A Tucson Fire paramedic has been awarded a $3.8 million settlement after the department failed to provide her with a private place to pump her breast milk and retaliated against her when she complained, court documents show.

The city of Tucson is not commenting on the federal jury’s decision but is evaluating the city’s position for an appeal, spokeswoman Lane Mandle told the Arizona Daily Star.

Carrie Clark filed a lawsuit against the city in July 2014, saying Tucson Fire Department officials and city human-resources personnel denied her requests to transfer to fire stations that could accommodate her while pumping breast milk, according to Star archives.

After Clark informed the city that TFD may have violated federal labor standards by denying her access, city officials retaliated and continued to harass her further, she said.

Clark said in court documents that the alternatives the city offered included private bedrooms being used by fire chiefs or captains, which would have required her waking those officers every few hours and asking them to leave the room so she could pump, which she considered inappropriate, Star archives show.