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Wisconsin Watch partners with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. Read our methodology to learn how we check claims.

No.

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz in May 2023 signed legislation requiring public schools to provide free menstrual products to “all menstruating students in restrooms regularly used by students in grades 4 to 12 according to a plan developed by the school district.”

The Minnesota Education Department told Wisconsin Watch: “Each school district should have its own plan to comply with the legislation. (The department) has not directed schools to provide these products in boys’ bathrooms.” Some schools have stocked them in unisex bathrooms instead.

Wisconsin U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, echoing fellow Republicans across the country, claimed that Walz signed the legislation “to force women’s feminine hygiene products to be installed in boys’ bathrooms.”

Walz has signed bills that made Minnesota a refuge for youths seeking gender-affirming care, bar libraries from banning LGBTQ books and ban conversion therapy.

Editor’s note: This fact brief was originally published Aug. 8, 2024, and rated Yes. The brief was revised on Aug. 21, 2024, after the Minnesota Education Department provided additional information.

This fact brief is responsive to conversations such as this one.

Sources

Minnesota Department of Education Correspondence

Minnesota Legislature: HF 2497 Status in the House for the 93rd Legislature (2023)

Minnesota Legislature: HF 2497

New York Times: Trump Campaign Criticizes Walz for State Law Providing Tampons in Schools

ABC4 News: State rep argues ‘not all students who menstruate are female’ in fight to put period products in boys bathrooms

The Hill: Why Trump supporters are calling Walz ‘Tampon Tim’

Google Docs: Ron Johnson WisGOP press call on Tim Walz and bathrooms 8/7/24

Out Magazine: Kamala Harris picks Tim Walz as her VP — but how pro-LGBTQ+ is he?

The Hill: Tim Walz helped make Minnesota an LGBTQ ‘refuge.’ Could he do the same for America?

Education Week: States That Require Period Products for Free in Schools

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Tom Kertscher joined Wisconsin Watch as a full-time Milwaukee-based reporter in October 2024 after starting as a freelance Fact Briefs reporter in January 2023. In addition to contributing to Wisconsin Watch’s collaboration with The Gigafact Project to combat online misinformation, he reports on Wisconsin policy, labor, energy and the rapid expansion of data centers across the state. Kertscher is a former longtime reporter at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, a contributing writer for Milwaukee Magazine and the author of two sports books, on Al McGuire and Brett Favre.