Anishinaabe woman collecting menstrual products for First Nations left out of Ontario plan - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 09:02 AM | Calgary | -16.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Indigenous

Anishinaabe woman collecting menstrual products for First Nations left out of Ontario plan

An Anishinaabe woman is organizing a menstrual product drive forstudents in northwestern Ontario First Nations after they were excluded from a provincialinitiative to provide theproducts for free in schools.

'Jurisdictions shouldn't matter,' says Tania Cameron

Tania Cameron organized a menstrual product drive after finding out that on-reserve schools were being excluded from a Ontario plan to give out millions of products over three years. (Josh Cameron)

An Anishinaabe woman is organizing a menstrual product drive forstudents in northwestern Ontario First Nations after they were excluded from a provincialinitiative to provide theproducts for free in schools.

The Ontario government announced in October that Shoppers Drug Mart would provide six million essential hygiene items for free, annually, to school boards in the province for at least the next three years.

"I immediately inquired as to whether or not that includes on-reserve students living in Ontario," said Tania Cameron,aKenora, Ont.-based community organizer.

She found outFirst Nations in Ontario weren't includedwhen Sol Mamakwa, the NDP MPP for the Kiiwetinoong riding, asked about it in the legislature last month.

"It's just going to the municipalities and school boards," said Cameron.

Cameron, who is Anishinaabe from Niisaachewan Anishinaabe Nation north of Kenora, started collecting menstrual products and monetary donations for on-reservestudents on Nov.1.

"It's just catching like wildfire and the support from the community locally and regionally is just incredible,"she said.

Cameron has done similar menstrual product drives in the past andsaid that it's unfortunate that a project meant for all Ontario students would excludestudents on First Nations.

"Jurisdictions shouldn't matter," said Cameron.

"A student in needshouldn't be recognized in terms of boundaries, federal [or] provincial boundaries."

Help from other organizations

There are 133 First Nationsin Ontario and Cameron plans on trying to get supplies to at least 25in the northwest region of the province.

She has received over $2,900 worth of monetary donations so far and is in the process of setting up partnerships with organizations to help with shipping and distribution.

Cameron has also partnered with the Ontario chapter of Moon Time Sisters, a period equity organization that works with northern and remote Indigenous communities.

Moon Time Sisters has agreed to issue tax receipts to donors.Itslead co-ordinator, Veronica Brown, said she was disappointed to learn that on-reserve students were being excluded from theinitiative

Veronica Brown is the lead co-ordinator with Moon Time Sisters. She says it shouldn't be up to grassroots movements to supply northern Indigenous communities with menstrual products. (Submitted by Veronica Brown)

"It's just another colonial barrier that's being forced upon Indigenous youth and we need to move past this," said Brown.

She saidif Ontario can provide rapid COVID-19tests to schools on First Nations, then menstrual products should also be considered essential.

"Both the provincial and the federal government need to be working towardslooking at how we can solve this," said Brown.

Loblaw'open to discussions'

Ontario's Ministry of Education did not provide a statement toCBCNews but said on background that 46,000 off-reserve students in Ontario identify as Indigenous and will benefit from the provincialinitiative.

The ministry said it has asked the federal government to adopt a similar menstrual product initiative for First Nation and federally-run schools.

In an emailed statement from Loblaw, the parent company of Shoppers Drug Mart, a spokesperson wrote that the companyis donating products to the Ministry of Education, whichis responsible for how they get distributed to schools, and the criteria.

The company said it has not been contacted by any Indigenous communities "but would certainly be open to discussions."

Cameron's product drive will continue until Nov. 25

With files from Jasmine Kabatay