Greenbrier Off The Auction Block, An HIV Mystery And A Camping Ban That Targets The Homeless This West Virginia Week

On this West Virginia Week, we’ll hear from Governor Jim Justice about efforts to auction off his Greenbrier Resort – and what he says is behind it all.

Plus, why health officials worry that HIV infections in rural West Virginia are going undetected  – and spreading. 

We’ll also take a look at a proposed camping ban some say targets the homeless in Morgantown. 

Maria Young is our host this week. Our theme music is by Matt Jackfert.

West Virginia Week is a web-only podcast that explores the week’s biggest news in the Mountain State. It’s produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Chris Schulz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Jack Walker, Liz McCormick and Maria Young.

Learn more about West Virginia Week.

‘Period Poverty’: Reducing Barriers To Menstrual Product Access

Activists call barriers to accessing pads and tampons “period poverty.” They say its impact is felt across American life, from the classroom to the prison system. But some in West Virginia and beyond are working to change that.

Roughly one-third of American women have struggled to afford products like pads and tampons, according to a 2023 survey conducted by data analytics firm YouGov.

Activists call this barrier to access “period poverty.” They say its impact is felt across American life, from the classroom to the prison system.

Lacey Gero is director of government relations at the Alliance for Period Supplies, a nonprofit network working to expand access to period products nationwide. She spoke to reporter Jack Walker about the danger of period poverty, and efforts across the country to address it.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Walker: What exactly is “period poverty,” and how is it impacting lives across the United States?

Gero: 2 in 5 people have struggled to purchase period products, and that’s period poverty. It’s the inability to afford an adequate supply of period products to manage one’s menstrual cycle. What we see is that period poverty exacerbates this vicious cycle of poverty by forcing menstruators to withdraw from daily life, lose pay or miss educational opportunities — or even risk infections by using proxy products such as socks or toilet paper, or not changing products as often as needed.

Our organization, I’m sure you saw on the website, is a national network of individual nonprofits that are working in their local communities to address period poverty. Those individual nonprofits collect, warehouse and distribute period supplies, so they’re doing that on-the-ground work. We also do awareness raising, research and advocacy to truly target and eradicate the issue of period poverty in the U.S.

Walker: What are some reasons an individual might struggle to afford period products?

Gero: One of the reasons that period products can be difficult to access in the U.S. is the cost. They’re quite expensive for something that is basic, essential and needed by anyone who has a period. In some states, they’re even more expensive because they’re charged a sales tax on the products, which is the case in West Virginia. Additionally, period supplies are not covered by any government assistance program like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) or Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). It forces people that have periods to spend their own money on products, and that can sometimes be challenging, especially for young individuals.

Walker: I know one setting this plays out is in the classroom. Actually, just last year state lawmakers considered — but did not fully pass — a bill to provide free period products to all schools in West Virginia. Could you speak to how this issue is affecting students?

Gero: Definitely. We see that students are impacted by a lack of access to period products, and the impact on the educational setting is quite tremendous. A study was actually conducted by PERIOD, another national organization that we work closely with, and Thinx, and they worked together. … The first time the study was done was in 2021, and then it was repeated again in 2023. Both times, that study found that 1 in 4 students have struggled to purchase period products. So that’s caused them to miss school and class time because they don’t have the products they need. So they’re staying home, or maybe they’re in class, but they’re distracted thinking about where their next product will come from, or if they’ll have to use some sort of proxy item just to make it through that school day.

Walker: Obviously, this issue doesn’t just affect youth. I know your organization also advocates for expanding period product access in prisons and jails. Could you speak to that work, too?

Gero: Yeah, this is really complicated. There’s laws around period products and prisons across the country, but they vary in outline and implementation. Some states require that period products are available for those that are incarcerated, but they have to request them, or they have to pay for them at the commissary. Sometimes, they don’t say how much that’s going to be. So it’s quite a challenge across the country in many states where there’s this barrier to access. You don’t know if you’re going to get the adequate amount of period products that you need to get through your period. We’re even seeing and hearing in some states that this is causing an issue between guards, who might be the ones that have the products, and those that are incarcerated. It creates a kind of unequal balance of power for somebody who’s just trying to manage their period. So, not having that access in prisons is a health problem and it’s also a dignity problem.

Walker: Beyond just buying and distributing more period products, what are some solutions people are pursuing nationally to end period poverty?

Gero: At the federal level, there’s been a few bills that have been introduced. But the really big one, the comprehensive bill, is called the Menstrual Equity For All Act. It was introduced by Congresswoman Grace Meng. She’s been introducing this legislation for quite some time, and every year there’s another layer added, because we’re realizing that we need products. In addition to schools, we need them in shelters, we need them in prisons. This bill really works to comprehensively address that. It targets access in schools, prisons, shelters, public buildings, so it would provide funding for that.

Walker: And at the state level?

Gero: At the state level, we talked about schools. There are 28 states and D.C. that have passed bipartisan legislation to increase access to period products in schools. Then there are efforts across the country in the 20 states that still charge sales tax on period products to get rid of that tax so the items are seen as basic necessities and not luxury goods. I think that issue particularly is making people really frustrated, because it’s a very unfair tax that only one portion of the population has to pay.

For more information on period poverty and efforts to expand period product access, visit the Alliance for Period Supplies website.

HIV In Rural Communities And Navigating Period Poverty This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, West Virginia ranks 18th in the rate of new HIV infections but that may be an incomplete picture, and a conversation about the danger of period poverty, and what folks across the country are doing to address it.

On this West Virginia Morning, West Virginia ranks 18th in the rate of new HIV infections but that may be an incomplete picture. Caleb Hellerman brings us the fourth episode of a month-long series called “Public Health, Public Trust” produced in partnership between West Virginia Public Broadcasting and the Global Health Reporting Center.

Also, roughly one-third of American women have struggled to afford products like pads and tampons. Reporter Jack Walker spoke to Lacey Gero, director of government relations at the Alliance for Period Supplies, about the danger of period poverty, and what folks across the country are doing to address it.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Shepherd University.

Maria Young produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

Senate Passes Bill To Provide Feminine Hygiene Products In Schools

On Wednesday, the West Virginia Senate passed a bill that would require the boards of education of each county to provide free feminine hygiene products to grades three through 12.

On Wednesday, the West Virginia Senate passed a bill that would require the boards of education in each county to provide free feminine hygiene products to grades three through 12.

The local boards are also required to develop a plan to make the products available so the student can obtain them discreetly.

A 2021 study conducted by U from Kotex, the founding sponsor of Alliance for Period Supplies, found that two in five people have struggled to purchase period products, a problem the COVID-19 pandemic has compounded.

If the House of Delegates approves Senate Bill 489 and it is signed by the governor, West Virginia would join 16 other states in requiring period products in schools.

The bill now goes to the House for their consideration.

Senate Education Discusses Financial Literacy, Free Period Products

The Senate Education Committee started the day off with a lively discussion of several topics, including history and hygiene.

The Senate Education Committee started the day off with a lively discussion of several topics, including history and hygiene. 

Senate Bill 216 would require all schools to instruct students on the Holocaust and other genocides.

Although there was brief discussion around the need to define the term “genocide,” much of the debate and ensuing amendments to the bill related to concerns about government overreach into private education.

Sen. Rollan Roberts, R-Raleigh, argued the bill exacerbated an imbalance of creating requirements for secular schools, but not for homeschooling or other alternative education programs.

“What we’re adding on to I’m fine with, I have no problem,” Roberts said. “I’m thrilled, except for the forcing of the private schools to do these things when, by the way, we have twice as many homeschoolers in the state of West Virginia as we do private school students. We don’t do those things with all of the others. This is a singling out, is where I have the problem.”

Roberts proposed an amendment to strike the words, “private, parochial, and denominational” from the bill, which was adopted.

Sen. Mike Oliverio, R-Monongalia, proposed another amendment that would require all public schools to teach financial literacy.

“The basic understanding of a checking account and banking and how a mortgage works, how a car payment works; those kinds of things, I think are things that somehow some of our children are, as they leave public schools, are not prepared to have knowledge in those areas, and those are decisions they’re having to make that can really affect them,” Oliverio said.

State Superintendent David Roach testified that West Virginia schools do teach financial literacy and have for years but conceded that there is nothing in the state code requiring it be taught. The amendment also passed. 

A committee substitute of Senate Bill 216 was reported to the full Senate with the recommendation that it pass.

Free Period Products

The committee also took up Senate Bill 489, which would require all county boards of education to provide free feminine hygiene products to students in grades three through 12. 

In recent surveys from the Alliance for Period Supplies, a nonprofit sponsored by Kotex, more than two in five people with periods say they have struggled to purchase period products due to lack of income at some point in their life, often leading to missed work and school. The surveys also show COVID-19 has only exacerbated the issue of access.

Sen. David Stover, R-Wyoming, voiced his support for the bill. As a teacher for more than 20 years, Stover said he saw firsthand the need for period products in schools.

“What I ended up doing for the last 10 or 12 years I taught, any two or three of the female students that I knew, and knew their moms – who I probably taught 20 years earlier – I just donated for 500 bucks,” Stover said. 

“I said, ‘Here’s the fund, you and your mothers figure out where this will be stored. You don’t need to do anything, we’ll kind of know when you get up and go to that particular file cabinet.’ It was a godsend that that could happen. It would be a bigger godsend because it ended up being that students from every teacher in the building would interrupt my class then. So you need to do that in a central way. This could have been done a long time ago.”

If passed, West Virginia would join 16 other states including neighboring Maryland and Virginia in requiring period products in schools.

Senate Bill 489 was also reported to the full Senate with the recommendation that it pass.

Results Of Focus Groups

At the end of the meeting, the Senators heard a joint presentation from the state’s two education employee organizations. 

American Federation of Teachers-West Virginia President Fred Albert and West Virginia Education Association President Dale Lee presented some of the findings from six focus groups the organizations conducted across the state in late November and early December 2022 to collect community input on the factors that will help improve student achievement.

They reported the major finding was schools simply need more resources, closely followed by concerns of discipline, teacher compensation and academic freedom.

W.Va. Senate Passes Bill Calling For State Jails, Prisons To Provide Free Feminine Hygiene Products

Members of the West Virginia Senate have voted to provide free feminine hygiene products to inmates of the state’s prisons and jails. 

Senate Bill 484 would have the superintendent of a state correctional facility to provide inmates their choice of tampons or sanitary napkins within eight hours of a request.

The upper chamber passed the measure on a 32-0 vote. The proposal now heads to the House of Delegates.

In 2019, there were over 1,500 female inmates in the state’s prisons and jails. According to a fiscal note attached to Senate Bill 484, providing 2,000 cases of tampons to that many inmates would cost about $80,000 a year.

Other proposed legislation this session would require county boards of education to provide students free feminine hygiene products in schools. 

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