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As part of the ordinance, period products would also be made available in men's restrooms.
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As 2022 comes to a close, we’re hearing from North Texans about what they've learned this year.
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The city of Dallas will now provide free access to menstrual products as part of their Racial Equity Plan alignment.
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If Austin Rep. Donna Howard's latest bill makes it through the Legislature and becomes law, Texas will join 24 other states that don't tax feminine hygiene products.
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While people consider deleting period tracking apps and worry about interstate travel restrictions, most pregnancy-related criminalization start in a much simpler way: with a report from a health care provider.
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Privacy advocates warn that mobile data, including the kind users provide to period trackers and fertility apps, could be used to track people who might be considering abortion.
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Many women say store shelves that once had the menstrual essentials have been sparse for months. When they are available, tampons have been a lot more expensive recently, due in part to inflation.
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A group of young women have teamed up with a prestigious Houston law firm to get the state to stop charging sales tax on menstrual products, arguing they qualify as “wound care dressings.”
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Activists say menstrual products are a basic necessity that shouldn't require a long walk to the school nurse's office, and that providing them is key to removing the stigma of periods.
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From Texas Standard : As the 2019 legislative session continues, Texas Standard is talking with members about some of the bills they’ve filed, and what...
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UT Austin’s two university unions are set to offer free tampons and pads for students who may struggle to afford them.