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Nursing Moms Stage Feeding Frenzy
By Barry Owens
On a steamy afternoon in July, Battery Park City mother Leandra McCormick
wheeled her stroller into the air conditioned chill of the World Financial
Center's Winter Garden. There, in the middle of the lunch crowd, she found
an empty bench where she released her daughter from the stroller, raised
a breast from her tank top, and began to nurse. She was quickly approached
by a security guard.
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"I was told I had to either cover up or go back outside,"
McCormick said. Infuriated, McCormick returned two weeks later,
this time bringing along photocopies of the New York State Civil
Code Section 79-E that reads in part: "A mother may breastfeed
her baby in any location, public or private."
She also brought along two dozen other mothers, who in turn brought
along their hungry infants. And at a little before noon on July
21, as a small detail of police officers and World Financial Center
security guards hovered nearby, there was a showdown ofsorts.
M c C o r m i c k , who put the word out through local mother-and-baby
groups and in Internet chat rooms, was hopeful that the sight of
so many mothers breast-feeding at once in the Winter Garden would
provoke a reaction from mall management-perhaps even an apology
for the earlier incident.
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"They haven't said anything
yet, but let's see what happens when I whip my boob out,"
she said. "I think the word is 'breast,'" her friend
gently corrected. "When you whip your breast out."
Few eyebrows were raised, however, and security personnel kept
a respectful distance once the mass feeding began.
"This truly is like a dinner party for babies," one
mother exclaimed, as all around her infants took in their lunch,
blissfully unaware of their role as agitators.
"It's her first protest," said proud mother Jennifer
Grant, a Battery Park City resident nursing her infant daughter.
"'Don't get yourself arrested,' my mother-in-law said to
me on the way here."
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Yvette Aronesty commuted from Williamsburg, Brooklyn, to
take part in the "nurse-in." She even brought protest
signs. "Wall Street needs some mama love," read
one.
"A kid's gotta eat," said a man seated at a bench
nearby. "I'm not offended by it. I am sort of taken aback
by it sometimes, though."
One observer, who denied he was with the mall's security detail
but was later seen huddling with them, said he found breast-feeding
in public to be offensive. "My wife wouldn't do it,"
he said. Nor, he added, "would I walk through here with
my pants off."
Dorian Irizarry, corporate director of security for Mulligan
Security, the company that handles security for the mall,
sounded a more diplomatic tone. He offered a private apology
to McCormick after the protest, explaining that it was a "miscommunication."
And he told the Trib that nursing mothers would not be asked
to leave the Winter Garden in the future. Unless, he added,
a guard were to get a complaint from someone offended by the
sight. "We have to keep the peace," he said.
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