These N.L. crafters adapted their sealskin sewing skills for local PPE push - Action News
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These N.L. crafters adapted their sealskin sewing skills for local PPE push

A group of Trinity Bay women who usually sew sealskin products are among those in the province using their crafting skills to protect health-care workers from COVID-19.

TaskforceNL has recruited more than a dozen local businesses to make protective equipment health workers

Laurie Pitcher, the owner of Sealskin Treasures in Heart's Content, Trinity Bay, sews a protective gown for Eastern Health. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

A group of Trinity Bay womenwho usually devote their working hours to sewing sealskin productsare among the dozens of people in this province who have pivotedto help protect health-care workers from COVID-19.

They're part of a push to make personal protective equipment locallyand reduce Newfoundland and Labrador's reliance on outside sources,as worldwide demand for it soars during thepandemic.

The sewers in Heart's Content say switching from sealskin to the materials used to make gowns and face shields took some time.

"We use different needles and threads and fabrics," said Sealskin Treasures owner Laurie Pitcher.

"So everything is a littledifferent, but we're coming into our own with it."

She's modest. Clearly, they've mastered it, with Health Canada recently certifying their creations for use by workers on the pandemic's frontlines.

Arlene King and Elsie Smith are two of the people in Heart's Content sewing personal protective equipment for Eastern Health. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

Pitcher said she and her colleagues didn't hesitate whenasked last winter if they could join theeffort.

"Well, first thing, we wanted to help," she said.

"At the time COVID-19 was just coming on, and they were talking about the stress that lack of PPE was having on the health-care system and our first thought was, 'Let's do what we can.'"

The provincialPPE push

The campaign to produce local personal protective equipment wasspearheaded by TaskforceNL, a group of more than 75 volunteers from the province's business community working together to ensure Newfoundland and Labrador's health care system has an adequate supply of it.

Initially,they gathered up protective equipment for health-care workers from businesses in Newfoundland and Labrador that also use it.

After realizing there wasn't enough equipment in the province to meet the demand, TaskforceNL began to look for external sources.

Pitcher displays the protective face shields and gowns sewers are making in Heart's Content. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

"At first, we pulled together people in the oil and gas industry who have global expertise at sourcing and we spent many days and many nights running down leads in other countries," said Cathy Bennett, TaskforceNL'svolunteer leader.

"When that was exhausted andwe had done everything that we could, we realized that manufacturing was where we needed to focusour attention."

Nowmore than a dozenlocal companiesfrom small, single-employee craftersto large industrial constructionand manufacturing companies are helpingmake protective equipment in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Perhaps the biggest is D.F. Barnes, a local company that services the oil and gas industry which is overseeing the production project.

Bennett says Health Canada certification of locally produced equipmentwas a crucial turning point for the group.

"The certification was extremely important. We met with the health-care unions and we made a commitmentthat whatever we manufacture in Newfoundland and Labrador met the standards that they expected in the Canadian health-care system," she said.

"So we worked very hard and had to create with Memorial University local testing capacity. We had to learn the testing criteria. We had to make adjustments in the materials we were using. So, it was quite a comprehensive and detailed process."

Cathy Bennett is the volunteer team leader for TaskForceNL, a group trying to supply Newfoundland and Labrador health workers with personal protective equipment. (Mark Quinn/ CBC)

TaskforceNL is now producing tens of thousands of face shields and gowns for health authorities in the province. It's also looking at producing protective equipment for family doctors and health-care workers who see patients in the community.

Bennett hopes the local businesses making the equipment now will be able to sell those products to internationalmarkets in the future.

"We're working really hard as a group of volunteers, contacting the United Nations, looking at Third World countries, places where epidemics are fought almost annually and where this kind of material is used. We hope we can find a niche in that marketplace," she said.

It's a hope thesewersin Heart's Content share.

"Most definitely. Yes, bring it on," said Pitcher.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador