California 2021-2022 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SCR55 Compare Versions

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1-Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 55 CHAPTER 143 Relative to Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021. [ Filed with Secretary of State September 17, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSCR 55, Hurtado. Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021.This measure would proclaim August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California. The measure would recognize the unique benefits that breastfeeding provides, as specified, and would affirm that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed. The measure would encourage Californians to work together to explore ways to, among other things, improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: NO Bill TextWHEREAS, Breastfeeding is an issue of great importance to women, infants, their families, and their physicians and is, therefore, of interest to the Legislature; andWHEREAS, It is the first food system that, as babies, many humans are introduced to and sustained by; andWHEREAS, The American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine, and the World Health Organization recommend that babies be exclusively breastfed for the first 6 month of age and continue to be breastfed until 12 months of age or longer as mutually desired; andWHEREAS, In January 2011, the United States Surgeon General announced a Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding that identifies barriers to optimal breastfeeding in health care practices, employment, communities, research, public health infrastructure, and social networks, while also recommending methods in which families, communities, employers, and health care professionals could help to eliminate those barriers to improve breastfeeding rates and increase support for breastfeeding; and WHEREAS, Research shows that human milk and breastfeeding provide advantages to general health, growth, and development while significantly decreasing the risk of a large number of acute and chronic diseases, including, among others, sudden infant death syndrome, asthma, allergies, diabetes, viral and bacterial infections, childhood obesity, childhood leukemia, necrotizing enterocolitis, and infant mortality; andWHEREAS, Mothers who breastfeed have a decreased risk of breast, uterine, and ovarian cancer, postpartum depression, and osteoporosis later in life; andWHEREAS, The nutrients exclusive to human milk are vital to the growth, development, and maintenance of the human brain and cannot be manufactured; andWHEREAS, Breastfeeding has positive economic impacts on families by decreasing the need to pay for medical care for a sick infant and by eliminating the need to purchase infant formula; andWHEREAS, The health benefits to breastfed children and their mothers result in lower health care costs for employers, less employee time off to care for sick children, and higher productivity and employee loyalty; andWHEREAS, Employers, employees, and society benefit by supporting a mothers decision to breastfeed and by helping to reduce the obstacles to initiating and continuing breastfeeding; now, therefore, be itResolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly thereof concurring, That the Legislature hereby proclaims the month of August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California; and be it furtherResolved, That the Legislature recognizes the unique health, economic, and societal benefits that breastfeeding provides to babies, mothers, families, and the community as a whole and affirms that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed; and be it furtherResolved, That the Legislature encourages Californians to work together to explore ways to improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings, to facilitate increased awareness and education about breastfeeding, to explore and encourage the use of breastfeeding supports, and to improve the availability of effective breastfeeding resources and community support services; and be it furtherResolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
1+Enrolled September 10, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 01, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 07, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 55Introduced by Senator Hurtado(Coauthors: Senators Caballero, Grove, Kamlager, Leyva, Limn, Melendez, Ochoa Bogh, Rubio, and Skinner)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Bauer-Kahan, Cervantes, Cristina Garcia, Nguyen, Quirk-Silva, Waldron, Arambula, Bennett, Berman, Bigelow, Boerner Horvath, Mia Bonta, Bryan, Burke, Calderon, Carrillo, Chau, Chen, Chiu, Choi, Cooley, Cooper, Cunningham, Megan Dahle, Davies, Flora, Fong, Frazier, Friedman, Gallagher, Eduardo Garcia, Gipson, Holden, Irwin, Jones-Sawyer, Kalra, Kiley, Lackey, Low, Maienschein, Mathis, Mayes, McCarty, Medina, Mullin, Muratsuchi, Nazarian, ODonnell, Patterson, Petrie-Norris, Quirk, Ramos, Reyes, Luz Rivas, Robert Rivas, Rodriguez, Blanca Rubio, Salas, Santiago, Smith, Stone, Ting, Valladares, Villapudua, Voepel, Ward, Akilah Weber, Wicks, and Wood)August 16, 2021 Relative to Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSCR 55, Hurtado. Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021.This measure would proclaim August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California. The measure would recognize the unique benefits that breastfeeding provides, as specified, and would affirm that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed. The measure would encourage Californians to work together to explore ways to, among other things, improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: NO Bill TextWHEREAS, Breastfeeding is an issue of great importance to women, infants, their families, and their physicians and is, therefore, of interest to the Legislature; andWHEREAS, It is the first food system that, as babies, many humans are introduced to and sustained by; andWHEREAS, The American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine, and the World Health Organization recommend that babies be exclusively breastfed for the first 6 month of age and continue to be breastfed until 12 months of age or longer as mutually desired; andWHEREAS, In January 2011, the United States Surgeon General announced a Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding that identifies barriers to optimal breastfeeding in health care practices, employment, communities, research, public health infrastructure, and social networks, while also recommending methods in which families, communities, employers, and health care professionals could help to eliminate those barriers to improve breastfeeding rates and increase support for breastfeeding; and WHEREAS, Research shows that human milk and breastfeeding provide advantages to general health, growth, and development while significantly decreasing the risk of a large number of acute and chronic diseases, including, among others, sudden infant death syndrome, asthma, allergies, diabetes, viral and bacterial infections, childhood obesity, childhood leukemia, necrotizing enterocolitis, and infant mortality; andWHEREAS, Mothers who breastfeed have a decreased risk of breast, uterine, and ovarian cancer, postpartum depression, and osteoporosis later in life; andWHEREAS, The nutrients exclusive to human milk are vital to the growth, development, and maintenance of the human brain and cannot be manufactured; andWHEREAS, Breastfeeding has positive economic impacts on families by decreasing the need to pay for medical care for a sick infant and by eliminating the need to purchase infant formula; andWHEREAS, The health benefits to breastfed children and their mothers result in lower health care costs for employers, less employee time off to care for sick children, and higher productivity and employee loyalty; andWHEREAS, Employers, employees, and society benefit by supporting a mothers decision to breastfeed and by helping to reduce the obstacles to initiating and continuing breastfeeding; now, therefore, be itResolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly thereof concurring, That the Legislature hereby proclaims the month of August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California; and be it furtherResolved, That the Legislature recognizes the unique health, economic, and societal benefits that breastfeeding provides to babies, mothers, families, and the community as a whole and affirms that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed; and be it furtherResolved, That the Legislature encourages Californians to work together to explore ways to improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings, to facilitate increased awareness and education about breastfeeding, to explore and encourage the use of breastfeeding supports, and to improve the availability of effective breastfeeding resources and community support services; and be it furtherResolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.
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3- Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 55 CHAPTER 143 Relative to Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021. [ Filed with Secretary of State September 17, 2021. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSCR 55, Hurtado. Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021.This measure would proclaim August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California. The measure would recognize the unique benefits that breastfeeding provides, as specified, and would affirm that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed. The measure would encourage Californians to work together to explore ways to, among other things, improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: NO
3+ Enrolled September 10, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 01, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 07, 2021 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 55Introduced by Senator Hurtado(Coauthors: Senators Caballero, Grove, Kamlager, Leyva, Limn, Melendez, Ochoa Bogh, Rubio, and Skinner)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Bauer-Kahan, Cervantes, Cristina Garcia, Nguyen, Quirk-Silva, Waldron, Arambula, Bennett, Berman, Bigelow, Boerner Horvath, Mia Bonta, Bryan, Burke, Calderon, Carrillo, Chau, Chen, Chiu, Choi, Cooley, Cooper, Cunningham, Megan Dahle, Davies, Flora, Fong, Frazier, Friedman, Gallagher, Eduardo Garcia, Gipson, Holden, Irwin, Jones-Sawyer, Kalra, Kiley, Lackey, Low, Maienschein, Mathis, Mayes, McCarty, Medina, Mullin, Muratsuchi, Nazarian, ODonnell, Patterson, Petrie-Norris, Quirk, Ramos, Reyes, Luz Rivas, Robert Rivas, Rodriguez, Blanca Rubio, Salas, Santiago, Smith, Stone, Ting, Valladares, Villapudua, Voepel, Ward, Akilah Weber, Wicks, and Wood)August 16, 2021 Relative to Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSCR 55, Hurtado. Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021.This measure would proclaim August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California. The measure would recognize the unique benefits that breastfeeding provides, as specified, and would affirm that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed. The measure would encourage Californians to work together to explore ways to, among other things, improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: NO
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5- Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 55 CHAPTER 143
5+ Enrolled September 10, 2021 Passed IN Senate September 01, 2021 Passed IN Assembly September 07, 2021
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7- Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 55
7+Enrolled September 10, 2021
8+Passed IN Senate September 01, 2021
9+Passed IN Assembly September 07, 2021
810
9- CHAPTER 143
11+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20212022 REGULAR SESSION
12+
13+ Senate Concurrent Resolution
14+
15+No. 55
16+
17+Introduced by Senator Hurtado(Coauthors: Senators Caballero, Grove, Kamlager, Leyva, Limn, Melendez, Ochoa Bogh, Rubio, and Skinner)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Bauer-Kahan, Cervantes, Cristina Garcia, Nguyen, Quirk-Silva, Waldron, Arambula, Bennett, Berman, Bigelow, Boerner Horvath, Mia Bonta, Bryan, Burke, Calderon, Carrillo, Chau, Chen, Chiu, Choi, Cooley, Cooper, Cunningham, Megan Dahle, Davies, Flora, Fong, Frazier, Friedman, Gallagher, Eduardo Garcia, Gipson, Holden, Irwin, Jones-Sawyer, Kalra, Kiley, Lackey, Low, Maienschein, Mathis, Mayes, McCarty, Medina, Mullin, Muratsuchi, Nazarian, ODonnell, Patterson, Petrie-Norris, Quirk, Ramos, Reyes, Luz Rivas, Robert Rivas, Rodriguez, Blanca Rubio, Salas, Santiago, Smith, Stone, Ting, Valladares, Villapudua, Voepel, Ward, Akilah Weber, Wicks, and Wood)August 16, 2021
18+
19+Introduced by Senator Hurtado(Coauthors: Senators Caballero, Grove, Kamlager, Leyva, Limn, Melendez, Ochoa Bogh, Rubio, and Skinner)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Aguiar-Curry, Bauer-Kahan, Cervantes, Cristina Garcia, Nguyen, Quirk-Silva, Waldron, Arambula, Bennett, Berman, Bigelow, Boerner Horvath, Mia Bonta, Bryan, Burke, Calderon, Carrillo, Chau, Chen, Chiu, Choi, Cooley, Cooper, Cunningham, Megan Dahle, Davies, Flora, Fong, Frazier, Friedman, Gallagher, Eduardo Garcia, Gipson, Holden, Irwin, Jones-Sawyer, Kalra, Kiley, Lackey, Low, Maienschein, Mathis, Mayes, McCarty, Medina, Mullin, Muratsuchi, Nazarian, ODonnell, Patterson, Petrie-Norris, Quirk, Ramos, Reyes, Luz Rivas, Robert Rivas, Rodriguez, Blanca Rubio, Salas, Santiago, Smith, Stone, Ting, Valladares, Villapudua, Voepel, Ward, Akilah Weber, Wicks, and Wood)
20+August 16, 2021
1021
1122 Relative to Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021.
12-
13- [ Filed with Secretary of State September 17, 2021. ]
1423
1524 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1625
1726 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1827
1928 SCR 55, Hurtado. Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021.
2029
2130 This measure would proclaim August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California. The measure would recognize the unique benefits that breastfeeding provides, as specified, and would affirm that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed. The measure would encourage Californians to work together to explore ways to, among other things, improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings.
2231
2332 This measure would proclaim August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California. The measure would recognize the unique benefits that breastfeeding provides, as specified, and would affirm that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed. The measure would encourage Californians to work together to explore ways to, among other things, improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings.
2433
2534 ## Digest Key
2635
2736 ## Bill Text
2837
2938 WHEREAS, Breastfeeding is an issue of great importance to women, infants, their families, and their physicians and is, therefore, of interest to the Legislature; and
3039
3140 WHEREAS, It is the first food system that, as babies, many humans are introduced to and sustained by; and
3241
3342 WHEREAS, The American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the Academy of Breastfeeding Medicine, and the World Health Organization recommend that babies be exclusively breastfed for the first 6 month of age and continue to be breastfed until 12 months of age or longer as mutually desired; and
3443
3544 WHEREAS, In January 2011, the United States Surgeon General announced a Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding that identifies barriers to optimal breastfeeding in health care practices, employment, communities, research, public health infrastructure, and social networks, while also recommending methods in which families, communities, employers, and health care professionals could help to eliminate those barriers to improve breastfeeding rates and increase support for breastfeeding; and
3645
3746 WHEREAS, Research shows that human milk and breastfeeding provide advantages to general health, growth, and development while significantly decreasing the risk of a large number of acute and chronic diseases, including, among others, sudden infant death syndrome, asthma, allergies, diabetes, viral and bacterial infections, childhood obesity, childhood leukemia, necrotizing enterocolitis, and infant mortality; and
3847
3948 WHEREAS, Mothers who breastfeed have a decreased risk of breast, uterine, and ovarian cancer, postpartum depression, and osteoporosis later in life; and
4049
4150 WHEREAS, The nutrients exclusive to human milk are vital to the growth, development, and maintenance of the human brain and cannot be manufactured; and
4251
4352 WHEREAS, Breastfeeding has positive economic impacts on families by decreasing the need to pay for medical care for a sick infant and by eliminating the need to purchase infant formula; and
4453
4554 WHEREAS, The health benefits to breastfed children and their mothers result in lower health care costs for employers, less employee time off to care for sick children, and higher productivity and employee loyalty; and
4655
4756 WHEREAS, Employers, employees, and society benefit by supporting a mothers decision to breastfeed and by helping to reduce the obstacles to initiating and continuing breastfeeding; now, therefore, be it
4857
4958 Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly thereof concurring, That the Legislature hereby proclaims the month of August 2021 as Breastfeeding Awareness Month of 2021 in California; and be it further
5059
5160 Resolved, That the Legislature recognizes the unique health, economic, and societal benefits that breastfeeding provides to babies, mothers, families, and the community as a whole and affirms that Californians should work to ensure that barriers to initiation and continuation of breastfeeding are removed; and be it further
5261
5362 Resolved, That the Legislature encourages Californians to work together to explore ways to improve womens access to breastfeeding support services in medical, social, and employment settings, to facilitate increased awareness and education about breastfeeding, to explore and encourage the use of breastfeeding supports, and to improve the availability of effective breastfeeding resources and community support services; and be it further
5463
5564 Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.