Break Time For Nursing Mothers Under the FLSA - Balancing Obligations Under New York Law With New Federal Requirements

July 23, 2010

By: John M. Bagyi

Yesterday, the US Department of Labor issued a fact sheet  that provides general information on the break time requirement for nursing mothers, part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act which took effect March 23, 2010. While these amendments to the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) represent a significant change for employers in many states, since 2007, New York employers have been required to provide reasonable unpaid break time, or permit employees to use paid break time or meal time, to express breast milk. See our earlier posts on New York's requirement.

Thus, for New York employers, the most important observation contained in the US DOL's fact sheet is that the FLSA requirement of break time for nursing mothers to express breast milk does not preempt State laws that provide greater protections to employees. New York's protection of nursing mothers provides employees with a number of protections that exceed those provided under the new federal law. For example, New York law protects expression of breast milk up to three years following the birth of the child (federal law is limited to one year) and applies to all employers (federal law does not apply to employers with fewer than 50 employees).

Given that New York's protection of nursing mothers provides greater protection than the recent FLSA amendments, employers complying with existing New York law will be in compliance with the new federal law as well.