Pregnancy discrimination remains one of the most common forms of workplace discrimination. Despite clear legal protections, pregnant employees and new mothers routinely face terminations, demotions, denial of accommodations, and other adverse treatment that would never be directed at a non-pregnant employee in similar circumstances. If you are pregnant, recently gave birth, or are nursing, here is what the law protects and what to do if your employer crosses the line.
The Legal Framework
Several overlapping federal and Ohio laws protect pregnant employees and new mothers in the workplace.
The Pregnancy Discrimination Act
The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 amended Title VII to make clear that discrimination on the basis of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions is a form of sex discrimination. Under the PDA, employers with 15 or more employees cannot treat a pregnant employee worse than a similarly situated non-pregnant employee. This covers hiring, firing, promotions, job assignments, leave, and virtually every other term and condition of employment.
The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act
The Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, which took effect in 2023, significantly strengthened protections for pregnant employees by requiring employers with 15 or more employees to provide reasonable accommodations for known limitations related to pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions, unless doing so would cause an undue hardship. This is a meaningful expansion of prior law. Before the PWFA, pregnant employees often had to rely on the ADA or fight for accommodations by analogy to other temporarily disabled employees. Now the right to accommodation is explicit.
Covered limitations include a wide range of physical and mental conditions connected to pregnancy or childbirth, even if those conditions would not qualify as disabilities under the ADA. Common examples include lifting restrictions, modified schedules, additional breaks, temporary reassignment to light duty, and leave for medical appointments.
The PUMP Act
The Providing Urgent Maternal Protections for Nursing Mothers Act, known as the PUMP Act, extended and strengthened workplace protections for employees who need to express breast milk. The PUMP Act requires employers to provide reasonable break time for employees to pump breast milk for up to one year after the child's birth, and to provide a private space that is not a bathroom and is shielded from view and free from intrusion. These protections now cover most employees, including many salaried and exempt workers who were previously excluded from similar protections under the FLSA.
Critically, the PUMP Act gives employees the right to sue if their employer denies them pumping time or an adequate private space. Remedies include lost wages, compensatory damages, and in some cases liquidated damages. Employers cannot retaliate against an employee for asserting their rights under the PUMP Act.
The PUMP Act means your employer cannot require you to pump in a bathroom, share a space without privacy, or go without adequate break time to express milk. These are legal rights, not favors.
Ohio Law
Ohio's Civil Rights Act prohibits pregnancy discrimination by employers with four or more employees, a lower threshold than federal law. This means that smaller Ohio employers who fall below the 15-employee cutoff for Title VII coverage may still be subject to state law claims. Ohio law also prohibits retaliation against employees who assert their rights under the Civil Rights Act.
What Pregnancy Discrimination Looks Like
Pregnancy discrimination is not always obvious. It rarely comes in the form of a supervisor saying outright that you are being fired because you are pregnant. More often it looks like this:
- Being passed over for a promotion shortly after announcing a pregnancy
- Having job duties reduced or reassigned after disclosing a pregnancy
- Being placed on a performance improvement plan that coincides with a pregnancy announcement
- Being denied a reasonable accommodation for a pregnancy-related limitation while similar accommodations are granted to non-pregnant employees
- Being terminated while on maternity leave or shortly after returning from it
- Being denied pumping breaks or an adequate private space to express milk
- Facing comments or harassment about your pregnancy, weight, or physical appearance
Each of these situations can give rise to a legal claim, even if the employer offers a different stated reason for the adverse action. The question is always whether pregnancy, childbirth, or a related condition was a motivating factor in the employer's decision.
What to Do If Your Rights Are Violated
If you believe you are experiencing pregnancy discrimination or your employer is violating your PUMP Act rights, there are several important steps to take.
Document everything
Keep a contemporaneous record of discriminatory comments, denied requests, and adverse actions. Note the date, who was involved, and what was said or done. Save emails, texts, and any written communications related to your pregnancy, accommodations, or nursing breaks.
Make your accommodation request in writing
Under the PWFA, you have the right to request a reasonable accommodation. Making that request in writing creates a record and starts the interactive process your employer is required to engage in. If your employer ignores or denies your request without engaging in a good faith discussion, that refusal is itself potential evidence of a violation.
Consult an attorney promptly
Deadlines for filing claims are strict. For federal claims under the PDA or PWFA, you generally have 300 days from the discriminatory act to file a charge with the EEOC. Ohio Civil Rights Commission charges carry similar windows. Missing a deadline can permanently bar your claim, so acting quickly matters. Learn more about our employment discrimination practice at Sobel Law Solutions.
The law has never been stronger for pregnant employees and new mothers. The PWFA and PUMP Act together closed significant gaps that existed for years. If your employer is not complying, you have real remedies available.
The Bottom Line
Pregnant employees and new mothers in Ohio have robust legal protections at both the federal and state level. If your employer has treated you adversely because of your pregnancy, denied you a reasonable accommodation, or failed to provide adequate pumping accommodations, those are not just workplace grievances they are potential legal violations with real remedies. An employment attorney can help you evaluate your situation and decide on the right course of action.
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