Rotorua Daily Post

Charity shop rubbish dumpers are losers

- Carmen Hall

Anyone that knows me, knows my close affiliatio­n with secondhand shops. Most of my wardrobe is sourced from these places and I quite enjoy an afternoon fossicking around the bric-a-brac and clothing, looking for a bargain.

It’s therapy for me and recycling is good for the planet.

What is not good for the planet is idiots who set on fire the donations that have been left outside charity shops, and the losers who steal security cameras worth thousands of dollars that could have helped catch the idiots.

Another thing that is not good is when, every morning, volunteers who work at these charity shops have to clean up rubbish left by more losers who think it is okay to dump any old broken appliance or threadbare pair of underpants outside the shops — because they can.

As this newspaper reports this week, it is happening all over the region, including in Tauranga and Rotorua.

I call them losers because who, in their right mind, would get a kick out of kicking these charity shops in the guts?

Brookfield Salvation Army opshop manager Sharlene Farrell says she wouldn’t mind if it was homeless people or needy families rifling through their bins.

But no, it’s more losers.

I call them losers because they obviously don’t have two brain cells to rub together because who, in their right mind, would get a kick out of kicking these charity shops in the guts?

Most of the money made by these charity shops filters its way back into the community but too much of it is being filtered into paying to dump rubbish.

Farrell says $5000 of security cameras went down the drain when someone stole them and they have had to come in at stupid hours of the night to put out fires and call the police.

And it’s no better in Rotorua. Louise Parry from the Salvation Army says some of its donated goods are damaged, unsuitable or dangerous and have to be dumped or recycled.

So if you see a loser or idiot dumping rubbish or setting fire to a couch, call the cops.

And, better still, take a photo.

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