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Wed, 16 Feb 2005 09:45:15 -0800 |
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This reminded me of my pumping experience while on jury duty (in California,
circa 1995). When I got the summons, I called and was told I would be
exempted if I wanted. Actually, I said, all I needed was a place to pump.
The jury supervisor offered me her private office whenever I needed it. She
actually vacated her office to give me privacy (not that felt I needed it!)
Since I was working full-time as an RN at the time, jury duty was quite a
pleasant break for me. We started late and got off early; had long lunch
breaks; had Fridays off. I didn't need to work my scheduled weekends at the
hospital. I was able to spend so much extra time with my then 10 month old
baby.
I thought the funniest thing was bringing my Lactina and small cooler
through the heavy security and x-ray machines at the courthouse. The guard,
who was probably close to 70 years old, looked at this "machine" very
suspiciously. When I told him what it was, he blushed down to his toes.
For the rest of the trial, whenever he saw me coming through with my pump,
he would make a little joke about "making lunch for my baby".
I would *never* want an at-home mom to get stuck with jury duty and get
separated from her baby, but like I said, it actually allowed me to spend
*more* time with mine! (And unlike the other jurors, I found myself wishing
the trial would last longer!)
Marita Nickison, RN
A mother mentioned in the article had a
> difficult time pumping while on jury duty even though she was guarentedd
> the
> ability to do so. She wound up doing it quickly on breaks in the bathroom
> and
> had difficulty accessing a frig to keep the millk cold. I twas her
> experince
> that helped spur the bill.
> The bill which passed the Senate and has House of Delegate approval
> would
> make VA the 7th state per the article to exempt BF mothers from jury duty.
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