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Gravenhurst optometrist joins contact lens recycling program

Program allows people to bring all brands of disposable contact lenses and their blister pack packaging to participating eye doctor locations to be recycled
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NEWS RELEASE TERRACYCLE CANADA **************************** GRAVENHURST — Eye doctors located in cities throughout Ontario are helping the planet and the local community by reducing waste and keeping otherwise non-recyclable disposable contact lenses and their packaging out of the landfill. Through the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program, consumers are invited to bring all brands of disposable contact lenses and their blister pack packaging to participating eye doctor locations to be recycled. “Contact lenses are one of the forgotten waste streams that are often overlooked due to their size and how commonplace they are in today’s society,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. “Programs like the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program allows eye doctors to work within their community and take an active role in preserving the environment, beyond what their local municipal recycling programs are able to provide. "By creating this recycling initiative, our aim was to provide an opportunity where whole communities are able to collect waste alongside a national network of public drop-off locations all with the unified goal to increase the number of recycled contact lenses and their associated packaging, thereby reducing their impact on landfills," said Szaky Recently, a newcomer to the program was announced and is just north of Orillia: Earlier, the following other local eye doctors announced their participation in the program:
To learn more about the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program, become a public drop-off location or to search for their nearest participating location, visit https://www.terracycle.ca/brigades/bausch-and-lomb.

Local optometrists provide contact lens recycling through TerraCycle program

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Drop off boxes at Limestone Eye Care (left) and Bayview Optometry (right) for the recycling of disposable contact lenses through the Bausch+Lomb /TerraCycle program.
Local eye doctors are helping divert waste by collecting disposable contact lenses and their packaging as part of an Ontario-wide recycling program. The Bausch + Lomb ‘Every Contact Counts Recycling Program,’ run by TerraCycle, recycles contact lens waste, keeping it out of landfills. “Programs like the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program allow eye doctors to work within their community and take an active role in preserving the environment, beyond what their local municipal recycling programs are able to provide,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. “By creating this recycling initiative, our aim was to provide an opportunity where whole communities are able to collect waste alongside a national network of public drop-off locations, all with the unified goal to increase the number of recycled contact lenses and their associated packaging, thereby reducing their impact on landfills.” Limestone Eye Care, located at 215 Princess Street, is one of two local drop-off locations for the recycling program. Dr. Justin Epstein said that he was approached to join the program in September 2019, and he jumped at the chance. “I loved the idea – what’s not to love about it?” Epstein stated. “When it comes to safety and prevention of contact lens related eye disease, dailies (which are disposable) are the answer. They pose the least risk of contact lens contamination since it is a sterile lens in your eye every day.” In the west end of the city, at 1260 Carmil Boulevard, Bayview Optometry recently registered for the B+L recycling program. “We registered in March this year with the assistance of Bausch + Lomb, and Dr. Alyssa Misener was the one who initiated it,” said Laura Ross, a Canadian Certified Optometric Assistant (CCOA) and Contact Lens Procurement Specialist at Bayview Optometry. “Obviously, the environmental impact of disposable contact lenses is considerable and we wanted to do our part in not contributing to the problem; making it easy for our patients (and patients who belong to other practices) to have access to a responsible way of disposing of their contact lenses.” Both optometry offices shared that their patients are often concerned about the environmental impact of daily disposable contact lenses. “Without a recycling program, these plastics end up in the trash,” Epstein said. “Even if patients try to recycle their contacts, Kingston municipal recycling does not offer contact lens recycling services at this time. Due to the size of the contact lenses and their packaging, these materials are sorted at recycling facilities and directed into a waste stream, contributing to the volume of waste in Canadian landfills.” Furthermore, the recycling program helps keep contact lenses out of the municipal wastewater, as a fair number of disposable contact lens users flush their lenses down the sink drain or toilet, Ross explained of additional benefits of the program. “Most people seemed to be throwing out their spent lenses, either in the garbage or tossing them into the toilet, which end up in our waterways,” she shared. And with the assets boasted by daily lenses, it’s easy to see why the number of disposable lens users continues to grow — and therefore, recycling services are needed. According to Ross, the advantages of a daily disposable lens include no solution or storing, and better eye health, as well as the choice to wear contacts or glasses on any given day. Epstein shared that the new technology in contact lens materials provides “greater comfort, better vision and healthier eyes than ever before.” “As a result, patients who have previously failed with contacts in the past are now finding comfort, and the number of people using contact lenses is growing daily,” he stated. Ross added that more than half of the contact lens wearing patients at Bayview Optometry are using daily disposables, despite the cost being higher than monthly or bi-weekly replacement lenses, which, she said, is due to the convenience and benefits of the style. Both optometry offices welcome anyone who uses daily disposables to participate in the recycling program, regardless of where they purchase the lenses. The program accepts all brands of lenses and the packaging material, except the cardboard. Epstein stated that patients often ask what happens to the products after they go into the recycling program. “Once received, the contact lenses and blister packs are sorted and cleaned,” he shared. “The metal layers of the blister packs are recycled separately, while the lenses and plastic components of the blister packs are melted down into plastic that can be remoulded to create new products, such as benches, picnic tables, and playground equipment.” Contact lens wearers can visit Limestone Eye Care at 215 Princess Street, and Bayview Optometry at 1260 Carmil Boulevard to drop off their used lenses and packaging. Learn more about the Bausch + Lomb program on the TerraCycle website.

Contact lenses can now be recycled locally

Eye doctors across Ontario, including one Kingston clinic, are reducing waste and keeping otherwise non-recyclable disposable contact lenses and the packaging out of the landfill.
Contact lens users in the Kingston area can drop their used lenses at Limestone Eyecare at 215 Princess Street.   Through the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program, consumers are invited to bring all brands of disposable contact lenses and their blister pack packaging to participating eye doctor locations to be recycled, said a statement.   “Contact lenses are one of the forgotten waste streams that are often overlooked due to their size and how commonplace they are in today’s society,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle.   “By creating this recycling initiative, our aim was to provide an opportunity where whole communities are able to collect waste alongside a national network of public drop-off locations all with the unified goal to increase the number of recycled contact lenses and their associated packaging, thereby reducing their impact on landfills.”
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Contact lens recycling program hits big milestone

For two years, eye doctors across Canada have been helping divert disposable contact lenses and wrapping from landfills through a special recycling program. Those who include that kind of waste in their household recycling might be surprised to know that it usually gets filtered out of the recycling stream and ends up at the dump or in waterways as microplastic. "Contact lenses are one of the forgotten waste streams that are often overlooked due to their size and how commonplace they are in today’s society," said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle, in a news release. "(It) is very exciting because we recently hit a one million contact lenses and blister packs recycled milestone." It is estimated that 290 million contact lenses end up in Canadian landfills and waterways every year, Sudbury optician Beth Pentney told CTV News in an interview. "The blister packs, it’s made of foil and plastic so people know that that’s a recyclable product. They may toss it into their blue box, but because it’s so small, it will get filtered out of municipal recycling programs and end up in our landfills," Pentney said. "What I think is maybe even worse is that a 2018 study in the US suggested that about 20 per cent of people flush their contact lenses down the toilet or down the drain… and in the U.S., that’s equivalent to like three billion lenses per year." Her store, Walden Optical -- in the Greater Sudbury community of Lively, Ont. -- got involved as a drop-off point for contact lens recycling in 2020. "It’s important to me as a recent graduate, a new optician, that I’m a part of the solution in our industry. I wanted to make sure that the products that I was selling would be disposed of effectively," she said. "I think people are more and more concerned about their individual impact on the environment and contact lenses are an important part of peoples' daily lives. Particularly through the pandemic when everyone’s glasses have been fogging up. Contact lenses are a really vital part of peoples' lives, so having a way to recycle them and know that they’re going to get turned into something else and not just in our landfills is really important to people." Every Contact Counts is a partnership between contact lens manufacturer Bausch + Lomb and national recycling company TerraCycle, but all brands are accepted. There are drop-off locations across Canada, with 250 in Ontario alone. Find one near you here.

Those tiny contact lenses can create a big waste problem. Here's a way to focus on changing that

Our planet is changing. So is our journalism. This story is part of Our Changing Planeta CBC News initiative to show and explain the effects of climate change and what is being done about it. Ginger Merpaw of London, Ont., has been wearing contact lenses for nearly 40 years and had no idea that micro plastics from them end up in waterways and landfills. To minimize the big impact that these tiny lenses can have on the environment, hundreds of optometry clinics across Canada are taking part in a special program that aims to get them and their packaging recycled. The Bausch+ Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program encourages people to drop off their contacts in a bag to a participating clinic for them to be packaged for recycling. "You recycle plastics and things like that but I never guessed you could recycle contacts. When I take them out I put them in the garbage can, so I just assumed that they biodegrade normally and never thought anything of it," Merpaw said. She's not the only one, said Dr. Riyad Khamis of Highbury-Huron Optometry in London. Khamis said about 20 per cent of lens wearers either flush them down the toilet or throw them in the trash. His clinic is one of 250 locations in Ontario participating in the recycling program. "Contact lenses are sometimes overlooked in terms of a recycling aspect, so this is a great opportunity to help the environment," he said. Over 290 million contacts end up in landfills every year, according to TerraCycle, a recycling company leading the project. They said the totals could rise as the number of daily contact wearers increases. "Something so small adds up over the span of a year. If you have daily lenses, you are disposing of 365 pairs," said Wendy Sherman, senior accounts manager with TerraCycle, which also partners with other consumer product companies, retailers and cities for recycling efforts. "Contact lenses are such a vital part to many people, and when it's something that's so routine, you oftentimes forget that this can have an impact on the environment." The program, which launched two years ago, has already collected one million contact lenses and their packaging.

'It's for our environment'

Hoson Kablawi has worn daily contacts for more than 10 years. She was shocked to hear they can be recycled. She usually disposes of them in her compost. "Contacts aren't going anywhere. Not everyone's comfortable getting Lasik surgery, and not everyone wants to wear glasses, especially with masks," she said. "With contacts, the demand will keep going up and if we can do something about minimizing the waste, we should." Sherman said recycling directly impacts what ends up in landfills. "This [landfills] is where lots of methane is produced, which is a lot more potent than carbon dioxide, so by eliminating some aspects of waste, you're minimizing the impact it can have." A national recycling program looks to minimize the harmful impact that contact lenses can have on the environment. One of its Ontario locations is at the Huron-Highbury Optometry clinic in London. (Isha Bhargava/CBC) The lenses themselves — along with their blister packs, foils, and cases — can all be recycled. Both Kablawi and Merpaw, along with her daughters, who also wear contacts, will now start gathering them up in a container to drop them off to their local optometrists, they said. "It's our environment. It's a place where we live and we have to take care of it, and if this is one more step in the right direction toward making our planet healthier, I'm willing to do that," Merpaw added. Information on the closest participating optometry clinic to you, throughout Canada, can be found on TerraCycle's website

Contact lens recycling available at Shelburne Optometry

Contact lens users will now have an option of getting rid of their disposable contact lenses without them ending up in landfills. Shelburne Optometry has joined a group of eye doctors across the province taking part in a new program that recycles disposable contact lenses. Through the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program, consumers are able to drop off all brands of disposable contact lenses and their blister pack packaging to participating eye doctor location to be recycled. “Contact lenses are one of the forgotten waste streams that are often overlooked due to their size and how commonplace they are in today’s society,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. “Program like the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program allows eye doctors to work within their community and take an active role in preserving the environment, beyond what their local municipal recycling programs are able to provide.” He added, “By creating this recycling initiative, our aim was to provide an opportunity where whole communities are able to collect waste alongside a national network of public drop-off locations all with the unified goal to increase the number of recycled contact lenses and their associated packaging, thereby reducing their impact on landfills.” To learn more about the contacts recycling program, how to become a public drop-off location or to search for the nearest participating location visit – www.terracycle.ca. Paula Brown, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Shelburne Free Press

Contact lens recycling available at Shelburne Optometry

Contact lens users will now have an option of getting rid of their disposable contact lenses without them ending up in landfills. Shelburne Optometry has joined a group of eye doctors across the province taking part in a new program that recycles disposable contact lenses. Through the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program, consumers are able to drop off all brands of disposable contact lenses and their blister pack packaging to participating eye doctor location to be recycled. “Contact lenses are one of the forgotten waste streams that are often overlooked due to their size and how commonplace they are in today’s society,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. “Program like the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program allows eye doctors to work within their community and take an active role in preserving the environment, beyond what their local municipal recycling programs are able to provide.” He added, “By creating this recycling initiative, our aim was to provide an opportunity where whole communities are able to collect waste alongside a national network of public drop-off locations all with the unified goal to increase the number of recycled contact lenses and their associated packaging, thereby reducing their impact on landfills.” To learn more about the contacts recycling program, how to become a public drop-off location or to search for the nearest participating location visit – www.terracycle.ca.

Drop off used contact lenses for recycling at this Georgetown optometry office

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Modern Eyes Optometry in Georgetown is now one of many companies across the country helping to divert contact lenses from landfills and natural habitats. Through the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program, consumers can bring all brands of disposable contact lenses and their blister pack packaging, to the optometry office, located at 378 Mountainview Rd. S. The items will be recycled free of charge. Bausch + Lomb has partnered with TerraCycle Canada, a waste management company that partners with consumer product companies, retailers and cities to recycle products and packages, from dirty diapers to cigarette butts that would otherwise end up in landfills or incinerators.
More than 290 million contact lenses end up in Canadian landfills and waterways annually, according to TerraCycle Canada. To learn more about the program, become a public drop-off location or to search for the nearest participating location, visit www.terracycle.com/en-CA/brigades/bausch-and-lomb-en-ca.

Orillia optometrist sees a way to recycle contact lenses

BARRIE – Eye doctors located in cities throughout Ontario are helping the planet and the local community by reducing waste and keeping otherwise non-recyclable disposable contact lenses and their packaging out of the landfill. Through the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program, consumers are invited to bring all brands of disposable contact lenses and their blister pack packaging to participating eye doctor locations to be recycled. “Contact lenses are one of the forgotten waste streams that are often overlooked due to their size and how commonplace they are in today’s society,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle. “Programs like the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program allows eye doctors to work within their community and take an active role in preserving the environment, beyond what their local municipal recycling programs are able to provide. By creating this recycling initiative, our aim was to provide an opportunity where whole communities are able to collect waste alongside a national network of public drop-off locations all with the unified goal to increase the number of recycled contact lenses and their associated packaging, thereby reducing their impact on landfills.” Below is a list of local eye doctors participating in the program:
To learn more about the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program, become a public drop-off location or to search for their nearest participating location, visit https://www.terracycle.ca/brigades/bausch-and-lomb.

Local clinics part of contact lens recycling program

Oct 10, 2021 | 7:00 AM
  Two Grande Prairie eye clinics have joined a program that collects disposable contact lenses and the blister packs they come in for recycling. Both Doctors EyeCare and Aurora Eye Care are part of the Bausch + Lomb Every Contact Counts Recycling Program. Dr. Shonah Finlay with Doctors EyeCare says the clinic wanted to be part of an effort to keep plastic lenses out of the landfills and waterways. “With the waterways, in particular, people think it breaks down because they get old, and it doesn’t. That plastic floats around and then it gets stuck all over the place. In the ocean, they say you can see the masses of that little, fine plastic, that microplastic, that just floats.” The lenses are sent to a company called Terra Cycle that sends plastics and other material to facilities that convert them into something usable.
Dr. Finlay adds that so far, there has been a good response from the public. “We’ll get people that will come because the box is in front, and they’ll ask, and we’ll give them a little plastic envelope for them to put (their lenses in). Or, when they come in the next time, they’ll bring their old lenses that they’re no longer using, and we just take them out of the boxes and out them into the container.” “We’ve had it for a few months now. It’s a big plastic bag. I would say we are almost at a point of sending it in.” Dr. Finlay says even people who are not patients at her clinic can drop off plastic lenses for recycling.