Big Issue Changemaker Ella Daish, a campaigner for the removal of plastic from period products, has teamed up with an ethical shopping platform to get high quality pads and tampons to people in poverty.
The Eco Period Box will be open online for the first time, meaning shoppers using Ethical Superstore can donate plastic-free products while they browse or at checkout.
For every ten products donated, two more will be added by the company – and it will go to Changing Lives, a charity across the North East, North West, Yorkshire and the Midlands which is helping socially disadvantaged people get back on their feet.
The initiative ran in December 2018 and April 2019 with drop-off points stationed in 20 shops around the UK. Now it’s hoped that bringing the initiative online will mean the people who need the products won’t miss out while much of the country is socially distancing at home in light of the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak.
Cardiff-based Daish, a former postal worker, was named a Big Issue Changemaker earlier this year for her campaign to get plastic removed from period products to ease the strain on the planet. Her efforts, including a petition which has been signed by more than 205,000 people to date, saw supermarket giants like Tesco stocking plastic-free period products. When the Welsh Government announced it would spend £2.3m on putting free sanitary products in all schools, it asked that councils spend 10 per cent of the cash on reusable products. But after getting wind of Daish’s campaign, Caerphilly Council decided they would spend the whole grant on plastic-free sanitary products. Now she’s campaigning for other local authorities across the UK to follow suit.
“I set-up Eco Period Box to address period poverty in a way that I feel truly benefits all,” the campaigner said. “Eco-friendly and reusable period products are not only better for the people using them, but also the planet. Everyone, no matter their situation, deserves a choice in what they use.