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  • 1 month later...
Posted

You’re absolutely right—sending random items can often create more work for relief organizations than help. Monetary donations through established charities or government-coordinated funds really are the most effective way to support victims. It allows agencies like NEMA to buy exactly what’s needed—baby nappies, hygiene products, bedding—without clogging warehouses with unusable or duplicate items. Even a small contribution can go a long way in helping people get back on their feet.

 
 
 
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Posted

A mate volunteers at Vinnys in Bunbury a couple of days a week, sorting incoming secondhand goods and clothing. He says they're overwhelmed with secondhand stuff, and fill about 3 big skip bins a week with stuff they can't use or pass on.

 

Most of what they bin is quite usable, but they have no room to store it, not enough people to oversee sales, giveaways or deliveries of it, and very few people actually want the smaller household items. So it goes to landfill.

 

The Chinese have a lot to answer for, we should send all the unwanted Chinese crap back to where it came from, and stop creating massive landfills here.

  • Informative 1
Posted

We used to regularly receive coloured plastic bags in which to put unwanted clothing, shoes, etc. to be collected for passing on to needy people. it's been some time since we last received one. We have a lot of my late wife's clothes which may not be top fashion house stuff, but are in good condition and may be of use to someone who was left with only the clothes they stood up in when their house was burned in a bushfire or washed away in a flood. But they have been on a clothes rack or in a wardrobe for four years, and washing then is a large task for my daughter, and dry cleaning is expensive. It's the logistics of getting them to those in need which is the problem.

  • Agree 1
Posted
2 hours ago, onetrack said:

 

The Chinese have a lot to answer for, we should send all the unwanted Chinese crap back to where it came from, and stop creating massive landfills here.

They're only selling it because we're buying it. I'd say the fault lies with us.

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