Pacific Island Times Vol 3 No. 3 March 2019 | Page 6
Insights
Addressing “period poverty”
T
his column is going to get a bit graphic, so if
you are a man, and you are squeamish about
that monthly time for the females in your
household, you can stop reading now.
In a moment, I am going to share a telephone con-
versation between a very nice elderly CHamoru man
and myself, following my radio conversation with
K57’s Patti Arroyo about my confirmation hearing
as the newly appointed director of the Bureau of
Women’s Affairs. I had been talking with Patti about
several initiatives that I am pursu-
ing – two of them being an awareness
campaign about sexual assault from
the male perspective, and a program to
help people (of any gender) who need
to get their high school equivalency in
order to get a job and become economi-
cally sustainable.
We also spoke about a concept that
I learned about in my new role, called
“period poverty.” Having had three
daughters but also having had the
means to supply them with a variety of
feminine hygiene products, I am em-
barrassed to admit that I never thought
about the fact that these products are
expensive, and that there are many
women and girls on this island who simply cannot
afford them. So what do they do? They use rags, or
toilet paper, or they simply stay home for a few days
every month, in a somewhat modern-day version
of the “red tent” concept highlighted in the Anita
Diamant novel about women in biblical times.
Always, a maker of feminine hygiene products,
has a global campaign to #EndPeriodPoverty.
According to their website, Always Confidence &
Puberty surveys done in 2017 and just last year
revealed that “nearly one in five American girls and
one in seven Canadian girls have either left school
early or missed school entirely because they did not
have access to period products.”
That’s in the continental U.S. and Canada. Here,
where Department of Public Health and Social Ser-
vices officials tell me that approximately 34 percent
of our population receive either welfare and/or food
stamps, the percentage of women and girls who
have to improvise on a monthly basis is probably
higher.
My office is working on some surveys to get
6
actual numbers, so that Guam can be a possible
recipient of the commitment by Always to donate
16 million pads worldwide to schoolgirls in need.
I spoke to two public school nurses recently about
“period poverty.” The high school nurse told me she
requests sanitary pads every year in her office sup-
ply list but that they never come (probably due to
budget constraints – one package can run you from
$7 - $10 depending on the brand). So she buys her
own, and “charges” the girls 50 cents per pad.
Many can’t pay, so she has them
write IOUs, which most never settle.
A middle school nurse told me the
same thing. Although some states
have required schools to provide these
products, looking to our government is
probably not an option at this budget-
ary point. So the Bureau of Women’s
Affairs is reaching out to #EndPeriod-
Poverty.
me following my K57 appearance:
Man: Mrs. Flores, you are doing a great job, but
I want to ask you, what about the men? Men need
equality too. Some men have to wear diapers, nai.
Me: Well, sir, some elderly women have to wear
diapers, too.
My office is also working with Island
Girl Power on a sewing project where-
by a group of women from Micronesia
are making reusable pads. These can
be washed and worn again. Of course,
this is only doable if you are at home,
because at school or work, this concept
can quickly become unsanitary. I am also (forewarn-
ing here) going to reach out to women’s clubs for
donations to public middle and high school nurses’
offices. Man: Yeah, but men, we have need too, like soap
and things, and where’s the equality?
In the 34th Guam Legislature, Sen. Regine Bis-
coe Lee introduced a bill to have these necessary
feminine hygiene products exempted from the gross
receipts tax, but says she received an incredible
amount of negative feedback – mostly from elderly
CHamoru men. Which brings me to my conversa-
tion with the nice elderly CHamoru man who called Me: Si Yu’os Ma’ase, sir. I really appreciate your
call. God bless you too.
Me (realizing that I now have to get a bit graphic
in order to make the point about the necessity of
these products for women): Sir, both men and wom-
en have to wear diapers sometimes. Both men and
women need soap, and shampoo, and other prod-
ucts. But sir, only women bleed every month.
Man: (pause) Ai. Well, God bless you. You are
doing a good job.
Jayne Flores, a longtime journalist, is now the
acting director of the Bureau of Women’s Affairs
of the government of Guam. You can reach her at
[email protected].
I am embarrassed to admit that I never thought about
the fact that these products are expensive, and that
there are many women and girls on this island who
simply cannot afford them. So what do they do? They
use rags, or toilet paper, or they simply stay home for a
few days every month.