Shoppers in Texas no longer have to pay a sales tax on menstrual products, making the state one of the few in the nation to eliminate the so-called “tampon tax.”
A new law that went into effect Friday eliminates the sales tax on feminine hygiene products including items like tampons, menstrual pads and menstrual cups.
In addition to menstrual products, the law, S.B. 379, also eliminates the sales tax on family care items including diapers, baby bottles, baby wipes, maternity clothing and breast milk pump products.
Color me surprised, was not expecting this from Texas.
Bizarrely, they have accidentally implemented an actual pro life policy
According to the links, the law was sponsored by Donna Howard (Dem) and Angie Button (Rep). Said 13 yays and 4 abstained from the financial committee.
Hopefully women constituents from both sides encouraged their reps to push forward.
Did… did Texas just do something right for once?
During the same session they banned drag shows in such a vague way that a trans person playing guitar in a public place could be fined or even arrested for sexual performance. Also made it illegal to refuse to identify yourself to police
Oh okay, so it was a distraction from the real issues
Even a stopped clock is right twice a day.
I’m guessing it’s for the wrong reasons. I imagine it’s a pro-procreation move.
Likely trying to score some points with female voters after rolling back Roe v Wade
I’m sure there’s some Republican politician someplace in Texas saying that women have the ability to shut their periods down if they try, and they don’t need socialist tampons.
God I want a socialist tampon inside me so bad. Socialism is so hot.
This is great - but is the “tampon tax” just “normal sales tax”?
Yes.
Yes. Problem is it only affects 50% of the population.
It would be fair(er) if it taxed Viagra at the same rate.
I don’t understand how that is a “problem”.
Rare Texas W
deleted by creator
This look to me like an advocacy group successfully advocating for common sense legislation:
“Advocates for menstrual equity who oppose a tax on menstrual products say the taboo around menstruation and the lack of access to menstrual products hurts women economically because it costs them money for products and may keep them from attending jobs and school. Poor menstrual hygiene poses health risks for women, including reproductive issues and urinary tract infections.”