Recycling program taking old wrecks out of Postville landfill - Action News
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Recycling program taking old wrecks out of Postville landfill

Car wrecks and old appliances are being taken out of the crowded landfill in the coastal Labrador community of Postville.

Recycling more difficult in isolated northern communities

Postville AngajukKak Diane Gear says the timing couldn't be better for the recycling program to take place since the landfill has been running out of space. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

It shouldn't be any surprise that the Postville landfill is full of old junk after all, that's what landfills are for but now the Labrador coastal community is cutting down on the volume of waste at the dump.

"Right now, we're starting to run out of space. We don't have anywhere to put our garbage," said Diane Gear, the AngajukKak,or mayor,of Postville.

"We're starting to out toward the water and that's something we don't want to do."

The Postville dump has been overflowing for years, Gear said,filled to the brim with old wrecked vehicles and appliances.

Once anything comes up to the communities,it never really comes back down.- Shelby Kerbel, Scott Environmental

A team has been workingto depollute and tear out parts for recycling from about 120 vehicles and more than150appliances.

The work is led byScout Environmental, a Toronto-based not-for-profit organization, which the Nunatsiavutgovernment partnered withas part oftheTundra Take-Back program this summer.

Recycling harder in the north

ShelbyKerbel, a program manager with Scout Environmental, told CBC News that the isolation ofnortherncommunities can make itdifficulttodisposeof largeitems.

"Once anything comes up to the communities,it never really comes back down,"Kerbelsaid.

Shelby Kerbel is with Scout Environmental, a not-for-profit out of Toronto which has partnered with the Nunatsiavut Government to clear landfills. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

"The longer they sit there, the higher the chances of these vehicles depolluting themselves and ending up in the ground right next to the North Atlantic."

Kerbel says dealing with the trash in northern communities ismore challenging than in southern places.

If it's being left like this over the years... it canaffect our fish and affect the humans as well.- Gary Edmunds

"It's a problem in communities all across Canada but in the southern communities we have the capacity to properly depollute vehicles," Kerbel said.

"We have noticed through a lot programs which we have executed that there is very little capacity in northern Canada to carry out similar projects. So we recognize the problem and we've developed a solution."

Gary Edmunds, a Postville man hired to work on the project, said people were worried about ever-increasing piles of trash, andhe's glad to be doing something about it.

Gary Edmunds works with a team to take parts and chemicals out of scrapped appliances for recycling. (Jacob Barker/CBC)

"It's not hard work.It's simple work. It's just the flies that are bothersome,"Edmunds saidas he toreout the inner workings of an old freezer.

"A lot of these things have mercury in them. It's another thing we have to be cautious of."

Chemicals can cause problems

Edmunds is working to drain all the oil and fluids out of the vehicles and appliances. Once he does that, everything will be partially crushed and shipped out for recycling.

Workers remove dangerous chemicals and contaminants from an old freezer. (Jacob Barker/CBC )

"If it's being left like this over the years, it gets into the soil, it gets into the salt water. It can affect our fish and affect the humans as well."

Scout Environmentalbrings professional recyclers into communitiesto showhow the depolluting and recycling process takes place.

"They walk through all of the steps with the local hires, show them why everything is done in a certain sequence," Kerbel said.

"The skill transfer is why this is such a sustainable project. They can carry that out moving forward within the community."

Diane Gear is delighted with the progress.

"We couldn't ask for better timing," she said.

About 120 vehicle wrecks have already been cleared from the landfill. (Jacob Barker/CBC)