最新蜜桃影像

最新蜜桃影像
Council Member Brooke Pinto

Council committee to vote on bill to bring free period products to D.C. residents

The D.C. Council鈥檚 Committee on Housing and Executive Administration is expected to mark up Councilmember Brooke Pinto’s Period Act on Friday. The legislation that would provide free period products in all women鈥檚 and gender-neutral bathrooms in government owned and operated buildings.听

最新蜜桃影像ington D.C. Council鈥檚 Committee on Housing and Executive Administration is expected on Friday to mark up legislation that would provide free period products in all women and gender-neutral bathrooms in government-owned and operated buildings.

Kevin Chavous, a spokesperson for committee chair Anita Bonds (D-At Large) said the bill was expected to pass the committee.

The Period Act of 2022

The bill is sponsored by Councilmember Brooke Pinto (D-Ward 2) and builds upon her previous bill, the Expanding Student Access to Period Products Act of 2021, which was passed unanimously earlier this year.听

That required all public, public charter, private schools, and post-secondary institutions to provide free period products to students. The legislation also required the creation and implementation of a menstrual health education standard by the District鈥檚 State Office of the Superintendent of Schools (OSSE).

鈥淭he inability to access period products can create serious health consequences,鈥 Pinto said Oct. 4 in a public hearing notice on the new bill.Women, transgender men, and non-binary people who lack access to menstrual products are more likely to reuse products or use products for too long, which puts those individuals at higher risk for infection and other conditions that require medical care.”

Pinto鈥檚 Period Act seeks to alleviate the 鈥減eriod poverty鈥 experienced by many of D.C.鈥檚 most vulnerable residents, such as the unhoused, the councilmember said.听

All entities in the District that have been awarded human care agreements, which include shelters and care facilities, would be required to provide free period products. These human care agreement recipients provide services to a number of demographics, from minors in the custody of the District, to residents that are disadvantaged, disabled, elderly, and unemployed.

Another aspect of the bill would require a dispenser or container with period products to be in all women鈥檚 and gender-neutral bathrooms. In the case that a building does not have a gender-neutral bathroom, at least one men鈥檚 bathroom would be required to have menstrual products and a sign would be provided in the other men鈥檚 bathrooms indicating their location.听

With Pinto鈥檚 bill, both tampons and pads would be provided at all locations.听

At an Oct. 11 hearing of the housing committee, Pinto said: 鈥淭his bill is another step towards overcoming the stigma surrounding menstruation and treating period products the same as toilet paper 鈥 a product everyone agrees is a basic necessity and can be readily found in public buildings and places.

鈥淭he District has the opportunity to be a national leader on period equity and look forward to getting this bill passed and implemented.鈥

At the hearing, many menstruating individuals testified to the importance of the bill and provided comments on how it could be more effective in assisting groups the bill is trying to reach.

Winnie Zhang, a community organizer at Period, a nonprofit focused on eliminating period poverty and furthering menstrual equity legislation, told the committee: 鈥淚f this act is enacted in the District, it will show other states what they鈥檙e capable of achieving, it will show policymakers that period poverty is a real legitimate problem that many experience and many should not be experiencing. And that the solution is simple: provide free access to these products鈥 really would be a shame if this period act wouldn鈥檛 be enacted because that would perpetuate the notion that marginalized groups don鈥檛 matter.鈥

Others, like Harvard sophomore Shruti Gautam, who helped facilitate state policy organizing in her home state of Missouri and volunteers with community organizing in the Boston area to end period poverty, talked about the necessity of period products.

鈥淓very person needs to be able to take care of themselves and their bodily processes that they don鈥檛 have their own jurisdiction over, thus there is a right to a bathroom, and this translates for there being a right to be able to use these products and facilities,鈥 Gautam said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 no one鈥檚 fault they have these processes and not giving them the proper resources to take care of them is putting more people at a disadvantage and susceptible to a disease.”

Many, like University of the District of Columbia law student Beth Brodsky, shared stories of their experiences of not being able to locate period products when they needed them most.

鈥淎 few days ago, I could not access menstrual products myself,” Brodsky recounted. “I went to a D.C. professional event requiring business attire, so I wore a pair of tights, and outside the event, a group of men were uncomfortably staring at me, I wasn鈥檛 sure why. And so, when I got to the bathroom, I realized they were staring because 鈥 surprise 鈥 I got my period, which for me, like many other menstruators it鈥檚 hard to predict. As a student, I鈥檓 trying to establish a professional identity in public spaces, and nobody wants to hire someone that bleeds all over themselves.鈥

听鈥淚 think it’s fantastic not only because sometimes you forget products and accessibility is important but all because accessibility is important in the terms that period products are taxed and a luxury with a pink tax on them,鈥 American University student Mara Shepherd told 最新蜜桃影像. 鈥淭hey’re a necessary hygiene item. It鈥檚 like not having access to toilet paper – we can鈥檛 just hold it in and wait for later.鈥澨

AU student Bryanna Miller agreed, saying 鈥淚t鈥檚 a wonderful idea, I think it should be implemented everywhere. There鈥檚 women, femme-presenting people, people who experience periods everywhere, so it鈥檚 like why wouldn鈥檛 you. I don鈥檛 see any downside to it.鈥

Dillin Bett

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