our research. Interestingly, many of those women at the counters are women of color (as I saw on my last visit to the USA).
    >
    > Stella
    >
    > Professor Stella M. Nkomo
    > Bateman Distinguished Professor of Business Leadership
    > Graduate School of Business
    > University of South Africa
    > Office Phone: +27 11 652 0365
    > Cell Phone: +27 82 416 6308
    > Fax: +27 11 652 0240
    >
    > Mailing Address:
    > P O Box 392
    > Pretoria 0003
    > South Africa
    >
    > Federal Express or DHL Address:
    > First Street Extension
    > Midrand
    > South Africa
    >
    >
    >
    > Bernardo Ferdman <bferdman@ALLIANT.EDU> 09/01/06 18:33 PM >>>
    >
    >
    > Interesting and I think, important, article in today's New York Times.
    > Regards,
    > Bernardo
    >
    >
    > The New York Times
    > September 1, 2006
    >
    > On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System
    >
    > By JODI KANTOR
    >
    > When a new mother returns to Starbucks' corporate headquarters in Seattle
    > after maternity leave, she learns what is behind the doors mysteriously
    > marked "Lactation Room."
    >
    > Whenever she likes, she can slip away from her desk and behind those doors,
    > sit in a plush recliner and behind curtains, and leaf through InStyle
    > magazine as she holds a company-supplied pump to her chest, depositing her
    > breast milk in bottles to be toted home later.
    >
    > But if the mothers who staff the chain's counters want to do the same, they
    > must barricade themselves in small restrooms intended for customers,
    > counting the minutes left in their breaks.
    >
    > "Breast milk is supposed to be the best milk, I read it constantly when I
    > was pregnant," said Brittany Moore, who works at a Starbucks in Manhattan
    > and feeds her 9-month old daughter formula. "I felt bad, I want the best for
    > my child," she said. "None of the moms here that I know actually
    > breast-feed."
    >
    > Doctors firmly believe that breast milk is something of a magic elixir for
    > babies, sharply reducing the rate of infection, and quite possibly reducing
    > the risk of allergies, obesity, and chronic disease later in life.
    >
    > But as pressure to breast-feed increases, a two-class system is emerging for
    > working mothers. For those with autonomy in their jobs - generally,
    > well-paid professionals - breast-feeding, and the pumping it requires, is a
    > matter of choice. It is usually an inconvenience, and it may be an
    > embarrassing comedy of manners, involving leaky bottles tucked into
    > briefcases and brown paper bags in the office refrigerator. But for
    > lower-income mothers - including many who work in restaurants, factories,
    > call centers and the military - pumping at work is close to impossible,
    > causing many women to decline to breast-feed at all, and others to quit
    > after a short time.
    >
    > It is a particularly literal case of how well-being tends to beget further
    > well-being, and disadvantage tends to create disadvantage - passed down in a
    > mother's milk, or lack thereof.
    >
    > "I feel like I had to choose between feeding my baby the best food and
    > earning a living," said Jennifer Munoz, a former cashier at Resorts Atlantic
    > City Casino who said she faced obstacles that included irregular breaks and
    > a refrigerator behind a locked door. She said she often dumped her milk into
    > the toilet, knowing that if she did not pump every few hours, her milk
    > supply would soon dwindle.
    >
    > The casino denies discouraging Ms. Munoz from pumping. "We have policies and
    > procedures in place to accommodate the needs of all of our employees," Brian
    > Cahill, a Resorts spokesman, said.
    >
    > Nearly half of new mothers return to work within the first year of their
    > child's life. But federal law offers no protection to mothers who express
    > milk on the job - despite the efforts of Representative Carolyn B. Maloney,
    > Democrat of New York, who has introduced such legislation. "I can't
    > understand why this doesn't move," she said. "This is pro-family,
    > pro-health, pro-economy."
    >
    > Meanwhile, states are stepping in. Twelve states have passed laws protecting
    > pumping mothers - Oklahoma's law, the newest, will take effect in November.
    > But like Oklahoma's, which merely states that an employer "may provide
    > reasonable break time" and "may make a reasonable effort" to provide
    > privacy, most are merely symbolic.
    >
    > Public health authorities, alarmed at the gap between the breast-feeding
    > haves and have-nots, are now trying to convince businesses that supporting
    > the practice is a sound investment. "The Business Case for Breastfeeding,"
    > an upcoming campaign by the Department of Health and Human Services, will
    > emphasize recent findings that breast-feeding reduces absenteeism and
    > pediatrician bills.
    >
    > In corporate America, lactation support can be a highly touted benefit,
    > consisting of free or subsidized breast pumps, access to lactation
    > consultants, and special rooms with telephones and Internet connections for
    > employees who want to work as they pump, and CD players and reading material
    > for those who do not. According to the nonprofit Families and Work
    > Institute, a third of large corporations have lactation rooms.
    >
    > Even without these perks, professional women can usually afford a few months
    > of maternity leave during which to breast-feed. When they return, they can
    > generally find an office for the two or three 20-minute sessions per workday
    > typically necessary. Even bathrooms - the pumping spots of last resort - are
    > more inviting at an accounting firm than in a fast-food restaurant.
    >
    > Wealthier women can spend their way out of work-versus-pumping dilemmas,
    > overnighting milk home from business trips and buying $300 pumps that
    > extract milk quickly, along with gizmos that allow them, in what seems like
    > a parody of maternal multitasking, to pump while driving to and from work.
    >
    > In contrast, said Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, an associate professor of
    > pediatrics at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and a
    > member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on breast-feeding,
    > her patients cannot afford a basic $50 breast pump - an investment, she
    > said, that "could prevent a lifetime of diseases." The academy urges women
    > to breast-feed exclusively for six months and to continue until the child
    > turns 1.
    >
    > Many of her patients learn about breast-feeding through the government
    > nutrition program Women, Infants, and Children, which distributes nursing
    > literature to four million mothers, and also provides classes and lactation
    > consultants.
    >
    > Because of this and similar efforts, 73 percent of mothers now breast-feed
    > their newborns, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention..
    > But after six months, the number falls to 53 percent of college graduates,
    > and 29 percent of mothers whose formal education ended with high school. In
    > a study of Oklahoma mothers who declined to breast-feed, nearly a third
    > named work as the primary reason. Others, like Ms. Moore of Starbucks, find
    > the early days of breast-feeding frustrating, and their impending return to
    > work means they have little incentive to continue.
    >
    > "Sometimes my co-workers will sneak in two or three smoking breaks" before
    > she can steal away to pump, said Laura Kruger Rowe, who works at a Starbucks
    > in Rochester.
    >
    > The company, known for its generous benefits, has no breast-feeding policy,
    > but will "work with partners to accommodate their needs on a case-by-case
    > basis," said Valerie O'Neil, a spokeswoman.
    >
    > As at Starbucks, the gap between working mothers can play out within a
    > single organization. At many law firms, lawyers can pump in their offices,
    > while secretaries use bathroom stalls; in the Army, which also has no policy
    > on the matter, officers are less likely to encounter problems than enlisted
    > soldiers, who have less autonomy and a more complex chain of command.
    >
    > "They're scared to death to even talk to their employers," Dr. Barbara L.
    > Philipp, an associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University School of
    > Medicine, said of the housekeepers and fast-food servers whose children she
    > treats. They may fear the kind of harassment that Laura Walker, a former
    > server at a Red Lobster restaurant in Evansville, Ind., said she faced.
    >
    > According to the complaint Ms. Walker filed with the Equal Opportunity
    > Employment Commission, the restaurant ignored a note she brought from her
    > nurse explaining her need to pump. The managers cut her hours, assigned her
    > to the worst tables and ridiculed her - for instance, jiggling the
    > restaurant's milk containers and joking that they were for her. Eventually
    > Ms. Walker's milk ducts clogged, landing her in the hospital with mastitis.
    >
    > Officials of the restaurant chain said they did assist Ms. Walker.
    >
    > "We at Red Lobster work with all new mothers to accommodate their needs so
    > they can take care of their child," said Wendy Spirduso, a spokeswoman.
    > "That occurred multiple times in this case," she said, declining to go into
    > detail because of a confidential settlement Ms. Walker reached with the
    > company.
    >
    > Shortly after Marlene Warfield, a dental hygienist in Tacoma, Wash., began
    > pumping on the job, she said her boss wore a Halloween costume consisting of
    > a large silver box - his interpretation of a pump, perhaps - with a cutout
    > labeled "insert breast here." When he instructed Ms. Warfield to leave her
    > pump at home, she said, she quit her job- and consulted the local human
    > rights commission, which found nothing illegal about the dentist's actions.
    >
    > In contrast, higher-paid women can often pump without anyone knowing - or
    > with everyone knowing. Nina Wurster, who works in human resources for the
    > Advisory Board, a consulting group in Washington, conducts phone interviews
    > from the lactation room. "I just say, sorry about the background noise and I
    > keep going," she said. But breast-feeding is now so accepted in white-collar
    > circles that some women are completely matter-of-fact about it, pumping
    > right in their open cubicles.
    >
    > "It's been great," said Melany Richmond, an electrical engineer at Zilog, a
    > semiconductor company, in Bellevue, Wash. "I put a little sign up - it says
    > 'Do Not Disturb,' with a little 'Moo' on the bottom."
    >
    > Pumping breast milk has one benefit that cannot be quantified: it makes
    > working mothers feel less guilt-ridden about leaving their children. "There
    > is a lot of satisfaction in knowing I am doing right by him," Ms. Wurster
    > said of her son, James.
    >
    > Dr. Philipp recalled a small furor about whether Jane Swift, the former
    > governor of Massachusetts who gave birth to twins, would breast-feed after
    > returning to work.
    >
    > "That's a great thing to do, but she had her own office and could set her
    > own schedule," Dr. Philipp said. "The one I want to know about is the lady
    > cleaning her office."
    >
    > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    > This message (and attachments) is subject to restrictions and a disclaimer.
    > Please refer to http://www.unisa.ac.za/disclaimer for full details.
    > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    > <<<<gwavasig>>>>
    > <<<< gwavasig >>>>
    >
    >
    >
    > --
    > Joy E. Beatty
    > Assistant Professor
    > Department of Management Studies
    > School of Management
    > University of Michigan - Dearborn
    > 313-583-6524
    > jebeatty@umd.umich.edu
    >
    >


  • 7.  NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    Posted 09-05-2006 11:54
    I agree with this - but at least they're now able to use the "b-word" (breast) and not speak of it euphemistically (nursing)!
     
    Have a great week!
     
    Sue


    From: Gender & Diversity in Organizations Division Listserv [mailto:GDO-L@AOMLISTS.PACE.EDU] On Behalf Of Joy Beatty
    Sent: Sunday, September 03, 2006 6:51 AM
    To: GDO-L@AOMLISTS.PACE.EDU
    Subject: Re: NYTimes: On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System

    Hi everyone,
    I had to laugh and then cringe when I read the phrase "The Business Case for Breastfeeding." Has it really come to this, that business values are the appropriate yardstick for making this choice? I ask this rhetorically, since it's pretty obvious there is a "business case" for everything-- I just hadn't seen it explicitly applied to breastfeeding. I know this has been used as an effective approach to get business people to listen, as in the corporate social responsibility movement saying that adopting these policies and programs is good for the bottom line. It's becoming so taken for granted that people can now say "The business case for X" and others just accept it without challenging the premise.
    Joy

    S M Nkomo wrote:
    Dear All:  Hey, the secret is out organisations are "classed."  The simultaneity of race, gender and class...we have been talking about this in GDO but we really need to find ways to consistently hold it in our research.  Interestingly, many of those women at the counters are women of color (as I saw on my last visit to the USA).   Stella  Professor Stella M. Nkomo Bateman Distinguished Professor of Business Leadership Graduate School of Business University of South Africa Office Phone:  +27 11 652 0365 Cell Phone:  +27 82 416 6308 Fax:  +27 11 652 0240  Mailing Address: P O Box 392 Pretoria 0003 South Africa  Federal Express or DHL Address: First Street Extension Midrand South Africa    
    Bernardo Ferdman <bferdman@ALLIANT.EDU> 09/01/06 18:33 PM >>>         
     Interesting and I think, important, article in today's New York Times. Regards, Bernardo     The New York Times September 1, 2006  On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System   By JODI KANTOR  When a new mother returns to Starbucks' corporate headquarters in Seattle after maternity leave, she learns what is behind the doors mysteriously marked "Lactation Room."   Whenever she likes, she can slip away from her desk and behind those doors, sit in a plush recliner and behind curtains, and leaf through InStyle magazine as she holds a company-supplied pump to her chest, depositing her breast milk in bottles to be toted home later.   But if the mothers who staff the chain's counters want to do the same, they must barricade themselves in small restrooms intended for customers, counting the minutes left in their breaks.  "Breast milk is supposed to be the best milk, I read it constantly when I was pregnant," said Brittany Moore, who works at a Starbucks in Manhattan and feeds her 9-month old daughter formula. "I felt bad, I want the best for my child," she said. "None of the moms here that I know actually breast-feed."  Doctors firmly believe that breast milk is something of a magic elixir for babies, sharply reducing the rate of infection, and quite possibly reducing the risk of allergies, obesity, and chronic disease later in life.   But as pressure to breast-feed increases, a two-class system is emerging for working mothers. For those with autonomy in their jobs - generally, well-paid professionals - breast-feeding, and the pumping it requires, is a matter of choice. It is usually an inconvenience, and it may be an embarrassing comedy of manners, involving leaky bottles tucked into briefcases and brown paper bags in the office refrigerator. But for lower-income mothers - including many who work in restaurants, factories, call centers and the military - pumping at work is close to impossible, causing many women to decline to breast-feed at all, and others to quit after a short time.  It is a particularly literal case of how well-being tends to beget further well-being, and disadvantage tends to create disadvantage - passed down in a mother's milk, or lack thereof.  "I feel like I had to choose between feeding my baby the best food and earning a living," said Jennifer Munoz, a former cashier at Resorts Atlantic City Casino who said she faced obstacles that included irregular breaks and a refrigerator behind a locked door. She said she often dumped her milk into the toilet, knowing that if she did not pump every few hours, her milk supply would soon dwindle.  The casino denies discouraging Ms. Munoz from pumping. "We have policies and procedures in place to accommodate the needs of all of our employees," Brian Cahill, a Resorts spokesman, said.   Nearly half of new mothers return to work within the first year of their child's life. But federal law offers no protection to mothers who express milk on the job - despite the efforts of Representative Carolyn B. Maloney, Democrat of New York, who has introduced such legislation. "I can't understand why this doesn't move," she said. "This is pro-family, pro-health, pro-economy."  Meanwhile, states are stepping in. Twelve states have passed laws protecting pumping mothers - Oklahoma's law, the newest, will take effect in November. But like Oklahoma's, which merely states that an employer "may provide reasonable break time" and "may make a reasonable effort" to provide privacy, most are merely symbolic.  Public health authorities, alarmed at the gap between the breast-feeding haves and have-nots, are now trying to convince businesses that supporting the practice is a sound investment. "The Business Case for Breastfeeding," an upcoming campaign by the Department of Health and Human Services, will emphasize recent findings that breast-feeding reduces absenteeism and pediatrician bills.  In corporate America, lactation support can be a highly touted benefit, consisting of free or subsidized breast pumps, access to lactation consultants, and special rooms with telephones and Internet connections for employees who want to work as they pump, and CD players and reading material for those who do not. According to the nonprofit Families and Work Institute, a third of large corporations have lactation rooms.  Even without these perks, professional women can usually afford a few months of maternity leave during which to breast-feed. When they return, they can generally find an office for the two or three 20-minute sessions per workday typically necessary. Even bathrooms - the pumping spots of last resort - are more inviting at an accounting firm than in a fast-food restaurant.   Wealthier women can spend their way out of work-versus-pumping dilemmas, overnighting milk home from business trips and buying $300 pumps that extract milk quickly, along with gizmos that allow them, in what seems like a parody of maternal multitasking, to pump while driving to and from work.  In contrast, said Dr. Lori Feldman-Winter, an associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics' committee on breast-feeding, her patients cannot afford a basic $50 breast pump - an investment, she said, that "could prevent a lifetime of diseases." The academy urges women to breast-feed exclusively for six months and to continue until the child turns 1.  Many of her patients learn about breast-feeding through the government nutrition program Women, Infants, and Children, which distributes nursing literature to four million mothers, and also provides classes and lactation consultants.  Because of this and similar efforts, 73 percent of mothers now breast-feed their newborns, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.. But after six months, the number falls to 53 percent of college graduates, and 29 percent of mothers whose formal education ended with high school. In a study of Oklahoma mothers who declined to breast-feed, nearly a third named work as the primary reason. Others, like Ms. Moore of Starbucks, find the early days of breast-feeding frustrating, and their impending return to work means they have little incentive to continue.  "Sometimes my co-workers will sneak in two or three smoking breaks" before she can steal away to pump, said Laura Kruger Rowe, who works at a Starbucks in Rochester.   The company, known for its generous benefits, has no breast-feeding policy, but will "work with partners to accommodate their needs on a case-by-case basis," said Valerie O'Neil, a spokeswoman.  As at Starbucks, the gap between working mothers can play out within a single organization. At many law firms, lawyers can pump in their offices, while secretaries use bathroom stalls; in the Army, which also has no policy on the matter, officers are less likely to encounter problems than enlisted soldiers, who have less autonomy and a more complex chain of command.  "They're scared to death to even talk to their employers," Dr. Barbara L. Philipp, an associate professor of pediatrics at Boston University School of Medicine, said of the housekeepers and fast-food servers whose children she treats. They may fear the kind of harassment that Laura Walker, a former server at a Red Lobster restaurant in Evansville, Ind., said she faced.   According to the complaint Ms. Walker filed with the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission, the restaurant ignored a note she brought from her nurse explaining her need to pump. The managers cut her hours, assigned her to the worst tables and ridiculed her - for instance, jiggling the restaurant's milk containers and joking that they were for her. Eventually Ms. Walker's milk ducts clogged, landing her in the hospital with mastitis.   Officials of the restaurant chain said they did assist Ms. Walker.  "We at Red Lobster work with all new mothers to accommodate their needs so they can take care of their child," said Wendy Spirduso, a spokeswoman. "That occurred multiple times in this case," she said, declining to go into detail because of a confidential settlement Ms. Walker reached with the company.  Shortly after Marlene Warfield, a dental hygienist in Tacoma, Wash., began pumping on the job, she said her boss wore a Halloween costume consisting of a large silver box - his interpretation of a pump, perhaps - with a cutout labeled "insert breast here." When he instructed Ms. Warfield to leave her pump at home, she said, she quit her job- and consulted the local human rights commission, which found nothing illegal about the dentist's actions.  In contrast, higher-paid women can often pump without anyone knowing - or with everyone knowing. Nina Wurster, who works in human resources for the Advisory Board, a consulting group in Washington, conducts phone interviews from the lactation room. "I just say, sorry about the background noise and I keep going," she said. But breast-feeding is now so accepted in white-collar circles that some women are completely matter-of-fact about it, pumping right in their open cubicles.  "It's been great," said Melany Richmond, an electrical engineer at Zilog, a semiconductor company, in Bellevue, Wash. "I put a little sign up - it says 'Do Not Disturb,' with a little 'Moo' on the bottom."   Pumping breast milk has one benefit that cannot be quantified: it makes working mothers feel less guilt-ridden about leaving their children. "There is a lot of satisfaction in knowing I am doing right by him," Ms. Wurster said of her son, James.  Dr. Philipp recalled a small furor about whether Jane Swift, the former governor of Massachusetts who gave birth to twins, would breast-feed after returning to work.  "That's a great thing to do, but she had her own office and could set her own schedule," Dr. Philipp said. "The one I want to know about is the lady cleaning her office."  --------------------------------------------------------------------------- This message (and attachments) is subject to restrictions and a disclaimer.   Please refer to http://www.unisa.ac.za/disclaimer for full details. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- <<<<gwavasig>>>> <<<< gwavasig >>>>   

    --  Joy E. Beatty Assistant Professor Department of Management Studies School of Management University of Michigan - Dearborn 313-583-6524 jebeatty@umd.umich.edu