City rebates for cloth nappy families and reusable sanitary products

City rebates for cloth nappy families and reusable sanitary products

118 have signed. Let’s get to 200!
Started
Petition to
City of Stirling and

Why this petition matters

Started by Hannah Jackson

Cloth nappy and reusable sanitary product rebates are being successfully trialled and rolled out by Local Councils across Australia and the UK. These rebates recognise the benefits of cloth nappies and reusable sanitary products while making them accessible for the community. 

I am starting this petition to show City of Stirling council that residents in the community would like access to a rebate for cloth nappies and reusable sanitary products.

In Western Australia the City of Melville, City of Cockburn and Shire of Augusta-Margaret River currently offer rebates. There is currently a petition for the city of Bayswater to do the same.

What is a cloth nappy and reusable sanitary product rebate?

A household can receive up to fifty percent of the purchase back on new and secondhand items with proof of receipt at limit of $150. These reusable items can include:

Cloth nappies (all ages)
Swim nappies
Nappy liners
Cloth wipes
Wet bags
Nursing breast pads
Cloth menstrual and incontinence pads
Menstrual cups
Period underwear
Period wet bags


The initial financial outlay for reusable products can be a barrier for some. Rebates help ease costs while also reducing social stigmas around these items.

Why cloth nappies and reusable sanitary products are worth considering:

They reduce waste to landfill (children alone need between 6,000 to 7,000 nappies and people use 12000 pads and tampons throughout their life) - a significant environmental & financial benefit. Additionally there are capacity problems with some Perth landfills predicted to reach capacity in 5 years. Nappies, pads and tampons don't break down properly in landfill

Can help save up $3000 on nappies from birth to toilet training and up to $100 each year on menstrual items
Some reusable menstrual items will last for up to 10 years. They are more environmentally friendly, especially if items like nappies are sold on. 

Less plastic (did you know the average menstrual pad can contain up to 5 plastic bags within the pad itself! Including the packaging, it's a lot of plastic!)

Less harmful chemicals

Never risk running out, meaning less visits to the shops


*Only residents within the City of Stirling are encouraged to sign this petition. 

(1) Perth metropolitan councils face tough decisions on waste as landfill capacity deadlines loom - ABC News

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-08-01/perth-councils-face-tough-decisions-as-landfill-capacity-looms/100337038 

118 have signed. Let’s get to 200!