Plastic-free amid a pandemic? It might not be possible, but it's worth a try - Action News
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Plastic-free amid a pandemic? It might not be possible, but it's worth a try

With plastic increase abounding, these people say it's worth trying to keep the environment top of mind during COVID-19.

Risk of transmission via objects is low, says doctor who urges reusable container use

Newfoundland and Labrador has pushed back the date for its plastic bag ban amid the pandemic, from July 1 to Oct. 1 of this year. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

The very first day of Vanessa Bromley's vow to use less plastic for an entire month did not go well, all because of a seemingly innocuous trip out for Canada Day ice cream with her two kids.

"Of course, here we are, plastic spoons in our hand. Like, great, we failed the first day of Plastic Free July," laughed the Bay d'Espoir mom, teacher and owner of theonline zero wasteshop Bare GoodsNL.

Bromleytook the setback in stride, knowing that her decision totake the Plastic Free July plunge an environmental challenge that began in Australia in 2011 and has since become a global movement comes during particularly challenging times foranyone looking to ditch the immortal material.

Sincepandemic measures reached her corner of Newfoundland's south coast, Bromley hashad to adjust her shopping routines, withstores in her areabanningreusable shopping and produce bags. She also noted some produce has been swathed in plastic, doing triple duty as a sanitary measure, a life-extender and an environmental irritant.

"Our plastic consumption, in particular for grocery shopping, has been up tremendously," she said.

"It's actually a struggle. I've had to accept that it's basically impossible to be perfect, when it comes to looking after the environment right now."

Vanessa Bromley and her two children go through their plastic-free bedtime routine, using bar soap for handwashing and bamboo tooth brushes with tooth powder. (Submitted by Vanessa Bromley)

No goodbye for bags yet

Bromley is just one eco-conscious consumer feeling the crush of COVID-19-related measures that have seen efforts to scale back single-use plasticstall, both in the province and around the world.

Newfoundland and Labrador was set to bring in a plastic bag ban on July 1, but amid a wave of COVID-19 cases on April 6, Premier Dwight Ball pushed that date back to October 1. Some shopping chains, such as Dominion, banned reusable bags for a period and then reinstated their use, while others have hit pause on reusable programs indefinitely, from bringing your own coffee cup to Starbuckstoreusable containers at Bulk Barn.

The federal government has similarly stated that its effort to ban some single-use plastics has been delayed due to the pandemic, although it hopes to keep on its target of bringing in legislation in2021.

While much of this stems from good intentions to protect the public from coronavirus transmission,Calgary ER physician Dr. Joe Vipond said measures like reusable bag bans are based more in a desire to try to control an unpredictable situationthan scientific fact.

We can't just ignore one crisis because another crisis is going on. Thisisn't going away.- Joe Vipond

Evidence is mounting that transmission of the virus from surfaces is a lot harder than first thought, as such scientifically sound sources such as the World Health Organization andThe Lancet have published papers to that effect.

"It's a challenging topic, Ithink, for some grocery storesbecause they want to feel like they're doing something, and yet this doesn't seem to be helping, in my mind," Vipond, who is also the interim president of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment, told CBC.

"I think we just need to recognize that washing our hands is much more important than not reusing things."

A mindset shift?

Vipond was one of the more than 100 scientists and medical professionals who added their signatures to a public letter this spring, stating that reusable containers and bags can be used safely during a pandemic, as long as they're washed with soap and water.

It also encouraged contact-free systems, like getting customers to bag their own groceries policies that are becoming more commonplace as the pandemic continues. But Bromley said she's felt a lingering stigma about bringing hers back to the store as part of her Plastic Free July plans.

"It's kind of still frowned upon," she said."So Ido feel like it's been crushed a little, but, you know, maybe we'll get back there soon, hopefully."

Plastic use has had an uptick during the pandemic, but a group of scientists and doctors have written an open letter saying washing reusable items with soap is a safe way to avoid some single-use plastics. (Alessandro Garofalo/Reuters)

Despite the very real threat COVID-19 poses, Vipond urged people not to forget that the pandemic doesn't displace other problems looming over our collective future, such as climate change and single-use plastics.

"Ithink we've all been kind of shocked by entering into this existential crisis known as COVID, and everybody feels their mortality, right? Pretty rare that we have this experience that we are threatened ourselves,but we actually have two or three even other existential crises ongoing at the same time," he said.

"We can't just ignore one crisis because another crisis is going on. Thisisn't going away."

Ditch (some) of the plastic PPE

The world can feel like a plastic-swaddled place of late. There are the ubiquitous plastic dividers surrounding cashiers, pin pads covered in Saran Wrap, andboxes of disposable gloves placed by the doors of many retail shops.

While some of those are necessary sanitary measures, as someone who has dealt with COVID-19 patients, Vipond feels pretty strongly about that last one.

"Ithink the thing that drives health-care workers the battiest is people wearing gloves out in public, disposable gloves," he said.

"Ionly wear gloves when I'm in a COVID room, and Iuse those gloves and then i come right out and I take them off and I wash my hands right away. I'm never wearing gloves for more than fiveor 10 minutes at a time. Whereas we're seeing people walking around stores, wearing their gloves, and then touching their faces andgrabbing their phones."

ER physician Dr. Joe Vipond says washing your hands and using a cloth mask are better alternatives for the general public than using plastic gloves and masks. (Submitted by Joe Vipond)

Handwashing is far more effective, he said, and can be done with plastic-free bar soap to the same effect as its bottled counterpart. He also urged people to choose cloth masks over disposable ones in their day-to-day public activities.

"The general public is walking around in a situation where their exposure risk is much much lower and their concentrations they're being exposed to are muchmuch lower. So Ipersonally am very comfortable wearing a cloth mask in public and washing it frequently at home," he said.

Time to think

Back in Bay d'Espoir, Bromley said one unexpected benefit to all her recent downtime as a teacher, she's been out of the classroom since March has been the spaceto figure out an environmental way forward.

"We've been able to focus on making better choices, because I actually have the time to sit and think, and focus on some environmental things that I haven't really had the time to focus on before," she said.

She opened up her online store right before the pandemic hit,delayingher plans for a retail space or pop-up shops. She hopes that will eventually come to fruition, but she's taking her own advice and trying to make small changes toward larger progress that will hopefully outlast the pandemic.

"Pick one thing that you feel like your family can tackle," she said.

"Life gets in the way. COVID may get in the way. You really don't know what's going to happen."

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador