Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Clothing donation pipeline breaks down

- By Sara Bauknecht

Carloads of clothing that Pittsburgh­ers want to donate to good causes are being drenched by rain, pilfered by late-night scavengers and basically failing to reach those who could put the items to good use.

In Western Pennsylvan­ia, many organizati­ons have had to close donation centers or get by with skeleton crews since Gov. Tom Wolf ordered businesses deemed nonessenti­al to temporaril­y close in mid-March. But that hasn’t stopped people from dropping off items, resulting in piles of discarded clothes.

“We dealt with a lot of dumping,” said Andrew Marano, vice president of donated goods and retail for Goodwill of Southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia.

March and April showers made matters worse.

“It kind of was a double whammy because it created a health and a safety issue. Donors donated really nice stuff, but it was getting ruined,” Mr. Marano said.

Goodwill of Southweste­rn

Pennsylvan­ia was recently granted permission from the governor’s office to open no-contact donation

There are multiple boxes set up at each site, including one specifical­ly for clothing. Donors can drop off items daily between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Each site has signage with a QR code that can be scanned with a smartphone to obtain a donation receipt. An attendant outfitted in personal protective equipment removes donations throughout the day as boxes fill up.

If you’re donating clothing, you’ll need to take some extra safety precaution­s. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, COVID-19 generally survives for shorter periods at higher temperatur­es. Prior to donating clothing, you’re advised to wash it in water as warm as possible without damaging the fabric. Laundered clothes should then be stored and taken to donation centers in a dark plastic bag or a box to minimize contact.

At Goodwill, collected items are set aside for 72 hours before they’re handled as an additional safety precaution.

“That’s been working really well for us. We’ve been able to bring some people back to work,” Mr. Marano said.

Although dumping has improved, after-hours theft has become a problem, he said.

“Typically, our stores would run, and we’d take donations from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. There are people who are aware of our hours. We have cameras, and we see people out there rifling through things.

“We’re monitoring that and working closely with local police department­s to do whatever we can do.”

The Salvation Army’s Adult Rehabilita­tion Centers in Pittsburgh, which have temporaril­y halted clothing donations, have also experience­d dumping and looting.

“Some of our locations are more susceptibl­e to that than others,” said Martina O’Leary, administra­tor for business. “We also have people who see the donations sitting somewhere and then they go through them, and it creates quite a mess. That’s why we’re asking people to hold on to them.”

Clothing dumped outside the Free Store in Braddock will be discarded because there’s not a protocol in place to process and sanitize it, founder Gisele Barreto Fetterman said. It has been closed since the governor’s business mandates went into effect but continues to serve the community.

Ms. Fetterman said she’s noticed a greater demand for food than clothing during the COVID-19 outbreak. She said she has made some porch deliveries of new clothing and has been referring anyone looking to donate gently worn items to Auberle in McKeesport.

“We are happy to talk about what people have to offer us and what our needs are,” said Aimee Plowman, director of Auberle housing programs and its 412 Youth Zone in Downtown.

While demand for clothing hasn’t changed much during the pandemic, Ms. Plowman said, Auberle still seeks it for its clients, who include those experienci­ng homelessne­ss, people interviewi­ng for jobs and families transition­ing into permanent housing. To make a donation, call 412-673-5800.

Some nonprofits have used this downtime to plan how they’ll handle donations once business restrictio­ns relax.

Dress for Success Pittsburgh plans to schedule nocontact drop-off appointmen­ts at its office in Bloomfield. It’s also exploring ways to use its two mobile units to service Butler and Fayette counties.

“We will definitely limit the amount of donations we can accept per week because we won’t have many volunteers in the facility when we go back for safety and social distancing reasons,” area director Liz Mims said.

Dress for Success has been responding remotely to women being hired in health care positions who need scrubs and nonslip shoes. In lieu of clothing donations, it’s seeking small monetary gifts to fulfill these requests.

“Twenty-five dollars buys a pair of shoes or a whole set of scrubs,” Ms. Mims said. “That can literally change a woman’s ability to work and make an income during this really unsure time.”

In the meantime, don’t get rid of clothing. Organizati­ons

are counting on it when they reopen, particular­ly those looking to stock resale stores.

“We think thrift sales are most likely to go up with the huge unemployme­nt rates,” said Teddi Horvitz, president of the National Council of Jewish Women Pittsburgh section.

Sales from its Lawrencevi­lle resale store, Thriftique, are one of its main revenue sources for the services it provides to women, children and families.

“Please don’t throw out your stuff. Create a holding space for it in the garage or trunk of the car until Thriftique does reopen,” Ms. Horvitz said.

The St. Vincent de Paul Society of Pittsburgh has been forced to close its five stores, which means “revenue has pretty much come to a stop,” executive director Ricardo Luckow said.

Sales at the stores help support people with rent, mortgages and utility payments, among other things. Mr. Luckow said St. Vincent de Paul is determined to ramp up donation efforts and reopen its stores when the time is right.

“It becomes important that people realize we’re here and we help about 100,000 individual­s and families a year, and we’re continuing to do so,” he said.

 ?? Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette ?? Anna Papa, store manager of Goodwill in West Mifflin, moves a donation box Tuesday while Michele Calbert, of Brentwood, drops off a bag filled with items.
Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette Anna Papa, store manager of Goodwill in West Mifflin, moves a donation box Tuesday while Michele Calbert, of Brentwood, drops off a bag filled with items.

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