New Bill Regarding Air Travel With Breast Milk Introduced After Nursing Netflix Star Goes Viral At Airport

A new bill has been introduced in the House of Representatives regarding air travel with breast milk.

The proposed legislation would amend the Bottles and Breastfeeding Equipment Screening Enhancement (BABES) Act to protect parents and caregivers by requiring the Transportation Security Administration to “clarify and regularly update guidance on handling breast milk, baby formula, and other related nutrition products.”

New Bill Regarding Air Travel With Breast Milk Introduced After Nursing Netflix Star Goes Viral At Airport

New Bill Regarding Air Travel With Breast Milk Introduced After Nursing Netflix Star Goes Viral At Airport
Image via Shutterstock

The federal agency would have to develop and update the guidelines with direction from maternal health groups, per a press release from California Rep. Katie Porter, who is sponsoring the bill.

On December 16, 2016, The BABES Act was first signed into law by President Barack Obama and required TSA to notify airlines and security staff of the agency’s directives on traveling with baby formula, breast milk, and juice on planes.

“TSA screening checkpoints should not pose a risk to Americans who just want to keep their babies healthy and fed,” Porter said in a statement. “I’m proud to introduce this bipartisan bill that will make it easier for parents with young kids to travel safely.”

New Bill Regarding Air Travel With Breast Milk Introduced After Nursing Netflix Star Goes Viral At Airport
Image via Shutterstock

Florida Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar, a co-sponsor of the bill, added in another statement, “It should not be difficult for traveling mothers to breastfeed or carry breast milk through TSA checkpoints. We can — and should — make motherhood easier through sensible measures like the BABES Enhancement Act.”

The pending expansion of the BABES Act was spurred by an incident involving the host of Netflix’s “Emily’s Wonder Lab” Emily Calandrelli. Emily, who is a mom of two, posted about an experience while flying for work in a now-viral Twitter thread from May. She had been attempting to go through airport security when male TSA agents told her she couldn’t travel with ice packs that she had intended to use to preserve breast milk despite guidance listed on the TSA website.

Calandrelli told “Good Morning America” shortly after the incident that she had found the entire ordeal “embarrassing” and felt the agents had treated her like a “petulant child.”

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Calandrelli’s story caused social media outrage and news coverage, which led to the TSA to release a statement on May 13 saying, in part, that the agency was “committed to ensuring that every traveler is treated respectfully and courteously at the checkpoint” and that it would “continue to engage with advocacy and community-based organizations to enhance our screening protocols” and “re-double our training to ensure our screening procedures are being consistently applied.”

After introducing the proposed bill amendment, Porter re-shared Calandrelli’s tweets and added in her own message, “Earlier this summer, my constituent Emily called out @TSA for failing parents traveling with breast milk. We worked together to draft bipartisan, bicameral legislation to better protect parents like her who just want to keep their babies fed. I proudly introduced our bill today.”

Calandrelli told “GMA” in a new statement that the proposed legislation she helped co-write felt like a “full circle moment.”

@thespacegal

Bill comes out tomorrow!!!

♬ original sound – The Space Gal

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“I had a unique perspective because I had thousands of moms and parents reach out to me to detail their own issues they experienced with TSA while traveling with young kids and/or breastmilk and formula,” Calandrelli wrote in an emailed statement. “From those comments, I was able to do a short analysis of what the most common issues were so that we could figure out what problems actually need to be addressed.”

“I’m excited that this bill will be helping all of those parents and families who reached out to me,” she continued. “Because of Representative Porter (and all of the other representatives who are supporting this bill), families will be able to travel [through] security a bit faster and with fewer issues — and I think we can all get excited about that!”

A similar version of the proposed House bill is expected to be introduced in the Senate as well, with Sens. Tammy Duckworth, of Illinois; Mazie Hirono, of Hawaii; and Steve Daines, of Montana, sponsoring it.

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