Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Shock At Pricey Tampons At Calgary Airport, But That's The Norm In The North

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Dec, 2017 12:43 PM
    CALGARY — A $15 box of tampons sold at the Calgary International Airport may have elicited shock online, but it's common for feminine hygiene products to cost that much — or more — in many remote northern communities.
     
     
    Carlee Field was waiting for a flight from Calgary to Vancouver last month when she stopped to use the ladies' room in the terminal and saw a box of tampons with an unsigned handwritten note.   
     
     
    "None of the tampon vending machines work in this area so I was forced to buy this $15 box from Relay. Not acceptable!" the note said. "Please take one if you need one."
     
     
    Shortly after Field posted a photo on the social media site Reddit, the airport authority wrote that the machines had been refilled and the price at Relay had been lowered to $6.25.
     
     
    Field is glad her post has opened a conversation about how period products are too often viewed as a luxury rather than a necessity.
     
     
    "I don't go month to month and go, 'Man, I really want a box of tampons.' No, I really need one," Field said.
     
     
    "It would be cool if they were just free for everybody. They give toilet paper away for free. Why can't they give pads and tampons away for free?"
     
     
    Keetha Mercer, program manager of community initiatives at the Canadian Women's Foundation, said she's not surprised Field's post went viral since it speaks to another cost women have to factor into their daily lives — a particular burden for 1.5 million women in Canada who live on a low income.
     
     
    "Women are paid less and our products often cost more," she said. "Women shouldn't have to choose between putting food on the table and buying products for their basic needs, but that's the reality for many women in Canada."
     
     
    The regional disparities are striking, she said.
     
     
    In Iqaluit, a 40-pack of tampons is $15 and in the First Nations community of Attiwapiskat, Ont., near the shore of James Bay, it's about $18.
     
     
    Community organizer Nicole White began collecting donations of pads and tampons for schools, health centres and shelters after hearing that girls in northern Saskatchewan were missing school during their periods.
     
     
    "That is something that's unacceptable to me," she said. "If you're a person who's living under the poverty line, feminine hygiene products are seen as a luxury."
     
     
    White's group, Moon Time Sisters, donated 96,000 products to 15 Saskatchewan communities during its inaugural drive last spring. It has since branched out into Ontario.
     
     
    Veronica Bairos, who runs the Ontario chapter, said women who can't afford pads or tampons resort to using rags or used clothes.
     
     
    "It is a pretty big expense for a lot of women. And obviously income is very low usually in those areas. Employment rates are quite low in those areas."  
     
     
    Feminine hygiene products were subject to GST until 2015 — even though incontinence products, cocktail cherries, human sperm and wedding cakes were not, said the group Canadian Menstruators, which campaigned to end the tax.  
     
     
    The group estimates Canadians spent almost $520 million on sanitary products in 2014.
     
     
    Even without the GST, the cost is still a burden for many.
     
     
    Most women in Canada don't know what it's like to ration pads and tampons so that they can make it through the day, said Elsbeth Mehrer, vice-president of engagement and people at YWCA Calgary.
     
     
    The YWCA receives donations of those products, but when they run out, the cost comes out of programming funding.
     
     
    Mehrer said it's important that feminine hygiene products are readily available at shelters for women struggling with homelessness or fleeing domestic violence.
     
     
    "It doesn't become yet another thing on their list to tick off as they're trying to go about their daily lives," she said. "It shouldn't be something that's hard."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Report Lays Out Exercise Guidelines For Kids Under 5, Including 'Tummy Time' For Babies

    Report Lays Out Exercise Guidelines For Kids Under 5, Including 'Tummy Time' For Babies
    The new report was developed by experts including the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology; obesity specialists at Ottawa's Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario; and the non-profit group ParticipAction.

    Report Lays Out Exercise Guidelines For Kids Under 5, Including 'Tummy Time' For Babies

    Apology To Canadians Persecuted For Being Gay Coming Nov. 28: Justin Trudeau

    OTTAWA — Martine Roy was just 20-years-old and less than a year into her chosen career as a medical assistant with the Canadian Armed Forces at CFB Borden when military police suddenly showed up at her workplace to arrest her.

    Apology To Canadians Persecuted For Being Gay Coming Nov. 28: Justin Trudeau

    Abbotsford Const. John Davidson Didn't Like Guns, But Didn't Hesitate When Call Came

    Abbotsford Const. John Davidson Didn't Like Guns, But Didn't Hesitate When Call Came
    An Abbotsford, B.C., police constable killed in the line of duty was remembered as dedicated and caring, a man who had a gut-busting sense of humour and a dislike for guns.

    Abbotsford Const. John Davidson Didn't Like Guns, But Didn't Hesitate When Call Came

    Man And Woman Charged With Manslaughter In July Homicide In Burnaby Starbucks

    Man And Woman Charged With Manslaughter In July Homicide In Burnaby Starbucks
    Lawrence Sharpe, 40, And Oldouz Pournouruz, 35, Arrested In Relation To The Death Of Michael Page-vincelli

    Man And Woman Charged With Manslaughter In July Homicide In Burnaby Starbucks

    Motorcycle Injuries In Ontario Twice As Costly To Treat As Those From Car Collisions

    Motorcycle Injuries In Ontario Twice As Costly To Treat As Those From Car Collisions
     new study suggests motorcyclists in Ontario are three times more likely to be injured in a collision than people in automobiles, 10 times more likely to suffer serious injuries, and those injuries will cost more to treat.

    Motorcycle Injuries In Ontario Twice As Costly To Treat As Those From Car Collisions

    Taking From the Rich

    Taking From the Rich
    The first change intends to eliminate “income sprinkling,” where income is distributed to family members who earn less in order to take advantage of a lower income tax rate.

    Taking From the Rich