What a spectacle! Why these kids are recycling glasses for people who can't afford them - Action News
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What a spectacle! Why these kids are recycling glasses for people who can't afford them

At Beachy Cove Elementary, students have a vision for the future.

Portugal Cove-St. Philip's 'environmental agents' have teamed up with Lions Club

Beachy Cove Elementary students sort through eyeglasses that will be recycled and given to people who wouldn't otherwise be able to afford them. (Mark Cumby/CBC)

Ten thousand people will see more clearly, thanks to the Portugal Cove-St. Philip's Lions Club and an elementary school in Portugal Cove-St. Philip's.

Since 2012, the club has been collecting eyeglasses some old, some new to recycle for people who might not be otherwise able to afford them, said president Bradley Moss.

Some will go toBishop's Falls Correctional Centre, and some will be taken to Haiti with Team Broken Earth, a Newfoundland-started charity that provides humanitarian relief in places around the world.

Gavin Sala checks to see if a donated pair of glasses is in good shape. (Mark Cumby/CBC)

"We bring them in, the kids sort them, count them, ensure that they're in workable order, separate the broken frames and lenses out, because we do have a use for those," said Moss.

Gavin Sala, a student at Beachy Cove Elementary and one of the school's "environmental agents" has a foolproof method for checking the glasses.

"I close each eye first to see if one of the lenses is blurry, and if they aren't, then they're all good, but then I search for any cracks, just in case," said Gavin, inspecting a pair. "These glasses are pretty good, and still pretty stylish. Not that worn."

Sometimes the eyeglasses that need some work are easy to spot, said Kara March, who's in Grade 4.

"It's really fun how we get to sort out the good glasses from the bad," she said. "At one point I found a pair of glasses with tape on it, so I think that that wasn't very good."

Grade 4 teacher Paula Courage says the eyeglass recycling program fits in with the school's emphasis on global citizenship. (Mark Cumby/CBC)

That's where Grade 2's Josie Pretty comes in.

"All the broken ones go over here, and the good ones go over there, in a bag," she said.

For Grade 4 teacher Paula Courage, the program fits in well with school's focus on global citizenship.

Other people can get new glasses and see better. That makes other people have smiles.- Josie Pretty

"That's something we cover in our social studiescurriculum quite a bit," she said.

"I think it's important that the children knowthat they are children but they have a voice and they have a purpose, and I personally believe empowering children is the best job that I can do."

Bradley Moss, president of the Portugal Cove-St. Philip's Lions Club, holds up the 10,000th pair of recycled eyeglasses. (Mark Cumby/CBC)

That's a message the students, like Luke Pittman in Grade 4, are taking in.

"Being a global citizen is a great thing to do, and this project can really help people be introduced to what you can change in the world," he said. "There's few activities out there that can change people's lifestyles, and this is one of them, and I'm glad that it is."

A cheer went up from the students as Moss held up what he announced was the 10,000thpair to be recycled through the program, a milestone he said is tremendous.

Environmental stewardship

"It squares really well with the environmental stewardship and global citizenship that they're teaching here at Beachy Cove Elementary."

For Josie Pretty, the reward is simple.

"I think it's important so our world doesn't get full of old glasses, and other people can get new glasses and see better," she said."That makes other people have smiles."

Read more articles from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador