The Price Young Girls Pay When Tampons Aren't Free
One day during biology class last winter, Celeste Bond needed to go to the bathroom; she had felt that first painful cramp that told her her period started. But the substitute teacher wouldn't let her go. When Bond asked again — this time for a nurse's pass — he said no. He thought she needed the bathroom, anyway.
"I'm like, 'They're both kind of the same thing if you know what I'm saying,'" Bond, now 18, recalls. He didn't.
The third time she asked, Bond said she had a "female emergency." Still no. But Bond went anyway, without the teacher's pass she needed for the nurse, who would give her a pad. As with many young girls, Bond wasn't prepared that day because she didn't expect her period to start. Luckily, the nurse let it slide — after interrogating her about her period. Bond missed most of class and couldn't complete her required worksheet. And when she went back to the room, the substitute wouldn't let her in; a friend had to instead.
Her story isn't unique. After holding roundtables in June, New York City Councilwoman Julissa Ferreras-Copeland discovered youth across the city have to navigate a capricious web of school staff to get a pad or tampon, compromising their education in the process. A package of bills Ferreras-Copeland plans to introduce in the coming weeks seeks to close the supply gap by making menstrual products free and easily available in public schools, as well as in homeless shelters and correctional facilities.
"This is a big stress in a lot of [the students'] lives," says Ferreras-Copeland. But, she continues, when students have access to menstrual products in bathroom, they feel relieved and no longer lose valuable class time. "[They] have everything they need to have a successful day."
In some New York City schools, students who need sanitary supplies can go to the nurse. In others, they have to ask the counselor for a pass to the nurse, who'll make them sign in and explain why they didn't have a pad in the first place. Advocates say having to jump through hoops for menstrual care can be traumatizing, especially for the 21 percent of school-age children living in poverty. Students who can't access pads or tampons often can't concentrate in class, risk bleeding through their underwear, and are forced to miss class or school altogether, falling behind on lessons and grades. But non-menstruating peers, advocates say, already have everything they need in a school bathroom — toilet paper and hand soap.
"I'm like, 'They're both kind of the same thing if you know what I'm saying,'" Bond, now 18, recalls. He didn't.
The third time she asked, Bond said she had a "female emergency." Still no. But Bond went anyway, without the teacher's pass she needed for the nurse, who would give her a pad. As with many young girls, Bond wasn't prepared that day because she didn't expect her period to start. Luckily, the nurse let it slide — after interrogating her about her period. Bond missed most of class and couldn't complete her required worksheet. And when she went back to the room, the substitute wouldn't let her in; a friend had to instead.
Her story isn't unique. After holding roundtables in June, New York City Councilwoman Julissa Ferreras-Copeland discovered youth across the city have to navigate a capricious web of school staff to get a pad or tampon, compromising their education in the process. A package of bills Ferreras-Copeland plans to introduce in the coming weeks seeks to close the supply gap by making menstrual products free and easily available in public schools, as well as in homeless shelters and correctional facilities.
"This is a big stress in a lot of [the students'] lives," says Ferreras-Copeland. But, she continues, when students have access to menstrual products in bathroom, they feel relieved and no longer lose valuable class time. "[They] have everything they need to have a successful day."
In some New York City schools, students who need sanitary supplies can go to the nurse. In others, they have to ask the counselor for a pass to the nurse, who'll make them sign in and explain why they didn't have a pad in the first place. Advocates say having to jump through hoops for menstrual care can be traumatizing, especially for the 21 percent of school-age children living in poverty. Students who can't access pads or tampons often can't concentrate in class, risk bleeding through their underwear, and are forced to miss class or school altogether, falling behind on lessons and grades. But non-menstruating peers, advocates say, already have everything they need in a school bathroom — toilet paper and hand soap.