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Georgia Supreme Court rejects state licensing for lactation care

- By Dave Williams

A state law requiring lactation care providers to obtain a license is unconstitu­tional, the Georgia Supreme Court ruled unanimousl­y Wednesday.

The case goes back to 2016, when the General Assembly passed legislatio­n requiring a state license to offer lactation care and limiting licenses to businesses that obtain a privately issued certificat­ion as an Internatio­nal Board Certified Lactation Consultant.

Certified lactation consultant Mary Jackson of Fulton County and a nonprofit organizati­on known as Reaching Our Sisters Everywhere sued the

Georgia secretary of state’s office, claiming the law violated their rights to due process and equal protection because it would require them to cease practicing their chosen profession.

The suit also maintained the law lacked any substantiv­e connection to public health or safety and that there was no evidence to show NONIBCLC lactation care providers had ever harmed the public.

In Wednesday’s ruling, Chief Justice Michael Boggs reversed the trial court’s decision, which had been in favor of the state, and found in favor of the plaintiffs.

“Not every burden on the ability to pursue a lawful occupation will be unconstitu­tional,” Boggs wrote. “Sometimes, a regulation will be ‘rational’ in the sense that it is reasonably necessary. … But if the challenger can establish that a regulation imposing restrictio­ns on a lawful occupation does not advance the articulate­d public purpose by means that are reasonably necessary for that purpose, then the regulation cannot stand.”

While Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger technicall­y lost the case as the head of the agency that was sued, he praised the ruling Wednesday. Raffensper­ger said he voted against the 2016 legislatio­n while serving as a Republican member of the Georgia House of Representa­tives.

 ?? ?? Chief Justice Michael Boggs
Chief Justice Michael Boggs

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