Lactation and Breast-Feeding Are "Pregnancy Related Conditions" Protected Under Title VII

August 7, 2013

In EEOC v. Houston Funding II, Ltd., the Fifth Circuit issued a landmark decision finding that terminating a female employee because she is lactating or expressing milk is unlawful sex discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (as amended by the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978) (PDA).  The Court also found that lactation is a medical condition related to pregnancy.

Donnica Venters (“Venters”) took a leave of absence to give birth, and subsequently asked her supervisor whether she could use a breast pump at work.  Instead of responding to her inquiry, Venters was told that she was being discharged for job abandonment.  The EEOC filed suit claiming that Houston Funding discriminated against Venters based on her sex, including her pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions (citing the language from the PDA).  The Fifth Circuit agreed that terminating Venters simply because she is lactating or expressing breast milk constitutes sex discrimination, and that an adverse action “motivated by these factors clearly imposes upon women a burden that male employees need not - - indeed, could not – suffer.”

The Fifth Circuit held that lactation is a physiological condition distinct to women who have undergone pregnancy and childbirth, and that men, as a matter of biological fact, cannot lactate. As such, the Court held that lactation is included in the term “pregnancy related conditions” and protected by Title VII and the PDA.  Female employees, who are lactating and/or breast-feeding, may now bring claims under Title VII and the PDA.  Employers should also be aware that the Affordable Care Act already amended the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) to require an employer provide “reasonable time for an employee to express milk for her nursing child for 1 year after the child’s birth each time such employee has need to express the milk.”  Employers must take their obligation to provide time and space to express breast milk seriously and must also take caution when considering taking adverse action against such employees.  The EEOC has made pregnancy- related limitations one of its six national priorities to address in the context of equal employment law, so employers should critically analyze any request or inquiry from employees regarding pregnancy or post-pregnancy accommodations to avoid unnecessary negative liability.

For more information on the implications of the EEOC v. Houston Funding II, Ltd. decision and other sex and pregnancy policies and regulations in the workplace, please contact Dena B. Calo, Esq, dcalo@genovaburns.com, Director of the Human Resources Practice Group and Partner in the Employment Law & Litigation Group, or Jane Khodarkovsky, Esq., Associate in the Employment Law & Litigation Group, at jkhodarkovsky@genovaburns.com.

Tags: GeneralHuman ResourcesAffordable Care ActPregnancy Discrimination ActTitle VIISex DiscriminationEqual Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)FLSAlactationbreast feedingpregnancysex discriminationpregnancy discriminationEEOCDena B. CaloJane Khodarkovsky