Labor Department investigated Ram Trucks plant on complaint about nursing mother

The Labor Department found that Stellantis' Sterling Heights Assembly Plant violated the rights of nursing mothers during a recent investigation.

Nursing mothers at Stellantis’ Sterling Heights Assembly Plant were forced to wait up to 20 minutes to access lactation rooms in some cases, and investigators were told that the company required a doctor’s note and child’s birth certificate in order to use the rooms, which is improper, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.

As a result, workers at the plant, which produces the popular Ram 1500 pickup, weren’t able to express breast milk when needed, according to a news release Wednesday from the department.

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The Labor Department launched its investigation last year in response to an allegation that a worker was expressing breast milk on the factory floor after being denied access to a lactation room.

Investigators with the department’s Wage and Hour Division found that there weren’t enough rooms and that at the time of the investigation, 19 nursing mothers shared access to four, one-person lactation rooms, the release said.

As of December, the Macomb County plant employed 6,785 workers — 6,459 hourly and 326 salaried — on three shifts, according to the company.

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In response to the department’s finding that the company, which also owns the Jeep, Dodge, Chrysler and Fiat brands, had violated the rights of nursing mothers, Stellantis agreed to add lactation rooms and correct its break policy to avoid future violations, the release said.