The employer shall make reasonable efforts to provide the employee with the use of a room or other location, other
than a toilet stall, in close proximity to the employee's work area, for the employee to express milk in private.
Employers are also required to make a reasonable effort to provide a private location, other
than a toilet stall, in close proximity to the workplace for this activity.
§ 11-5-116 (2009) requires an employer to provide reasonable unpaid break time each day to an employee who needs to express breast milk for her child and requires an employer to make a reasonable effort to provide a private, secure and sanitary room or other location other
than a toilet stall where an employee can express her breast milk.
Employers are also required to make a reasonable effort to provide a private location, other
than a toilet stall, in close proximity to the work place for this activity.
The law also requires employers to make reasonable efforts to provide a room or other location, other
than a toilet stall, where an employee can express her milk in privacy.
The law also provides that employers with more than 25 employees must provide a private location, other
than a toilet stall, where an employee can express the employee's breast milk in private and if possible to provide a refrigerator for storing breast milk that has been expressed.
Employers also must make an effort to provide a private location, other
than a toilet stall, where a woman may express milk.
The survey also checked whether districts have clear policies governing pregnant and parenting students, a student policy that includes lactation accommodation — time and space to pump milk, other
than a toilet stall — and an identifiable Title IX Coordinator on staff.
Not exact matches
Employers are also required to make a reasonable effort to provide a private location, other
than a bathroom or
toilet stall, in close proximity to the workplace that is shielded from view, free from intrusion and has an electrical outlet.
Requires that an employer make reasonable efforts to provide a sanitary room or other location, other
than a bathroom or
toilet stall, where an employee can express her breast milk in privacy and security.
The cliches start bubbling up (this job is better
than digging ditches, somebody says - yeah, but at least with a ditch, there's something to show for it), and the blubbering in the
toilet stalls doesn't elicit much sympathy, either.
The problem with publishing today, though, is that its driven by greed, and that's driving debut writers to self - publish rather
than risk getting rejected because a) they didn't walk into the
toilet stall of their favorite author and politely ask for a blurb, or b) they discovered they'd rather spend what free time they have writing, and not marketing or frequenting social venues to make connections that may or may not pan out.
The house, or cell, or cellule, not larger
than two queen - sized beds put side - by - side, consists of a desk or table, a sleeping area that is rather tomb - like, and an small
stall that features a prototypical shower /
toilet combination.
It drives me nuts, because a lazy, casual vandalism of the English language is far worse
than vandalism against, say, a restroom mirror or a
toilet stall.
It takes a lot of bright people several thousand years longer to build a language and its tools
than it takes to build a
toilet stall, for one thing.