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News / Business

Appeals court overturns ruling against Value Village

By Associated Press
Published: August 18, 2021, 7:36am

OLYMPIA — A Washington state appeals court has overturned a 2019 ruling that found Bellevue-headquartered thrift chain TVI Inc., which operates Value Village and Savers, had misled customers by deceptively marketing itself as a charity.

Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson, whose office sued TVI in 2017 over alleged violations of the state’s Consumer Protection Act, will appeal the decision, spokesperson Brionna Aho said in an email to the Seattle Times.

“We … respectfully disagree with the appeals court,” Aho said. “We intend to hold Value Village accountable for misleading Washingtonians.”

Value Village cheered the reversal, in a statement calling Ferguson’s suit “costly” and “misguided.”

The appeals court’s ruling “was a resounding confirmation that what we’ve been doing has always been transparent and the AG’s case was not well-founded,” said Value Village general counsel Rich Medway.

A Value Village operated in Vancouver at 7110 N.W. Fourth Plain Blvd. until November of 2016. The store closed when property owner Dick Hannah Dealership declined to renew the store’s lease. Hannah’s Ram truck dealership has since opened in its place.

Value Village operates 14 locations in Washington.

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