Accessibility to Menstrual Hygiene Products
March 21, 2023 03:35 PM to All House Members
Circulated By

Representative Darisha K. Parker
D House District 198
Along With

Rep. Carol Hill-Evans
D House District 95
Memo
In 2021, two in five people struggled to purchase period products, an increase of 35% from 2018. Individuals that cannot afford period products can be found using newspapers, rags, and socks instead of pads, pantiliners, or tampons, leading to health problems. Further, period poverty disproportionately impacts Black and Latinx communities: nearly a quarter of menstruating individuals within these communities struggled to afford period products in 2021.
It is for these reasons we plan to introduce legislation that would require our Department of Human Services to apply to the federal government if a waiver is made available to states to allow those receiving Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) to use the two programs for menstrual hygiene products. Currently, these programs do not allow for the purchase of menstrual hygiene products, despite being a necessity.
Moreover, our other bill would create a grant program to provide eligible public-school entities with funding to acquire and distribute menstrual hygiene products at no expense to students.
People who menstruate should not have to miss work, school, or other life events due to not having access to period products. More than half of the world’s population are menstruating individuals and it is time that period poverty comes to the forefront of discussion.
Please consider joining Representative Hill-Evans and I in co-sponsoring this much needed legislation and provide individuals with accessibility to a necessity, period products, for whenever they may be in need.
It is for these reasons we plan to introduce legislation that would require our Department of Human Services to apply to the federal government if a waiver is made available to states to allow those receiving Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) to use the two programs for menstrual hygiene products. Currently, these programs do not allow for the purchase of menstrual hygiene products, despite being a necessity.
Moreover, our other bill would create a grant program to provide eligible public-school entities with funding to acquire and distribute menstrual hygiene products at no expense to students.
People who menstruate should not have to miss work, school, or other life events due to not having access to period products. More than half of the world’s population are menstruating individuals and it is time that period poverty comes to the forefront of discussion.
Please consider joining Representative Hill-Evans and I in co-sponsoring this much needed legislation and provide individuals with accessibility to a necessity, period products, for whenever they may be in need.
Legislation
Document 1 - Introduced as HB 850
This bill would require the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services to apply for a waiver if the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service creates and makes a waiver available to the states that would allow those receiving SNAP and WIC to use those programs for menstrual hygiene products.
Document 2 - Introduced as HB 851
This bill would establish the Menstrual Hygiene Products Accessibility Grant Program.
Last updated on March 21, 2023 03:36 PM
Accessibility to Menstrual Hygiene Products
March 21, 2023 03:35 PM to All House Members
Circulated By
PARKER and HILL-EVANS
Memo
In 2021, two in five people struggled to purchase period products, an increase of 35% from 2018. Individuals that cannot afford period products can be found using newspapers, rags, and socks instead of pads, pantiliners, or tampons, leading to health problems. Further, period poverty disproportionately impacts Black and Latinx communities: nearly a quarter of menstruating individuals within these communities struggled to afford period products in 2021.
It is for these reasons we plan to introduce legislation that would require our Department of Human Services to apply to the federal government if a waiver is made available to states to allow those receiving Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) to use the two programs for menstrual hygiene products. Currently, these programs do not allow for the purchase of menstrual hygiene products, despite being a necessity.
Moreover, our other bill would create a grant program to provide eligible public-school entities with funding to acquire and distribute menstrual hygiene products at no expense to students.
People who menstruate should not have to miss work, school, or other life events due to not having access to period products. More than half of the world’s population are menstruating individuals and it is time that period poverty comes to the forefront of discussion.
Please consider joining Representative Hill-Evans and I in co-sponsoring this much needed legislation and provide individuals with accessibility to a necessity, period products, for whenever they may be in need.
It is for these reasons we plan to introduce legislation that would require our Department of Human Services to apply to the federal government if a waiver is made available to states to allow those receiving Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) to use the two programs for menstrual hygiene products. Currently, these programs do not allow for the purchase of menstrual hygiene products, despite being a necessity.
Moreover, our other bill would create a grant program to provide eligible public-school entities with funding to acquire and distribute menstrual hygiene products at no expense to students.
People who menstruate should not have to miss work, school, or other life events due to not having access to period products. More than half of the world’s population are menstruating individuals and it is time that period poverty comes to the forefront of discussion.
Please consider joining Representative Hill-Evans and I in co-sponsoring this much needed legislation and provide individuals with accessibility to a necessity, period products, for whenever they may be in need.
Document 1
This bill would require the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services to apply for a waiver if the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food and Nutrition Service creates and makes a waiver available to the states that would allow those receiving SNAP and WIC to use those programs for menstrual hygiene products.
Introduced as HB 850
Document 2
This bill would establish the Menstrual Hygiene Products Accessibility Grant Program.
Introduced as HB 851
Last Updated
March 21, 2023 03:36 PM
Generated 04/23/2025 02:03 AM