Competing charities?
Goodwill may be doing fine by virtue of its famous name and cultural cool — and the fact that it’s been around for over 80 years, Emanuel said. “It may be a tradition … to give to Goodwill, put together a box once a month,” she said. “People are very green here, and that may be a result.”
Other local nonprofit organizations driven by thrift store sales report a different landscape.
“We are feeling the recession. People are holding on to their used clothes longer,” said Jesse Dunn, executive director of The Arc of Southwest Washington, which provides services and advocacy for people with developmental disabilities. The biggest single chunk of The Arc’s budget — nearly 40 percent — has been driven by sales of donated, second-hand goods sold at the local Value Village thrift store, 7110 N.E. Fourth Plain Road. But that number is shrinking, Dunn said.
Last year, homeless mission Open House Ministries decided to stop handing over all the furniture donation it receives to the Salvation Army, a sister Christian charity with thrifts all over America, and launch its own store instead. A few months later, it doubled the size of its showroom at 915 W. 13th Street. The store pulls in between $2,000 and $2,200 per month, according to operations manager Viki Landsverk.
“For us, it’s 100 percent profit,” said Open House manager Richard Barton. “We already own the building. We don’t have to pay rent like Friends of the Carpenter does.” Volunteers eager to grow some retails sales skills staff the operation, he said.