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Why would you assume anything? The answer is provided in the article itself. Why can so few people be arsed to read the information provided before leaping to an attempt at pithy commentary?
The group … views Satan not as a supernatural being but as “a literary figure that represents a metaphorical construct of rejecting tyranny over the human mind and spirit.” The club’s programs, they say, focus on “science, critical thinking, creative arts, and good works for the community.”
(Boldface mine. “science” comes to us from Latin’s “scientia”: knowledge)
The irony of assuming something instead of learning/confirming it from the information provided, as regards an article about an organization whose stated focus is on knowledge and critical thinking, is disappointing.
The terms of this program on the Staples.com site, which servers the USA market, stipulate U.S. stores.
I would describe the recycling information at Staples.ca, which I found at https://www.staples.ca/a/content/sustainability, as just of a collection of brochure-quality blurbs about their recycling services’ availability, no information about an incentive program; I see no mention anywhere of paying the customer for bringing in recyclables items. That’s not to say that Staples.ca isn’t just slow to update with new information. If such an incentive-based initiative is in effect at Canadian stores too, that’s great news.