Where can I donate used clothes that isn't a normal goodwill type place? Is there a church/organization that gives the items directly to a needy family, rather than sell it? Goodwill has 1000s of bags of clothes they haven't even put on the shelf to sell yet...
11/13/2010 12:45:59 PM
http://www.raleighrescue.org/donate/accepted-donationsthey also have those yellow drop box things, but i'm not sure what actually happens to the clothes...
11/13/2010 12:52:14 PM
^ that's what i was gonna suggest too
11/13/2010 12:54:12 PM
i'm pretty sure they resell the clothes out of the yellowboxes
11/13/2010 4:18:12 PM
11/14/2010 7:53:43 AM
^true. It's just when I saw a warehouse full of trash bags at goodwill, it made me think there is another less known place that could use them.
11/14/2010 1:31:50 PM
Salvation Army takes clothing donations. There's that organization in Raleigh that takes shoe donations and loans them out to people for job interviews etc. I forget the name of it but they run ads on WKNC all the time.
11/14/2010 1:40:31 PM
Dorcas Shop is by NCSU
11/14/2010 10:15:28 PM
11/14/2010 10:47:32 PM
i'm pretty sure goodwill doesn't anything, b.
11/15/2010 12:59:44 AM
my middle school can always use donations. let me know if you're interested and i can PM you more info.
11/15/2010 12:28:54 PM
i got a letter in the mail from some Vietnam Vets organization - they would even come pick the clothes up from your home. google that & i think you'll be able to find it..
11/15/2010 12:44:07 PM
http://m.vice.com/read/what-actually-happens-to-donated-clothes?utm_source=vicetwitterus
3/28/2014 12:37:23 PM
Goodwill is the best garbage service in this country. I shall continue to donate, shop, and reap the rewards.
3/28/2014 12:58:54 PM
People donate for the tax deduction or because the thrift store will send a truck to pick up their old junk that they don't want to move themselves. The notion that poor people in the US need more t-shirts, specifically your old shit that you don't want anymore, is a fallacy. T-shirts are given away for free all the time as promotional items. As long as the thrift stores have a decent selection of dirt cheap coats, sofas, suits, pots, pans, utensils, etc they're filling the gap that you think they need to fill. They can do whatever they want with the excess as far as I'm concerned. If they turn it into a profit, and then re-invest those profits into positive causes, that's even better.[Edited on March 28, 2014 at 2:44 PM. Reason : l]
3/28/2014 2:35:45 PM
St. Vincent DePaul
3/28/2014 9:27:54 PM