Otago Daily Times

Plastic firm switches production to help fight pandemic

- MOLLY HOUSEMAN molly.houseman@odt.co.nz

A DUNEDIN company is bracing for a boom in demand for protective plastic screens as the Government considers whether to ease Covid19 restrictio­ns.

Progressiv­e Plastics has been creating plastic shields, which have been installed at petrol station, supermarke­t and pharmacy counters.

While working with acrylic plastics is not new to its team, creating plastic shields has been.

However, with the potential for more businesses to start operating if Level 4 restrictio­ns were lifted, it may become its new normal.

Administra­tion manager Jackie McBride said the company had supplied medical centres and pharmacies across Otago with the shields, and inquiries were flooding in from businesses preparing to reopen under Level 3 restrictio­ns.

It meant the business, which usually focused on making plastic trays for meat, fish and produce companies, had another purpose to fulfill within the community.

The inquiries had come from a range of companies who provided facetoface services, including dentists.

The company had also started making intubation boxes since lockdown began, to help protect health care workers against the virus.

Its work had usually been under two manufactur­ing divisions, Mrs McBride said.

While the thermoform­ing division, which had begun making the screens, remained busy, the fabricatio­n division, which predominan­tly made pipe fittings for plumbers, had ‘‘almost’’ come to a complete halt.

Only one of the three fabricator­s had been needed for work during the lockdown.

The other two people and a few members of the administra­tion team would remain off work until jobs picked up.

 ?? PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ?? In the protection business . . . Hayden Kelliher checks on one of the many protective screens he has been making at Progressiv­e Plastics.
PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY In the protection business . . . Hayden Kelliher checks on one of the many protective screens he has been making at Progressiv­e Plastics.

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