After launching a pilot program last year, the Montgomery County Public School system says it is ahead of schedule in its plan to place free menstrual product dispensers in all school bathrooms, with the goal of outfitting every campus with at least one dispenser by October 2025.
The plan builds on existing progress throughout the county, which MCPS officials say placed five dispensers in every high school and three in nearly every middle school under its jurisdiction since 2021. MCPS is now looking to install dispensers in remaining middle schools and begin stocking elementary schools.
鈥淎ll of our 25 high schools have at least five dispensers to date in each school, and of course the products are free,鈥 said MCPS Communications Director Chris Cram. 鈥淭he next was to move to middle schools. When that part of the project is done, at least three student restrooms in each of the middle schools will ultimately have these dispensers.鈥
After successfully equipping each Montgomery County high school with menstrual health products, Cram said the department moved forward with its plan to place dispensers in White Oak Middle School and Montgomery Village Middle School in January of last year. The , according to a newsletter issued by the school district, was to place two dispensers in every middle and high school and one in every elementary school by the summer of 2022.
MCPS took a different route, Cram said. The district chose first to fully stock each high school with the five dispensers the initiative called for before shifting its focus to middle and elementary schools, with White Oak and Montgomery Village leading the way.
The decision paid dividends for MCPS, Cram said, with the school system eyeing the end of the 2023-2024 academic year as a target date to install three dispensers in each middle school and one in every elementary school.
鈥淚 think we’re on a path to do it far more quickly than that,鈥 Cram said. 鈥淲e seem to indicate that we will very likely be done by the end of this next school year, mostly done this year.鈥
The move by MCPS 聽builds on a passed by the Maryland state legislature. The state law, introduced as HB 0205, mandates all middle and high schools provide free menstrual products to students by 2025 and comes as Montgomery County Councilmember Will Jawando introduced a bill () in November requiring the county to install free menstrual product dispensers in public women鈥檚 bathrooms by the same year.
Montgomery County residents have expressed concerns regarding a lack of access to affordable menstrual health products.
County Board of Education Ombudsman Ryvell Fitzpatrick said the general public had urged municipal lawmakers to make tampons more readily accessible to MCPS students during public meetings that pre-dated the 2021 ordinance.
鈥淧eople did come in and provide public comment at board meetings,鈥 Fitzpatrick said. 鈥淭here was definitely the request from the community.鈥
Montgomery County鈥檚 push for menstrual healthcare equity represents another step in what George Washington University School of Nursing鈥檚 Senior Policy Professor Diana Mason called a global movement to provide free period products to women and girls.
First conceived in Great Britain, Mason said programs to reduce the cost of menstrual health care have yielded positive results in Europe and could serve as a model for both Montgomery County and the United States.
鈥淭his was first identified I believe in Scotland in the UK,鈥 Mason said. 鈥淚t has enabled women and girls to not miss as much school and work. It has reduced or eliminated the barrier of the cost of menstrual products in public places for girls and women.鈥
Mason, who on menstrual inequality, said lack of access to proper menstrual hygienic products most directly impacts women and girls from working class backgrounds, creating a school and work attendance gap which further exacerbates socioeconomic inequality.
鈥淲e know that there are some girls who, when they have their periods, if they don’t have menstrual products will not go to school,鈥 Mason said. 鈥淲e know that for some women who are particularly in low-income jobs, that if they don’t have menstrual products, they may miss work.鈥
Beyond the financial and education implications of lacking access to proper menstrual hygiene, insufficient period healthcare can prove deadly.
Mason said women who cannot afford menstrual healthcare frequently find themselves rationing or recycling tampons, which is a leading cause of toxic shock syndrome a potentially lethal condition caused by bacteria.
鈥淢enstrual hygiene is an issue,鈥 Mason said. 鈥淲e know that toxic shock syndrome is a consequence of superabsorbent tampons. If you if have limited access to tampons, you might decide 鈥業’m not going to change my tampon. I’m just going to keep it in.鈥 Well, you’re putting yourself at risk of toxic shock syndrome, which can kill.鈥
To Mason, initiatives such as HB 0205 and MCPS swift response to the law mark a turning point not only in economic equality for women, but greater gender equality overall.
According to , the average price of a box of tampon is roughly $7, but prices can climb as high as $30 through depending on the brands and stores women buy from 鈥 a frequent expense men are spared from.
As a medical professional, Mason observed men are frequently given non-essential grooming products free of charge. She is hopeful laws such as HB 0205 will play a part leveling the financial playing field.
鈥淚t’s in it’s sort of crazy because so I am a nurse, and in hospitals we provide men with shaving products for free, right, and menstrual products are often charged for,鈥 Mason said.
Add comment