Posted on 02/13/2014 11:59:49 AM PST by Responsibility2nd
A New Mexico woman said the Border Patrol forced her to make a decision: Be a mother or be an agent.
Sophia Cruz, who worked at the agencys station in Lordsburg, said she simply wanted to pump and store her breast milk at work. But she said her superiors violated orders from her doctor and one of the agencys programs designed for nursing mothers.
All I wanted to do was nurse my daughter. And all I wanted to do was be a mom and an agent, Cruz said in an interview with 4 On Your Side Investigator Ryan Luby.
The Border Patrol fired her in April for failing and refusing to take a test to keep her firearms certification current.
Cruz said the agency never set up the test and never supplied her with a new armored vest thats required to take the test. She said the shape of her body changed considerably after pregnancy.
Even if the agency had supplied Cruz with a properly-fitted vest, her doctor didnt want her to wear it for extended periods of time since it could hinder the flow of her breast milk. Cruzs doctor also told the agency, repeatedly, that she should work light duty, avoid altercations and night shifts.
They kept using the word recommendations, that the doctors were merely making recommendations, Cruz said of her superiors.
Ray Martinez, Cruzs attorney in El Paso, said he recently presented the case to an arbitrator.
I think the issue was that they always approached this as Agent Cruz wanted special treatment, he said of the Border Patrol.
Yet Martinez said his client was merely asking for the agency to follow guidelines established through its Lactation Support Program, or LSP, which it implemented in 2011. LSP allows reasonable break time for employees who are nursing mothers up to one year after they give birth.
Additionally, the LSP requires the agency to have sanitized lactation rooms not restrooms in which employees can pump breast milk and store it in a small refrigerator.
I think basically the evidence and testimony that was presented in this case laid out pretty clearly that they treated her differently, they treated her negatively, Martinez said.
He produced a copy of a letter that Mark Woody, Assistant Chief Patrol Agent, sent to Cruz in January 2013. Although Woody wrote that Cruz made a laudable decision to care for her child, he explained that in the competing interests of being both a mother and a border patrol agent she may resign from employment or return to full duty.
Woody wrote, We need you back on full duty.
Cruz began working for the Border Patrol in 2010 after she left her job as assistant controller at the Santa Fe New Mexican.
Working at the newspaper was interesting and different, but you sit at a desk every day, you see the same people every day, basically do the same thing every day, she said.
Cruz said she comes from a law enforcement family and found the idea of protecting the nations border exciting despite the remote locations she was hired to patrol.
It's never the same. You go one day from driving down the road, to seeing a vehicle, jumping out of your car and chasing somebody. Or going on a 14-mile hike, she said.
However, not long after she became pregnant in late 2011, she explained that she experienced hostility from management. She said she felt like she was a nuisance to them.
The Border Patrols communications team declined to discuss the specifics of Cruzs case, due to the pending litigation and arbitration process thats still underway, but they issued a statement:
Customs and Border Protection is dedicated to the health and well-being of all of its employees and is constantly looking for programs and initiatives that positively impact their work environment. The Lactation Support Program is one such program that was designed to enhance the quality of work life for employees who are nursing mothers. CBP understands the stress and challenges of having a new baby and is concerned for the health and well-being of all employees by providing needed worksite assistance. Pre-designated areas are provided for employees needing accommodations and employees are responsible for providing their own equipment and maintaining the cleanliness of the lactation rooms. Full-time and part-time CBP employees are eligible to participate in the program. CBP fully supports the Lactation Program which was enacted January 25, 2011.
Cruz said shes not fighting the agency to land a large settlement. She said she simply wants her job back and wants the agency to follow its own rules.
Cruz is pregnant with a second child and expects to give birth soon.
Martinez said he expects to hear a decision from the arbitrator in a few weeks.
Well, guess what there mommy. You WERE a nuisance.
Sure glad the media is all over THIS one and not Brian Terry.
Now you know you’re not supposed to get that breast milk all over the evidence —especially the drugs.
She wanted to take the baby to work??
Sure glad the media is all over THIS one and not Brian Terry.
Good point!
Coming soon to Special Forces.
Is that how it works now?
Things I doubt a doctor would recommend for a pregnant or new mother. Being pregnant made her unqualified for the duties of her job. I can see both sides of the argument but, ultimately, she wasn't in condition to do the work the government hired her to do so either she should have taken leave or quit the job.
I wonder if her new armored vest had those little flaps in front like a nursing bra? If not - well then, I could so totally see her complaint.
/sarc
I’m a nursing mother, and this twit is nuts! Orders from her doc? Take medical leave then!
Well, I hope she’s on the ‘correct’ side of the border when she delivers.
They couldn’t use Terry to pump the “War on Women” lie. You will see a sharp turn away from anything that can’t be used to push the Purulent Pantsuit at us in 2016.
I agree. What man ever gets special consideration like this which hampers the mission of the team? Some women want it all, but just like men, they can’t have it all (unless their co-workers are forced to pick up their slack).
They don’t want the other prospective illegal aliens to hear that one of their cohort was actually punished for killing a man defending the border.
I was on war exercises about 15 years ago with the Army and they had a specialist that was breast pumping.
They let her sleep in the tunnel of an armored vehicle between the cockpit and the working area, which hindered egress and regress.
Then 2 soldiers would take a humvee daily and deliver the milk back behind lines, taking soldiers and equipment out of the “war zone”.
It was quite ridiculous.
Sounds like a “war on women” to me.
LOL, that’s what I was thinking.
No, you pump your breast milk, put it in a container or bag, refrigerate it or freeze it until you can get it home for Baby.
But she sounds like a royal pain in the patootie over this. I could be wrong (imagine that!!!) but she sounds like she is demanding and whiny and possibly won’t attend to her work. And there’s another one on the way! Are there Daddies to go with these babies????
Oh, I know. They're the "Undocumented Resident" outreach program. They must make sure that these undocumented residents get their welcome packages, with their food stamp card and their guide to government benefits.
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