Campaign
delivers 62,000 menstrual items to Rhode Island Food Bank
RI CLUW President Maureen Martin who is also Secretary-Treasurer of the RI AFL-CIO |
The Rhode
Island Coalition of Labor Union Women (CLUW)
lead an effort, Help a Sister Out
Period, that resulted in a donation of 62,000 menstrual products being
delivered to the Rhode Island Food
Bank.
“These items will be distributed
through our network of about 158 member agencies across the state, which
includes food pantries, meal sites, shelters and of course women’s shelters,”
said Lisa Roth Blackman, Chief
Philanthropy Officer at the Rhode Island Food Bank.
“Here at the Food Bank, we know that
many children and adults lack regular access to healthy, nutritious food.
Without those meals they may miss out on many activities that we all take for
granted. The same is true of menstrual products. Without them, young girls miss
school and women miss work.”
CLUW had the help of the Rhode Island Federation of Teachers and
Health Professionals, Teamsters
Local 251, NEARI, UFCW, IBEW, the Rhode Island AFL-CIO and
others in their efforts.
“We understood that there were women
who didn’t go to work because even women who have jobs, who are low wage
workers, cannot afford the products they need if it comes upon you suddenly,”
said Maureen Martin, President of CLUW
and Secretary-Treasurer of the Rhode Island AFL-CIO.
“This also brought a number of labor
unions together which is very important because we all know that we’re better
when we work together,” said Frank
Flynn, President of the Rhode Island Federation of Teachers and Health
Professionals.
“We know that poverty comes in many
different forms and sometimes we don’t realize how people are affected by it,”
said Kate Brewster, Executive Director
of the Jonnycake Center of Peacedale.
“For low wage working women and
women living in poverty the inability to access menstrual products can
marginalize them and put them at risk for preventable health complications. We
distribute these products to women through our food pantry and to teens through
our Jonny’s locker program which provides high school students with toiletries,
snacks and hygiene items that their families may not be able to afford.”
“I would like to ask you to go home
or go back to work and start talking about this,” said Martin, closing the
short program. “Start talking about this to people who maybe wouldn’t normally
talk about this. Talk about having periods, about who’s having them and why
this is a problem, why people afford them and why they aren’t accessible to
people in public buildings…”
The Rhode Island
Community Food Bank distributes food to 53,000
struggling Rhode Islanders each month through a statewide network of 158 member
agencies including food pantries, meal sites, shelters, youth programs and
senior centers.
Steve Ahlquist is a frontline reporter in Rhode
Island. He has covered human rights, social justice, progressive politics and
environmental news for half a decade.Uprise RI is his new project, and he's
doing all he can to make it essential reading. atomicsteve@gmail.com