Loraas Recycle pleads with Sask. residents not to put single-use masks, gloves in recycling - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Loraas Recycle pleads with Sask. residents not to put single-use masks, gloves in recycling

Alexa Mofazzali has a simple message for people in Saskatchewan: keep single-use masks, gloves, and other potential contaminants out of recycling.

About 8,100 single-use masks and gloves are mixed in with recycling every day, spokesperson says

A pile of blue masks and hospital gloves.
Single-use masks and gloves aren't only clogging up the recycling line at Loraas Recycle, but there are also concerns about workers being exposed to disposable PPE contaminated with COVID-19. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

Alexa Mofazzali has a simple message for people in Saskatchewan: keep single-use masks, glovesand other potential contaminants out of the recycling.

Mofazzali, a digital media specialist at Loraas Recycle in Saskatoon, said the waste management and recycling service now sees about 8,100 masks and gloves put into recycling every day.

"When you're seeing 8,100 masks and gloves a day, that's 8,100 times we have to pull something off the line and put it in the garbage in a safe and protected way," she said, noting the fastest conveyor belt moves about 80 metres per minute.

"It's definitely tough," she said.

Sometimes workers see individual masks and gloves, but they also see "big bags" filled with the protective gear, Mofazzali said.

"We're not able to pull them all off right at that first pre-sort. I myself have worked closer to the back of the line, where it's a little slower, and I'm still pulling masks and gloves off frequentlylike every single minute, you're pulling something off."

Not only are they clogging up the recycling system, but there's also the lingering concern of disposablemasks and gloves being contaminated with COVID-19.

Mofazzali said it's "very, very unlikely" that a worker would be infected bya contaminated glove or mask because of the amount of personal protective equipment they're using, and how often they're cleaning it.

However, she alsosaid safety is a top priority and the public needs to do its part to ensure Loraas workers can do their jobs as safely as possible, especially during a pandemic.

"They're my work family," she said.

"I would just love for everyone to come together and take this small step at home and spread this word, and just to please stop putting masks and gloves and any other contaminants in your recycling cart so we can keep my employees here safe."

With files from CBC Radio's Saskatoon Morning