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Lactation Information and Discussion <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 17 Feb 2008 10:25:51 -0500
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http://www.dailynews.com/news/ci_8266373

DWP users asked to pay breast-feeding bill
By Beth Barrett, Staff Writer

Sidestepping any potential opposition from its commission, the Los Angeles 
Department of Water and Power is shopping for a contractor to run pregnancy 
and breast-feeding classes for its workers for up to $50,000 a year. 

Because the contract for "lactation specialist services" is less than $150,000, 
General Manager H. David Nahai can award it without seeking approval from 
the DWP board once the proposals are opened March 7. 

But board member Nick Patsaouras criticized Nahai on Thursday for not 
bringing the controversial contract to commissioners for discussion. 

"In general, I respect the general manager has the authority (to award 
contracts) under $150,000, but in this case some board members in the past 
expressed objections and so it should come before the board," he said. 

Patsouras said it's inappropriate to continue the lactation program at a time 
when the utility wants to raise electric rates by 9 percent over three years 
and water rates by 6 percent over two years. 

"It's absurd. At a time when we're asking ratepayers to increase the rates, 
we're going for lactation," Patsaouras. 

But Nahai said he intends to go forward with the program that's operated 
since 1988, calling it a good deal for ratepayers. 

"(They) are getting a tremendous return on their investments," Nahai 
said. "This program has resulted in an overall 27 percent reduction in 
absenteeism, and a 36 percent reduction in health-care claims 

by new mothers who use the service. 
"Apart from all that, we live in an enlightened age where an entity such as the 
DWP has to have a humanitarian outlook." 

Nahai said DWP is in step with many other government, private and academic 
institutions that provide similar services. 

Last year, the same contract cost DWP $37,000. In 2005, the lactation 
specialist worked 16 hours per week, fielded nearly 1,000 telephone calls and 
conducted 48 classes for expectant parents. 

An independent study of the agency's finances nearly two years ago found 
more than $16 million in non-core activities in fiscal 2006, including $1.1 million 
for various family-care and breast-feeding programs. 

At that time, Nahai, who was vice president of the commission, said the DWP's 
spending habits as well as whether or not to raise rates, were a bigger issue 
than a lactation program. 

Patsaouras, then a commissioner, argued against it. 

"We're in the business of producing water and electricity, not in the social-
service business," he said at the time

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