Daily Southtown

O’Hare, Midway airports to install lactation pods

- By Robert Channick rchannick@chicagotri­bune. com

As travelers make their way through O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport this summer, they may notice a new amenity sprinkled among the newsstands, coffee shops and popcorn kiosks: portable lactation pods.

The Chicago Department of Aviation is installing 11 free-standing lactation pods across O’Hare and Midway airports, offering a private oasis for nursing mothers to use at no charge. Eight of 10 pods designated for O’Hare are up and running, while Midway’s sole unit is in place.

“The CDA is continuall­y working to elevate the customer experience for everyone coming through Chicago airports,” Aviation Commission­er Jamie Rhee said in an emailed statement. “These lactation pods offer accessible convenienc­e for our family travelers in addition to the Mother’s Rooms already available in our terminals.”

The 50-square-foot lactation pods, built by Burlington, Vermont-based Mamava, feature a table, two benches, a mirror, motion-activated lighting and ceiling vent, and a dual outlet for powering breast pumps. An app locates the pod and unlocks the door, providing a dedicated space for nursing mothers on the fly.

Launched in 2015, Mamava has installed over 2,000 lactation pods across the U.S. in offices, airports, malls, hospitals, military bases, universiti­es and sports arenas. In Chicago, Mamava has pods at Soldier Field, McCormick Place and Navy Pier, among other installati­ons.

“Our mission is around helping to support breastfeed­ing parents,” said Sascha Mayer, 51, CEO and

co-founder of Mamava. “It’s just a nice contained environmen­t when you really need to sit down and use a breast pump or nurse a baby.”

Mamava builds three different-sized pods at its Vermont factory, ranging in price from $10,000 to $25,000 each. The city paid about $220,000 total for its order of 11 extra-large pods at O’Hare and Midway, a Department of Aviation spokespers­on said Tuesday.

Most of the Mamava lactation pods are sold to private businesses, but airports are a growing category, driven in part by legislatio­n to accommodat­e nursing mothers, Mayer said. For many travelers

the pods are a welcome alternativ­e to restrooms, which often serve as breast milk pumping stations, she said.

There are 176 Mamava lactation pods at 69 airports around the country. When the two remaining O’Hare pods are installed in Terminal 1 this summer, the airport will rank No. 2 in portable lactation accommodat­ions, after Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport.

In Chicago the pods supplement five nursing rooms at O’Hare and one at Midway, and help both facilities meet the Friendly Airports for Mothers

Improvemen­t Act, which was authored by U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth and signed into law in November 2020.

Building on the Illinois Democrat’s 2018 Friendly Airports for Mothers Act, the legislatio­n requires all airports to provide private spaces in each terminal for mothers to express breast milk.

“Expanding lactation spaces is critical in helping working moms across the country and making travel more family friendly,” Duckworth said in an emailed statement. “I’m glad to see our Chicago airports leading the way in providing even more accessible and convenient options for nursing moms.”

Mayer said the FAM Act has helped to increase pod sales at airports. She also cited the pending Providing Urgent Maternal Protection­s for Nursing Mothers as potentiall­y crucial federal legislatio­n for getting lactation pods in more locations.

The PUMP Act, which was approved by the House in October but has stalled in the Senate, would require employers to provide sufficient break time and space for nursing mothers to express milk for up to two years after giving birth or beginning nursing.

Beyond legislatio­n, the challenge of luring employees back to the office has raised the stakes for companies to accommodat­e nursing mothers in the post-pandemic landscape, Mayer said.

“Employment is such a challenge in terms of recruiting, finding and retaining people,” Mayer said. “So now there’s expectatio­n around every facility or business (of ) having a lactation space. It’s almost a given, so that’s really propelling us.”

Mamava generated 30% year-over-year revenue growth until sales stalled during the pandemic, as many people worked remotely, public spaces remained sparse and potential customers put lactation pod orders on hold.

The Chicago Department of Aviation orders, for example, were “two years in the making,” Mayer said.

But as the world emerges from pandemic stasis, growth is ramping back up and pod sales are expected to double this year, Mayer said.

Another factor that may boost demand is the formula shortage, which has left many young families scouring distant retailers and searching for alternativ­es to feed their babies.

Mayer said improving infrastruc­ture and institutio­nal support — including the installati­on of lactation pods at airports — will make breastfeed­ing a more viable option for many families, reducing the broader dependence on formula.

“There’s no formula-shaming or anything,” Mayer said. “But obviously if more families have support to be breastfeed­ing ... the formula issue would be less so because there’d be less people relying on it.”

 ?? STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? A family passes near a lactation pod at Chicago O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport on Tuesday.
STACEY WESCOTT/CHICAGO TRIBUNE A family passes near a lactation pod at Chicago O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport on Tuesday.

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