Northern Sask. residents push to 'unplastic' their communities - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Northern Sask. residents push to 'unplastic' their communities

Northern Saskatchewan residents are trying to reduce plastic use in some of the province's more remote communities.

Environment, climate change most important issue for many Canadians in federal election

Hundreds have joined in on the online dialogue happening at 'Unplastic Northern. Sask.' (Jeff Chiu/Associated Press)

Autumn Carlson says the water around La Ronge, Sask., has changed.

During the last 17 years, Carlson has noticed more plastic and Styrofoam gathering along the grassyshoreline each time theice melts in the spring.

Her kidsnoticed, too.

"I started to think about what kind of world I want my children to see, what kind of world I want my grandchildren to see," she said.

Carlson routinely takes her kids to help gather up the garbage that emerges after winter. She alsoco-created the Facebook group "Unplastic Northern Sask.," alongside Angela Plunz. It's meant to raise awareness and share practical solutions on how to reduce single-use plastic in thetri-communities La Ronge, Air Ronge and Lac La Ronge.

The focus is on reusing and reducing, but they also encourage people to recycle properly. Carlson is also encouraged as local businesses get on board.

"It's the feeling that it's working. We just have to keep working at it to get more people are willing to change," Carlson said.

Autumn Carlson is pictured at Lac La Ronge. Carlson obtained her Master's degree in Northern Governance and Development and works as a speech language interventionist teacher in the community. (Submitted by Autumn Carlson)

Several local businesses are starting to charge a fee for plastic bags or have stopped using plastic and Styrofoam for foodand beverages atevents. The restaurant Cravings has gone entirely plastic-free.

Carlson said the Riverside Motel has a bulk store that offers sustainable productslike laundry soap, insect repellent or shampoo.

She said they're in the process of trying to take their initiatives further by bringing local government leadership on board.

"A lot is happening, a lot still needs to happen."

Autumn Carlson pulls a plastic bag out of the water. She and her children engage in shoreline clean up after school during the springtime. (Submitted by Autumn Carlson)

Giving plastic a second life

Terri-Ann Weinberger is trying to give discarded plastic a second life in Air Ronge.

By day, she's busy as a registrar at Northland College. She's spent countless evenings and weekends in her Air Ronge shop, trying to turn No. 2and No. 5plastics into new products.

She uses three machines to shred, melt and manipulate plastic into new products like baskets, coasters andtiles.

Weinberger says she's always been seen as a frugal person who has "reused things to death and tried to make good choices," she said.

"I really like reclamation."

She gathers the plastics from her own home, friends and a partnership with the Churchill Community High School recycling program. Students collect plastics curbside once a month and bring her the batch.

Weinberger said her eventual goal is to melt down plastics into a filament that can be used in the 3D printer. That way she can create products like figurines or replacement parts instead of only printing baskets, tiles or coasters. (Round 2 Plastics/Facebook)

The project wasn't created in an effort to be more eco-friendly; rather Weinberger and her husband wanted bug-proof edging for their yard. They had trouble finding what they needed, so they found out how to make their own using a website that showed how to doat-home plastic recycling and moulding.

Now, Weinberger's actions have been celebrated in the community and she's looking to expand the process.

"Ultimately, I would love for people to be reusing the items that they donate," she said. "However, I know realistically people will throw that stuff out and I would be rescuing it perfectly fine stuff from the landfill."

Terri-Ann Weinberger said figurines to replacement parts to door hooks. Weinberger said they will be marked with their plastic type, so they can be melted down and reimagined once their purpose is up. (Round 2 Plastics/Facebook)

Online 'unplastic' movement expands to new community

Recently, Carlson was contacted by a stranger named Angela Leski from the town of Shellbrook. Leski was inquiring about Unplastic Northern Sask., and whether she could use the name for her own region.

Carlson said some ideas spread like wildfire on social media and she wants to see themomentum continue. It appears to be doing just that, asLeskihas just launched"Unplastic the Parkland."

Plastic has been a longtime concern for Leski, especially as she's seen packaging increase. For example, she said it's troubling that fruit that used to come in cardboard cartons now comes wrapped in multiple kinds of plastic.

"I'm really quite taken aback by how much that's changed. You know, you go into a grocery store these days and it just looks like a sea of plastic."

Calls for federal leadership

Some grocers have started to address calls for less plastic. For example,grocery giantSobeys announced it would phase out plastic bags that carry groceries next year.

"It sort of shows that there is now both demands from consumers that they're looking to appease and also pressure from the government," said Naomi Mihilewicz, who is the communications co-ordinator with the Saskatchewan Waste Reduction Council.

In June, the federal Liberal government announced it would ban single-use plastics which could include bags, straws and cutleryin Canada in 2021 at the earliest.

Environment and Climate Change Canada said at the time thatCanadians throw away more than 34 million plastic bags every day that often wind up in landfills, and it can take as long as 1,000 years for them to decay.

Carlson said she and Plunz also sell upcycled bags, bamboo toothbrushes, reusable water bottles, beeswax food covers (instead of saran wrap) at cost in the community. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

Mihilewicz said blanket bans make it easier to tackle plastic, as opposed to having small bans in individual municipalities.

"It's really difficult for small communities to be able to, you know, pass bans here and pass them there. It's also really difficult to stand up to the plastics industry."

Clear guidelines that are establishedcan also can make it easier on retailers if they have to follow a standard set of rules, she said.

Environmental issues have been a key point of discussion leading up to the federal election. In fact, data collected byVox Pop Labs for Vote Compass a civicengagement application offered by CBC/Radio-Canada shows that the environment is the No. 1issue among many Canadians.

This is a vast difference from the 2015 election, which saw people most concerned about the economy.

Vox Pop Labs says that the environment weighs in as top issue across all age groups. Thenon-random sample was weighted to create a representative picture of the Canadian population.

This data is based on the responses of90,224 people who answered between Sept.11 and 18, 2019, about what the most important issue was to them in this election.

A screen grab that illustrates how the environment has surpassed the economy as a key election issue among Canadians, according to data collected by Vox Pop Labs, through Vote Compass which is an engagement application offered by CBC/Radio-Canada. (Vox Pop Labs)

Leski hopes the conversation carries on long after Oct.21."I hope that it is something that is taken seriously by all governments, and that it kind of transcends any sort of political party," she said.

"I hope it's something that stays in the forefront of people's thinking."

Eventually, she hopes local businesses in the area will be inspired to cut back plastic.

For now, she wants "Unplastic the Parkland" to grow into a positive online discussion space where people can share ideas about alternatives and teach each other.

"There's endless ideas of what can be done, and they're all small but they add up."