Grant recipients work to eliminate period poverty

PEOPLE who have difficulty purchasing menstruation products in the Interior, Cranbrook, Hope, Kamloops, on the Lower Mainland and on southern Vancouver Island will soon have more options thanks to newly funded period poverty pilot projects created by local community organizations.

Through a provincial grant announced in May 2022, United Way BC has dispersed approximately $220,000 for 10 pilot projects that work toward the elimination of period poverty.

“No one should have to choose between paying for food and menstrual products,” said Sheila Malcolmson, Minister of Social Development and Poverty Reduction. “Period products should be available to people who can’t afford them. That’s why we’re funding community projects to help people access the supplies they need.”

The projects will test innovative approaches and methods of distributing free menstrual products, conduct studies to examine the factors that contribute to period poverty and look for ways to reduce stigma around menstruation in culturally appropriate ways. Funded pilot projects must be completed by August 2023. Results from pilot projects will help the Period Poverty Task Force develop recommendations for a comprehensive and sustainable response to period poverty in B.C by March 2024.

For example, the First Nations Wellness Outreach Society in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside is receiving a $25,000 grant for its project to offer cultural teachings about “moon time” by Elders and knowledge keepers. Moon time honours and celebrates a person’s menstrual cycle and is seen as a gift and a time to cleanse mentally, physically, emotionally and spiritually. The grant will also be used to distribute free menstrual products to meet the diverse needs of individuals in the community.

Since the start of its partnership with United Way BC in 2019, the Province has funded several period poverty initiatives, including the creation of the Period Poverty Task Force.

Kelli Paddon, Parliamentary Secretary for Gender Equity, said: “People with lower incomes who menstruate can be caught without products and face stigma and social isolation. This can also impact people who work or attend school. That’s why we’re working with United Way BC to deliver regional grants so local community organizations are empowered to create projects that will eliminate period poverty.”

 

Quick Facts:

* In May 2022, $750,000 was announced by government for period poverty grants and the establishment of a period poverty task force in October 2022.

* In 2020, the Province provided $107,000 to United Way British Columbia to conduct the Period Promise Research Project.

* Students in B.C. have had access to free menstrual products in all public-school washrooms since 2019.