Surge in flushed wipes, gloves is clogging wastewater pumps, Halifax Water warns - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Surge in flushed wipes, gloves is clogging wastewater pumps, Halifax Water warns

The wastewater pumping stations are so overrun with things like wipes, dental floss and gloves, that workers are having to pull the pump out of operation for cleaning.

Even something as simple as dental floss can cause big problems

Halifax Water is urging people not to flush wipes or plastic gloves down their toilets, as they are clogging up the city's pumping stations. (Halifax Water/Twitter)

Halifax Water is once again urging residentsnot to flush things like wipes and plastic gloves down the toilet.

James Campbell, the spokesperson for Halifax Water, said there has been a surge of unusual materials showing up in the wastewater treatment system, as COVID-19 has placed a heightened sensitivity around cleanliness.

"We're seeing an influx of gloves that people are wearing during the COVID-19 period. Those materials don't break down in the wastewater system, they clog the pumps," Campbell said.

"The only three things that should be going into the wastewater system are poo, pee and toilet paper. That's it, nothing else."

Campbell said the wastewater pumping stations are so overrun with things like wipes, dental floss and gloves, that workers are having to pull the pump out of operation for cleaning.

"If they're lucky, the pump is still salvageable," he said. "Sometimes if the blockage is bad enough, it will damage the pump beyond repair."

Campbell said if the blockage is bad enough, it can lead to wastewater backing up into people's homes. For that to be cleaned, those living there would have to leave.

Even if a wipe claims to be safe for flushing, Campbell said it isn't.

Even something as "innocuous" as dental floss can lead to big problems when thousands of people are flushing floss down the toilet.

"It collects into a ball, wraps around the impellersof the pumps and jams them up," Campbell said.

He said Halifax Water crews are trying to keep the water, wastewater and storm-water systems working right now.

"It's really critical with everything going on in HRM. But when they're diverted to do things that are completely unnecessary, that's just a waste of our crew's time."

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