Free sanitary products at Leeds station – Network Rail launches new initiative to tackle period poverty: Free sanitary products at Leeds station – Network Rail launches new initiative to tackle period poverty

Monday 6 Dec 2021

Free sanitary products at Leeds station – Network Rail launches new initiative to tackle period poverty

Region & Route:
Eastern: North & East
| Eastern
  • Network Rail has made sanitary products available to all who need them at Leeds station
  • The new initiative aims to help tackle period poverty and make sure people can travel with confidence
  • Products now available from free vending machines in the toilets

Leeds station is now offering free sanitary products to those who need them, with new vending machines in the toilets.

Network Rail has launched this initiative to help tackle period poverty as a survey found 10% of girls have been unable to afford sanitary products1. Passengers and station users can pick up pads and tampons from the new vending machines in the female and accessible toilets on the main concourse and on the platforms.

It is hoped that access to the free products will help passengers travel with dignity and confidence. Earlier this year, the station also opened its Changing Places facility – a toilet for people with profound and multiple disabilities – to help make rail travel more accessible.

Maxine Joicey, Station Customer Experience Manager for Network Rail’s North and East Route, said: “This new initiative, combined with other recent accessibility improvements at the station, is a huge move in the right direction. We want everyone to feel welcome at Leeds station. That’s why we’re providing free access to period products which we hope will allow our passengers - or anyone else in need - to travel by train or explore the city of Leeds with confidence.”

Period poverty is when a person struggles or is unable to access sanitary products due to financial constraints, with periods costing an average of £128 a year, or £10 a month2. It’s an issue which affects women, girls and people who menstruate all over the world.

Cllr Jonathan Pryor, Deputy Leader and Executive Member for Economy, Culture and Education at Leeds City Council, said: “Period poverty is something no one should have to experience and we welcome this initiative from Network Rail; it builds on Leeds City Council’s previous work with schools to provide free sanitary products through a variety of locations and provisions, and also helps tackle the stigma around periods and period poverty.”

Notes to Editors

1A 2017 survey by Plan International UK found that one in 10 (10 per cent) of girls have been unable to afford sanitary products.

2The average cost of a period is around £128 a year, or £10 a month (Bloody Good Poverty)

  • One in seven girls (15 per cent) have also struggled to afford sanitary wear (Plan International)
  • One in seven girls (14 per cent) have had to ask to borrow sanitary wear from a friend due to affordability issues (Plan International)
  • More than one in ten girls (12%) has had to improvise sanitary wear due to affordability issues (Plan International)
  • One in five (19%) of girls have changed to a less suitable sanitary product due to cost (Plan International)

Contact information

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Louise Leighton
Media Relations Manager
Network Rail
07858 375508
louise.leighton2@networkrail.co.uk

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