Volunteers pick up plastic bags, cigarette butts, straws as part of Toronto shoreline cleanup - Action News
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Toronto

Volunteers pick up plastic bags, cigarette butts, straws as part of Toronto shoreline cleanup

More than 70 people collected garbage around Humber Marshes in Toronto on Sunday as part of a national effort to keep Canadian shorelines clean.

Group organized by Ripley's Aquarium collected garbage around Humber Marshes on Sunday

More than 70 people collected garbage around Humber Marshes in Toronto on Sunday as part of a national effort to keep Canadian shorelines clean. (CBC)

More than 70 people collected garbage around Humber Marshes in Toronto on Sunday as part of a national effort to keep Canadian shorelines clean.

Peter Doyle, general manager of Ripleys Aquarium of Canada, said volunteers and aquarium staff took part in what is known as the Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup, a conservation initiative that began in Stanley Park in Vancouver, B.C. in 1994 but turned into a national campaign in 2002.

Early Sunday, the Toronto group found plastic bags, many cigarette butts and plenty of straws.

"People use way too many plastic bags and plastic bottles, and then they are just thrown away. Because they are so light, wind and rain will carry them into the water and they will wash up on the shore," Doylesaid.

"We are trying to educate people to use less plastic."
Children and teens took part in the cleanup on Sunday (CBC)

The aquarium organizes shoreline garbage collecting about twice a year. Doyle said it estimates it collects than more 45kilogramsof garbage annually.

Doyle said there seems to be more garbage littering the shoreline this year and he believes the increase may be related to fluctuating water levels on Lake Ontario.

Flooding and receding waters may have stirred up more garbage, he said.

In April, a group organized by the aquarium found significantly more garbage in the area than it did a year ago.

Humber Marshes in Etobicoke was selected because it's important ecologically, but also because it'sthe site of much garbage, said Doyle.

"We selected an area that is dirty and has lot of garbage buildup. We started four years ago."
The group picked a hot and steamy day to collect garbage in Toronto. (CBC)

Doyle said the aim of local eventsis to keep the shoreline clean and to spread awareness about the need to use reusable products.

"The No Straw Movement is great and we really support that as well," he said.

Carmen Garcia, a volunteer, said she wanted to take part because she wanted to do her bitfor the environment. She said she found cigarette butts and broken glass.

"I live close by and I picked the eventclosest to my house," she said. "I wanted to experience it for myself."

The Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup is a conservation initiative spearheaded bythe Vancouver Aquarium and WWF-Canada.
Carmen Garcia, a volunteer, put on plastic gloves to take part in the event. (CBC)