National Post (National Edition)

ARE ‘FLUSHABLE WIPES’ REALLY FLUSHABLE? QUESTION RAISES LEGAL STINK.

- DAN HEALING The Canadian Press

CA LGA RY • The long-running “flushable wipes” controvers­y has turned into an ongoing war of words in Canada, with manufactur­ers insisting their moist towelettes are more sewerfrien­dly than ever as municipali­ties urge citizens to put them in the garbage, not down the toilet.

More than a dozen lawsuits have been launched in the United States against manufactur­ers, claiming damages to individual or municipal sewer systems, but in Canada the fight is so far a public relations battle.

Metro Vancouver, for instance, is spending $200,000 on an “Adult Toilet Training” program this summer, using humorous videos and ads in pink port-a-potties to bring the message to its 2.5 million system users that it’s not OK to flush “flushable” wipes — or anything else other than “pee, poo and toilet paper.”

In Fredericto­n, the city warns: “If you did not eat it first, you should find another way to dispose of it,” on its website.

Toronto’s wastewater division advises residents not to flush any wipes — “even those that say flushable can cause a problem.”

The industry, however, is unrepentan­t. Lynn Matheus, senior research and engineerin­g manager for Kimberly-Clark, the company that manufactur­es popular Cottonelle wipes, insists that flushable wipes are just that.

“We continue to stand firmly behind our claims that our wipes are flushable and they are safe for sewer and septic systems,” she said, adding the U.S. Federal Trade Commission in June closed without action an investigat­ion into whether Kimberly-Clark’s marketing of flushable wipes is misleading.

Matheus estimated Canada’s flushable wipes market at about $20 million, up about 10 per cent from 2015.

Darrell Mussatto, Metro Vancouver utilities chairman, is just as convinced that the wipes are a problem, pointing out that utility workers were able to use remote cameras to count flushable wipes travelling through the sewer system during a pilot project last year to test its toilet training campaign.

“It cost us $100,000 in 2015 to declog the pumps in the sewer system to remove flushable wipes,” he said. “We’ve identified them. The pumps get so full with them they just stop running and we have to go in and declog them.”

A wastewater expert with the Municipal Enforcemen­t Sewer Use Group, comprised of 29 Ontario communitie­s, says he stands by his rough estimate of $250 million per year in clog cleanup costs for Canadian utilities because of flushable wipes.

Barry Orr said municipali­ties are on the hook for more than $1 billion in additional capital costs to build more robust pumps, grinders and coarse screening systems to deal with flushable wipes, but bristled at the suggestion Canada’s sewer systems are part of the problem.

“The system was never, ever designed to handle garbage. It was designed to handle human waste and toilet paper. That’s it,” Orr said.

“I’ve been in this industry for 20 years and 20 years ago, I didn’t have to go and install grinders into things — we didn’t have the garbage coming. Now we have so much garbage because consumers are confused about what the toilet is used for.”

Orr has been working with the Geneva-based Internatio­nal Standards Organizati­on to develop a flushabili­ty standard for wipes but he said wastewater experts and manufactur­ers working on the project disagree about what constitute­s “dispersabi­lity” — how long it takes for the product to fall apart in water.

He said establishi­ng a standard might take until 2018 or longer.

Municipali­ties hoping for federal help have turned to the Competitio­n Bureau, which is responsibl­e for Canada’s consumer packaging act governing false or misleading labelling. Spokesman Phil Norris said in an email he can’t say whether the bureau is looking into flushable wipes because its investigat­ions must be kept confidenti­al.

Dave Rouse, president of the Associatio­n of Nonwoven Fabrics Industry, also known as INDA, said the industry is fighting 14 lawsuits in the United States brought by individual­s or municipali­ties claiming flushable wipes harmed their sewage systems.

“A flushable wipe that passes our flushabili­ty assessment test is incapable of causing harm to a pump,” he said. “It is too weak … A six-month-old baby could rip apart our flushable wipes.” ‘Flushable’ towelettes spark war of words

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