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New York lawmakers repeal tax on feminine hygenie products

Posted 8/5/16

The state has removed sales tax on feminine hygiene products. Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Thursday signed legislation that eliminates the tax at the state and local level, which critics had dubbed the …

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New York lawmakers repeal tax on feminine hygenie products

Posted

The state has removed sales tax on feminine hygiene products.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo on Thursday signed legislation that eliminates the tax at the state and local level, which critics had dubbed the “tampon tax.”

Feminine hygiene products have been taxable since the state sales tax was first instituted in 1965, even as a wide variety of other goods, such as dietary and family planning products, have been exempt, Cuomo’s office said.

New York is one of the first states to join the movement to exempt feminine hygiene products from sales tax, which is expected to save women purchasing tampons and other similar products an estimated $10 million a year, according to Cuomo’s office.

“With the signing of this bill today, we are taking a monumental step forward in reforming our out-of-touch tax laws and we are sending a strong message to New York’s women that they are being heard,” Senator Sue Serino said, one of the bill’s sponsors. “This day is long overdue and I commend Governor Cuomo, as well as my colleagues in the Senate, for helping to finally make this tax a thing of the past. It is my hope that we can continue down the path of applying commonsense to our tax laws as we work to make our state more affordable for all New Yorkers.”

“I am proud that my bill exempting feminine hygiene products from state and local sales tax has been signed into law by the Governor. The signing of this bill into law represents a new dawn,” Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal said, another of the bill’s sponsors. “Women statewide will no longer be burdened by a lingering tax that was levied at a time when women were not part of government and the decision-making process. The tampon tax is regressive, and lifting it will spare all women the extra monthly burden of paying taxes on products that are already unaffordable to many.”

“This is a regressive tax on essential products that women have had to pay for far too long and lifting it is a matter of social and economic justice,” Cuomo said in a prepared statement. “I commend Assemblywoman Rosenthal and Senator Serino on their strong advocacy and for hard work in passing this important legislation.”