Oregon forces all schools — elementary and up — to put 'menstrual products' in boys' bathrooms with 'instructions on how to use' them
The law aims to
'affirm the right to menstrual dignity for transgender, intersex, nonbinary,
and two-spirit students.'
May 04, 2022
Every public
school in Oregon — including elementary institutions — will soon be required to
provide tampons and other feminine products in boys' bathrooms with
"instructions on how to use" them.
The
controversial requirement is in accordance with the state's new Menstrual Dignity Act, signed into law by Democratic Gov.
Kate Brown last year, which mandates that menstrual products be made available
in "every student bathroom."
Following the
bill's passage, the Oregon Department of Education developed and distributed a
"Medical Dignity for Students" toolkit to aid local
districts and set forth a phased plan for districts to meet the law's standards
and requirements.
Effective
immediately, each school is required to have menstrual product dispensers in at
least two bathrooms. But by June 2023, dispensers are required in every student
bathroom, KGW-TV reported. The department emphasized that schools
must "consider all-gender access to the products."
Sasha Grenier,
a sexual health specialist with the department, said, "This new program
will help students participate actively in classes and school activities by
alleviating some of the economic strain and experiences of shame that are often
barriers for menstruating people accessing their education."
Michela Bedard,
executive director of Portland-based advocacy group PERIOD, added in a press
release that "this is a progressive policy, but also a bipartisan one ...
because menstruation does not discriminate from race, class or political
affiliation."
Apparently,
menstruation does not discriminate based on sexual orientation or gender
identity, either. The state's resources for abiding by the law are littered
with inclusive phrases such as "students who menstruate" and
"menstruating and non-menstruating students." The department argues
the law promotes "menstrual equity."
The toolkit
goes on to say the new law aims to "affirm the right to menstrual dignity
for transgender, intersex, nonbinary, and two-spirit students."
Portland Public
Schools is reportedly excited to begin its planned implementation of the every
bathroom requirement.
In a recent statement, the district announced that it had made
feminine products available in "female and all-gender restrooms" and
added that the products would be provided in "all remaining restrooms,
including boys' bathrooms," by the start of the next school year.
The Governor of
Oregon passed the Menstrual Dignity Act which requires all schools (elementary,
middle, & high) starting next year place period products in all bathrooms
(boys and girls) with instructions on how to use it.pic.twitter.com/8CMejAG5JH
The progressive
law, however, is facing a fair amount of pushback, as well.
In a recent column, Family Research Council president Tony
Perkins blasted the "absurd" law, noting that local taxpayers would
be on the hook for thousands of new tampon dispensers, which are expected to
cost roughly $400 a machine.
He added that
in most cases, all the equity-forward measure will accomplish is giving school
janitors more to clean up as young boys undoubtedly take advantage of the new
and unusual prank materials.
"Obviously,
state leaders didn't bother to consult their counterparts in Illinois, where a
similar move has literally opened the floodgates to expensive plumbing issues
and mischief," Perkins wrote. "Case in point: campuses like Loyola
University, where janitors are dealing with all kinds of pranks, tampering, and
vandalism.
Sanitary pads
"would end up on the mirrors, in the sinks, down the toilet, and
completely thrown out," one students' group complained, according to Perkins.
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