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CUSTOMERS ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED, SHE WAS SHOCKED IT PROMPTED A CALL TO POLICE. >> I PRAY IT IS A PLACE PEOPLE FEEL COMFORTABLE. DAN: THAT’S VIKTORIA REDDY’S PRIORITY, AT ALREDDY CAFE IN SHARONVILLE. SHE’S BEEN SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH AND COFFEE HERE FOR 16 YEARS. BUT SHE’S NEVER HAD A SITUATION LIKE THE ONE DURING FRIDAY’S LUNCH SERVICE. SHARONVILLE POLICE SAY A WOMAN CALLED TO COMPLAIN ABOUT ANOTHER WOMAN NURSING HER BABY, WITHOUT COVERING UP. POLICE TOLD HER IT WASN’T ILLEGAL. >> THE CUSTOMERS DID END UP LEAVING AND NOT EATING. DAN: SUZANNE CRABLE, A COUNSELOR WITH BREASTFEEDING USA SAYS. OHIO LAW ALLOWS BREASTFEEDING IN PUBLIC, LEAVING NO ROOM FOR INTERPRETATION. >> A MOTHER MAY BREAST-FEED HER BABY IN ANY PLACE OF PUBLIC ACCOMMODATION. WHICH WOULD BE A RESTAURANT. DAN: CRABLE SAYS BREASTFEEDING IS GROWING IN POPULARITY. THAT’S WHY SHE WANTS PEOPLE TO UNDERSTAND THE LAW, AND THAT MOMS DON’T HAVE TO COVER UP TO NURSE. SHE SAYS UNCOMFORTABLE CUSTOMERS CAN BE RE-SEATED. REDDY SAYS SHE WAS HANDLING THE KITCHEN DURING THE SITUATION. SHE WISHES SHE COULD’VE TALKED WITH THE COMPLAINING CUSTOMER BEFORE SHE LEFT, BUT SHE ALSO WANTS EVERY BABY TO EAT. >> I JUST FEEL LIKE IT IS A NATURAL THING AND A GOOD THING. I WISH MORE MOMS DID IT. DAN: REDDY ISN’T SURE IF THE NURSING MOTHER EVEN KNOWS WHAT HAPPENED. AUGUST IS BREASTFEEDING AWARENESS MONTH, AND THIS WEEK IS WORLD BREASTFEEDING WEEK. HEALTH OFFICIALS ENCOURAGE BUSINESSES TO DISPLAY BREASTFEEDING WELCOM

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A customer was so upset about a woman breastfeeding her baby at a cafe in Sharonville, she called the police.The owner of the cafe said it happened during the lunch rush on Friday.Ironically, it happened during Breastfeeding Awareness Month.The cafe's owner supports breastfeeding but wishes she would have had a chance to talk with the customers about what happened.She was shocked it prompted a call to police."I just pray that it's a place that people just feel comfortable, and I want it to be a place that's, the food's healthy," owner Viktoria Reddy said.That is Reddy's priority at Alreddy Cafe in Sharonville.She has been serving breakfast, lunch and coffee at the establishment for 16 years.But she said she has never had a situation like the one during Friday's lunch service.Sharonville police said a woman called to complain about another woman nursing her baby without covering up.Police told the woman it was not illegal."The customers did end up leaving, not eating, and kind of upset that it wasn't taken more seriously for them. I don't know," Reddy said.Suzanne Crable, who works as a counselor with Breastfeeding USA, said Ohio law allows breastfeeding in public and there is no room for interpretation."A mother may breastfeed her baby in any place, a public accommodation, which would be a restaurant," Crable said.She said breastfeeding is growing in popularity, especially because of its nutritious benefits.That's why she wants people to understand the law and that moms don't have to cover up to nurse.She said uncomfortable customers can be reseated.Reddy said she was handling the kitchen during the situation.She wishes she could have talked with the complaining customer before she left, but she also wants every hungry baby to eat."I just feel like it's a natural thing and it's a good thing, and I wish more moms did it," Reddy said.Reddy isn't sure if the nursing mother even knows what happened.August is Breastfeeding Awareness Month in Ohio and this week is World Breastfeeding Week.Health officials encourage businesses to display "Breastfeeding Welcome Here" signs.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Ohio's 2018 breastfeeding initiation rate is 81.9%, which ranks the Buckeye State as 36th in the country.