You won't believe the prices at our thrift/goodwill store
#181
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Central Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA
Posts: 7,695
Originally Posted by quiltgrammyt2
OMG!!!!! How do they expect to be able to help ANYBODY
#184
The key is not to donate anything to those stores. The one in my area(Goodwill) has a literal mountain of clothing in the back--when you take a box of clean, folded clothing, they just dump it on the pile. Also, they pull out the good stuff and hold if for their antique sale, at which the prices are impressively high. I realize those are marketing techniques, but it is insulting to both contributors and buyers. I personally have found great good deals at garage sales in the summer.
#185
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Central Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA
Posts: 7,695
Originally Posted by pocoellie
I believe it. About 3 years ago, I went into a goodwill store and found a couple handmade 100% cotton pillowcases, with no price, so I took them up to the register to see how much they were, $1.98 EACH, I said, no thank you and haven't been in there since. I think that Good Will has gone "up scale". I was in a different one than the above, and they had a decent looking hutch, $1700.00. People this is a thrift store, I think the head of the company is forgetting what a THRIFT store is.
#186
Originally Posted by ptquilts
Originally Posted by rexie
Goodwill is owned by the Salvation Army and they are high, but you might find a smaller locally owned or church owned store that might not be so high.
Now the REAL rip-off is those "Planet Aid" collection boxes. Make you think it is some kind of a charity helping poor people - WRONG!!!!
Yow! Who knew.
here is just one story about what they really do
http://www2.citypaper.com/news/story.asp?id=9234
#187
Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Texan in Arizona
Posts: 14
I used to give to the Salvation Army and good will until I saw 60 min. that airs on Sun. evening. I was shocked to learn that what we donate is sorted out and some items are packed together to look like cotton bails. They are sold to other third world countries where people buy them. Now I just donate them to our church or take them to a soup Kitchen place where a homeless person can use them. Here in Tucson we have places that have homeless teenagers that always need clothes for school.
#188
Originally Posted by Pat G
Originally Posted by p38flygirl
our s has the same problem...prices way too high...
Unfortunately they have lost sight of what these places were about and just chase the $$$$$ these days.SAD!!
#189
Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 86
we donated a stove to habitat this year. Should be a decent right off i hope for taxes. While I was there I saw a antique rocker and I almost bought it. It needed a little fix, but my other half can do that for me. I did resis buying it. I just might go back and see if it is still there.
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11-10-2010 05:14 AM