Vancouver runner says he's picked up 32,000 littered masks in 1 year - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver runner says he's picked up 32,000 littered masks in 1 year

For the past year, David Papineau has collected discarded masks, wipes and gloves as he embarks on lengthy runs that can last up to four hours.

David Papineau takes tongs, gloves and a bag on his runs to collect discarded PPE such as masks and wipes

A man with a cap on his head and a blue scarf around his neck, wearing a blue coat, holds tongs and a small plastic bag of personal protective equipment he's picked up, while smiling for the camera.
Vancouver runner David Papineau carries tongs and a bag on all his runs so he can pick up masks and other litter as he cruises through the streets. (Janella Hamilton/CBC)

For Vancouver runner David Papineau, getting out the door to exercise involves putting on his shoes but also grabbing gloves, tongs and a plastic bag.

For the past year, the 53-year-oldlong distance runner has collected discarded masks, wipes and gloves pandemic tools left as litter as he takes excursions across the city, some as long as four hours.

During a Sunday run through the city, Papineautold CBC News thathe decided to start picking up masks and other pandemic garbage as he got increasingly boredwith pandemic life and had few races to train for.

Papineausays that he's picked up more than 32,000 masks so far.

"I needed something to motivate me to get out the door," he said. "And the second thing was general disgust with the amount of litter on the ground, masks in particular."

Papineau says he has picked up more than 32,000 masks in the past year. (Janella Hamilton/CBC)

He also said he undertook the project as a way to "do his part" to help with the pandemic after considering the efforts other people were making, such as health-care workers.

WATCH | David Papineau talks about what motivated him to pick up pandemic garbage

Vancouver long-distance runner picks up pandemic garbage

3 years ago
Duration 0:20
For the past year, David Papineau, 53, has collected discarded masks, wipes and gloves as he goes on long runs across the city.

Once he started, he was amazed by how many masks and other bits of pandemicdetritus he came across.

"I've covered probably halfthe city," he said. "There are masks everywhere ...Vancouverites are really good at wearing masks, but really bad at keeping them on their faces."

In2020, residents in the region threw out 528 million pieces of personal protective equipment (PPE), including 109 million masks, 48 million wipes and 371 million gloves, according to Metro Vancouver.

Officials like Karen Storry, an engineer forwaste services with Metro Vancouver, say masks and gloves havebeen important over the course of the pandemic, but users should take steps to ensure they end up in a garbage bag and then the landfill rather than as litter.

"Most disposable masksin B.C. are made of multiple plastic fibres and cannot be recycled. The responsible thing is to put them in the garbage," she said.

While the magnitude of the PPE waste may sound like it is overwhelming the system,it only accounts for about 0.5 per cent of total waste in the region.

Storry recommends people use and wash reusable masks if they want to cut down on potential waste from plastic masks.

As ofMarch 11,British Columbians no longer have to wear masks in low-risk, indoor public spaces, which could reduce the amount of waste theyproduce.

Papineau is encouraging others to take up litter collection, whether it'son their own, or through city programs such as Vancouver's Adopt-a-Block.

That's how he got started. The city provided tongs and reflective vests, but Papineausays he has picked up so much garbage, he had to buy a second pair of tongs.

"There's too much litter in downtown Vancouver. We tell people what a beautiful city we have. It doesn't take too much to pick up a piece of garbage."

WATCH |This runnercruises Vancouver's street picking up masks and other waste:

Long-distance runner cruises Vancouver's street picking up masks and other waste

3 years ago
Duration 0:40
David Papineau finds most of the masks he picks up near parked cars and says they most likely fall onto the ground as people get in and out of vehicles.

Papineaufinds most of the masks he picks up near parked cars and saidthey most likely fall onto the ground as people get in and out of vehicles.

He said it can be tricky carrying tongs and a plastic bag while he runs, but he's learned to manage it all and enjoys calling himself a "plogger," which is a term devised in Sweden in 2016 for people who run and pick up garbage.

"Every little bit makes a difference," he said.

With files from Janella Hamilton