The average menstruating person uses more than 18 tampons per cycle and uses 12,000-15,000 pads, tampons, and panty liners in their lifetime. Folks who menstruate spend a lifetime average of $11,000 on tampons alone, excluding other menstrual care expenses. #SB255
This financial burden is unfairly leveled on women and menstruating folks and, arguably, more unfairly leveled on young people. The result: Twenty percent of teens struggle to afford period products or are not able to purchase them at all.
Lack of free access to menstrual hygiene products doesn’t only create a financial burden, it puts students’ health in danger. Wearing products such as tampons for too long puts you at risk for toxic shock syndrome - a life threatening condition.
Lack of access to these products is all consuming. Not only does it impact folks’ finances and physical health - it impacts their mental health and student’s ability to learn. Two-thirds of students have felt significant stress due to lack of access to period products.
In 2017, the BBC reported that nearly half of 14-to-21-year-olds have missed an entire day of school because of their period. More than 4 in 5 teens have either missed class time or know someone who missed class time because they did not have access to period products.
Our bill addresses the financial, emotional, mental, & physical repercussions that stem from a lack of access to menstrual products by creating a grant program for public schools/districts to purchase menstrual hygiene products for their bathrooms
We know that a lack of access to pads or tampons puts students at risk in a multitude of ways. Menstrual hygiene products ARE essential health products. It’s time that we ensure that, just like their non-menstruating peers, students have everything they need in school bathrooms.
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On average in CO fines and fees that accrue in the juvenile justice system come out to $300 which is extremely over burdensome on CO families. In rural areas fees are even higher. For example, the average fee in Logan County is $1,482, yet the median weekly income is $947.
Not only are juv. fees harmful to children and families - ironically - they are harmful to the state. CO spends 75% of juv. fees collected on admin & collecting the same fees - leaving only 25% in net revenue. For every dollar collected, we spend 75 cents to collect that dollar.