Art by B. K. Dong

Art by B. K. Dong

Menstrual Equity at Laurier

We all deserve equitable access to the menstrual care products we need to be present and comfortable in life. Just like toilet paper and soap, menstrual products should be free in all public washrooms. In acknowledgement of this, as of Winter 2022, Laurier students and staff have access to free menstrual care products in some washrooms in Waterloo, Brantford campuses and Kitchener. 

In addition to ensuring that menstruating staff and students feel fully included on Laurier campuses, this project will also help address period poverty–the lack of access to menstrual care products as a result of financial barriers experienced by Laurier students and staff.

  • 38% of Laurier students and staff struggle to afford the menstrual care products they need (LSPIRG, 2019)

This initiative is the product of years of dedicated menstrual equity advocacy championed by LSPIRG in partnership with the Sustainability Office, Facilities and Asset Management, the Centre for Student Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion, the Graduate Students’ Association, and the Students’ Union and through participation by current students, staff, and alumni. Funding for the first 16 months of this project was unanimously supported by members of the Student Affairs Advisory Committee and the project is being managed by Facilities and Asset Management.

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Need menstrual care products?

Here is where you can find pads and tampons on campus!

Waterloo Washrooms

  • Science Building (washroom across from Dean’s office, gendered women’s washroom)

  • Library (main floor, gender-neutral)

  • Martin Luther University College (main floor, gender-neutral)

  • Fred Nichols Campus Centre (second floor in 24 Lounge by vending machines, gender-neutral)

  • Bricker Academic Building (first floor, gendered women’s and men’s)

  • Arts Building (second floor, gender-neutral)

  • Peters Building (first floor by Frank’s Coffee Haus, gender-neutral)

  • Lazaridis (first floor, gendered women’s and gender-neutral)

  • Athletic Complex (downstairs in Kinesiology Hallway, gender-neutral)

Brantford Washrooms

  • Grand River Hall (basement, gendered women’s and men’s)

  • One Market (near lounge area, gender-neutral)

  • RAC West (basement, gendered women’s and men’s)

  • Student Centre (first floor, gendered women’s and men’s)

Kitchener Washrooms

  • Faculty of Social Work (second floor, gender-neutral)

Please note that dispensers in gendered “men’s” washrooms are in the accessible stalls.

Other ways to access free menstrual products on campus:

  • Our Free Weekly Distro program run by LSPIRG, Luther and Wellness Education

  • The LSPIRG offices

  • Some Laurier departments including: Wellness Education, the Indigenous Student Centres, Centre for Student Equity, Diversity and Inclusion

  • The Laurier Food Bank run by the Students’ Union (request some in your next parcel)

While there are these options on campus, you deserve to be able to walk into any washroom to get what you need, just like toilet paper. LSPIRG will continue to advocate until all washrooms on all WLU campuses have period products. We are also working on providing more options of products, both disposable and reusable.

Access to menstrual care products is a right, not a luxury. Period.

You are invited to participate in an online research study that is being conducted by Eden Hennessey, a researcher at Wilfrid Laurier University and Hayley Newman-Petryshen, a Research Associate at McGill University.

The purpose of this study is to gain insight on a project supporting Menstrual Equity (i.e., the affordability, accessibility, and safety of menstrual products) at Wilfrid Laurier University.

As a participant, you will be asked demographic questions (e.g., gender), and questions about Laurier’s Menstrual Equity initiative. This survey will take approximately 10-15 minutes to complete. We are seeking 300+ participants 17+ years of age from the Laurier community (including those who menstruate and those who do not).

Data from this voluntary survey will be instrumental in guiding institutional decision-making related to Menstrual Equity at Wilfrid Laurier University. This project has Research Ethics Board Approval (#REB 8601).

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Rattled by seeing these stained panties? You’re not alone.

For many of us, periods are a natural, uncontrollable part of life. And yet menstrual blood is often treated as cringier than a gory scene in a movie. We aren’t used to seeing images like this because society actively hides them.

TV commercials depict mysterious, transparent blue liquid on pads and avoid the words “period” or “blood” by saying things like “time of the month.” As menstruators, we are taught to shroud our periods in shame and secrecy: We thoroughly wrap a bloodied tampon applicator in toilet paper before putting it in a waste bin or discreetly smuggle tampons from knapsacks to pockets.

There’s nothing wrong with menstrual bleeding. There’s nothing shameful about asking for a period product, leaking onto your underwear, or menstruating during sex.

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Myth: Only women get periods.

Fact: People of many genders can have periods.  Some cisgender women don’t have periods (e.g. menopause, health reasons) and some trans and non-binary folks do have periods. 

Everyone deserves to be able to access the menstrual products they need, which means menstrual products (note: we aren’t calling them ‘feminine hygiene products’!) should not only be available in femme spaces or “women’s” washrooms. 

Another barrier to access is that the (in)affordability of menstrual care products disproportionately impacts trans and non-binary folks, who are more likely to be living in poverty.

  • 75% of trans and non-binary students and staff struggle to afford menstrual care products, compared to the average of 38% for all students and staff. (LSPIRG, 2019)

Plus, products that look stereotypically feminine don’t work for everyone. Period stigma is even greater for trans and non-binary folks than cis folks --as their experiences can be complexified by transphobia and gender dysphoria. That’s why options like boxer brief period underwear and gender-neutral menstrual cup pouches  are so important!

It’s impossible to tell by looking at someone if they menstruate, so don’t make assumptions. Resist the cis-tem. We stand with menstruators of all genders and you should too.

Signage image text: Laurier supports everyone's right to choose a washroom that aligns with their gender identity. People using this space belong here.

If you’ve experienced harm

Everyone has the right to use the washroom in accordance with their lived gender identity and/or gender expression without the fear of harm or harassment, as these signs in WLU washrooms suggest. Trans and non-binary people who have experienced harm in washrooms can learn about support and reporting options at the button below. The Inclusive Washroom Initiative also provides tips on what to do if you witness transphobia or harassment.

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Art by B. K. Dong

Art by B. K. Dong

Thankfully, there are TONS of options nowadays that are sustainable and affordable. For example, cardboard applicators are much less wasteful than plastic ones. But better yet, there are products you buy once and use for years.

Zero waste options that save money in the long run:

  • Menstrual underwear (looks like normal underwear styles yet holds up to two tampons worth of blood)

  • Menstrual cups (silicone cup inserted for up to 10 hours and can last many years)

  • Reusable pads (pads that come in all kinds of absorbency, shapes and lovely designs that get rinsed and machine-washed)

There are also products that are partially reusable and partially disposable such as a reusable tampon applicator.

There are lots of reasons people may use disposable menstrual products. Maybe it’s due to accessibility or perhaps you can’t afford the initial investment -- that’s not your fault and we can’t blame and shame folks. However, it’s possible to have a plastic-free period and it’s important to try to reduce your waste if you can.

Bleed red, go green.


We need to remember that people of all levels of income and security may menstruate, including homeless folks.  Living in period poverty can contribute to feelings of shame, create lost opportunities, cause people to miss meals, and create health risks. These negative consequences are also more common for Black, Indigenous and Racialized people. In order to strive for equity, we need to support those who are in need most. This is part of the reason that many Laurier offices that support marginalized students offer free menstrual products. Striving for menstrual equity means that we need to simultaneously work to end all forms of oppression including racism, colonialism, sexism, cissexism, ableism and queerphobia.

Do you have questions, comments or suggestions on menstrual equity at Laurier?

Feel free to reach out to us at info@lspirg.org