Tracadie N95 mask supplier gets ready to double production - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 09:07 PM | Calgary | -11.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Tracadie N95 mask supplier gets ready to double production

Tracadie company is going to double production of N95 masks and has plans to hire 40 new employees from the area.

Fanny Pallot says it feels good to create jobs on the Acadian Peninsula

The existing assembly line and the workers who staff it make 34,000 masks in 24 hours or 1.4 million masks per month. (Radio-Canada)

Fanny Pallot says the spark for her business idea came to her in the oilsands.

Working in Alberta in occupational health and safety, she'd been tasked with sourcing protective equipment at the onset of the pandemic.

"And I couldn't get the supply. I couldn't get the N-95s," said Pallot, now president of Alpha Medical Manufacturing."They were challenging to get in Canada.

"So I started talking to my very solid team about how can we make a respirator? What is it about this little piece that's so difficult to get here or to make?"

Fanny Pallot says the N95 respirator is designed to fit snug to the face, and people should use care to put it on carefully with the straps going around the back of the head, not the ears. She says you should be able to breathe without too much discomfort. (Rachel Cave/Zoom)


The N95 mask, also known as the N95 respirator, gets its name because it blocks at least 95 per cent of airborne particles.

Increasingly, public health experts have come to endorse it as the gold standard for mask protection against the Omicron variant of the coronavirus.

Back in 2020, Pallot and her partners were working ahead of that trend.

After doing their research, they sourced a robotic manufacturing system in China and set it up in Tracadie.

Pallot said she had wanted to come home after 15 years of working in Edmonton and Fort McMurrayand getting her degree at the University of Alberta.

"Suddenly, you find that you want to go back to the source where you belong," she said. "There's a lot of love here."
Alpha Medical is waiting for a second production machine to arrive from China, which will be capable of making 2.7 million N95s per month. (Radio-Canada)


Pallot's company now produces 34,000 masks every 24 hours.

They're sold individually wrapped, 20 to a box.

So far, they're available online and in some New Brunswick locations, including some Shoppers Drug Mart and Home Hardware stores, and at Jean Coutu.

Pallothad already planned to grow her output when Canada's chief public health officer urged Canadians to ditch their cloth masks.

Tracadie mask company gearing up for explosive growth

3 years ago
Duration 2:36
Alpha Medical makes N95 respirators, and president Fanny Pallot says they can't keep up with demand.

In December, Dr. Theresa Tam told CBCNews that cloth masks don't provide protection against Omicron.

"You cannot have a single-layered cloth mask," Tam said. "The medical masks are better at filtering viruses."

She also said that even the three-ply surgical masks might not be enough, saying N95-typerespirators are a better fit for people's faces.



Pallot said this triggered a flood of inquiries from all across the country.

"Since Dr. Tam went on air and really encouraged Canadians to wear N95s, it went crazy at our end," she said.

Another boost was getting certified by the Canadian Standards Association.

Ottawa also recently authorized Alpha Medical as a supplier of medical devices, including N95 respirators,for uses related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Pallot said she's now waiting for a second manufacturing machine to arrive from China.

It will be capable of making 2.7 million masks per month.

Pallot said she's also hiring.

She saidshe'll need 40 people, including workers for a night shift.

Pallot said she's not only happy to be home, she's also feeling good about creating some employment in the Acadian Peninsula.

"For me, I'm very proud of my culture and proud of my roots," she said. "And I'm glad to have something to give."