USA TODAY US Edition

Las Vegas hotel recycles disposable masks

Specialty firm partners on sustainabi­lity project

- Melissa Yeager Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

When the Venetian Resort on the Las Vegas Strip reopened in June, it made face masks easily accessible. It placed amenity kits with disposable masks in rooms daily. It offered masks at doors around the property. Employees receive fresh masks at the start of their shifts.

But over the past six weeks, that has resulted in a lot of discarded masks. So far, 644 pounds of single-use masks would have gone to the landfill unless the resort could figure out a different solution.

“We took it up as a challenge and we wanted to find a means to dispose of the masks in a sustainabl­e manner,” said Pranav Jampani, executive director of sustainabi­lity for the Venetian Resort Las Vegas.

Jampani’s team contacted several recycling companies but it was difficult to find a place that would take them. Single-use masks are not easily recycled.

Along with the health implicatio­ns, the masks are made up of multiple materials. This makes them hard to recycle.

After calls to several vendors, the Venetian finally found one up to the task. The hotel is partnering with TerraCycle to pilot one of the first large-scale personal protective equipment recycling programs in the hospitalit­y industry.

“Traditiona­lly, masks cannot go in the bin. They are not municipall­y recyclable. And that really goes for any type of PPE or safety equipment,” said Dylan Layfield, senior manager of material solutions for TerraCycle.

TerraCycle specialize­s in recycling materials that aren’t accepted in traditiona­l curbside recycling programs. Two years ago, Layfield said, the company started recycling masks and other personal protective equipment. The new coronaviru­s pandemic has made that service more in demand.

In the past, TerraCycle’s typical customers were businesses that ordered the “zero waste box” to collect personal protective equipment from their employees. When the company returns the box to TerraCycle, Layfield said, the company shreds the masks and personal protective equipment into a crumb-like material used to form products such as shipping pallets, composite decking and composite lumber.

This is the first time TerraCycle has worked with a partner to collect personal protective equipment on a scale this large. It involves picking up and transporti­ng the masks in bales of 500800 pounds.

It’s also a new challenge for the Venetian, which has almost 20 million square feet of campus. Establishi­ng a process for recycling the masks took a bit of planning.

“We brainstorm­ed different ways to collect and separate the masks in our properties so that we will be able to capture as many as possible with the least contaminat­ion,” said Jampani.

Collection boxes have been placed throughout the resort and at the exits staff members use when they leave for the day.

Employees who work the recycling dock, who already are responsibl­e for sorting the Venetian’s trash to ensure the resort recycles as much as possible, are a second line of defense. Wearing protective gear, they sort out masks along with other recyclable­s to keep those from ending up in the landfill.

Both companies hope this program will help balance the need to protect public health with sustainabi­lity.

“Any time you can not use a product it’s better. COVID has definitely made that a little bit more difficult,” Layfied said. “Our business is to be there to collect these materials that people are going to have to use that are otherwise going to be discarded into a landfill or incinerati­on.”

 ?? VENETIAN RESORT LAS VEGAS ?? A staff member at the Venetian Resort in Las Vegas moves 644 pounds of masks.
VENETIAN RESORT LAS VEGAS A staff member at the Venetian Resort in Las Vegas moves 644 pounds of masks.

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