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The worst guy. donation diverter

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  1. #1
    hobo finds started this thread.
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    The worst guy. donation diverter

    This guy is the worst, worse than cord cutters and the smash and grabbers. The people who remove items that are sitting out for charity. If I am going thru an area that has stuff out and marked for the Charity pick up truck I leave the area. People don't like people who take donations before they even get in the donation truck!




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    I would have to agree. Worst then any scammer imo.

    The Foxy E-Scrapper
    Buy/Sell Thread: http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...ents-more.html


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    I agree. That is lower than whale $*it on the bottom of the ocean, a snakes belly, or a frogs butt after jumping off a cliff. When they meet their maker they will have to explain their selfish actions, until then we can just hope they get caught.

    I know the DAV (Disabled American Veterans) have volunteers that will pick up items. They ask that you not place items on the curb for this very reason. This is not a problem in our part of the country because everyone in town would know within an hour and the individual might be tarred and feathered.
    Give back more to this world than we take.

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    Around here you might need someone to guard it until the donation truck picks it up, or take it in yourself. Nasty people.. They'll take things right off the drop off dock at the Goodwill store. It'll turn up in someones booth at the flea market or sold to the scrap yard for some quick drug money. Its a shame how low some folks will go.

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    I donate but I take it to them or hold it until they come and get it i never put it on the curb.Low life people will get it.

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    I dont think anyone should be out digging through peoples garbage trying to make 2 cents either!

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    I tend to be a little more lenient on my views of "curb shopping", but I have no use for anyone who steals from a charity.

    Of course, my chair would have gone to the dumpster where I work if I didn't ask....
    More than Scrap Value Shipment Tips: http://www.scrapmetalforum.com/scrap...tml#post242349

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    Im not too proud to pick something off the curb, or even climb in a dumpster if need be. If its being thrown out, and I know I can make twenty bucks or so off it.. yeh, darn right I will. My dad had a friend that quit school and ran away from home at the age of fifteen. He became a millionair with his own septic tank company. I remember my dad sayin he'd seen him put his hand places for a nickle that most people wouldnt reach for a twenty dollar bill. Not sayin Id stick my hand in a sewer, but.. seriosly. Ive made thousands of dollars with other folks trash or scrap.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Focker View Post
    I dont think anyone should be out digging through peoples garbage trying to make 2 cents either!
    I don't think people should be throwing out working items or items with recyclable/reusable materials. If it's tagged for a charity, that's one thing, but if someone wants to throw away an easy fix or a working item, I have no issue with diverting it from a landfill. Most of the people that see me taking something from their curb say "thank you" like I've done them some service, so I don't see what the problem is with that.

    I don't even curb shop much anymore, don't have time and current prices don't make it worthwhile, but I won't drive past something I know will go into a landfill if I can try to reuse it or worst case make a buck off it at the scrapyard.
    METAL IS MY MISTRESS...PLEASE DON'T TELL MY WIFE!

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    The worst offender for donation diverting here is a used store called Value Village.

    The stores sell all used stuff-the stores all smell like wet clothes.

    They put out big red donation bins around town painted up with Diabetes association signs on them to trick people into thinking they are donating to charity.

    Value Village whom is owned by Savers inc. USA, gives the diabetes association a WHOLE 1 percent of all profits they make from these collection bins.

    Corporate donation diverting at it's worst!

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    Quote Originally Posted by bullion View Post
    The worst offender for donation diverting here is a used store called Value Village.

    The stores sell all used stuff-the stores all smell like wet clothes.

    They put out big red donation bins around town painted up with Diabetes association signs on them to trick people into thinking they are donating to charity.

    Value Village whom is owned by Savers inc. USA, gives the diabetes association a WHOLE 1 percent of all profits they make from these collection bins.

    Corporate donation diverting at it's worst!
    Around me the Value Village stores are the best kept second hand stores. They don't smell, whereas Goodwill and Salvation Army do, they wash the clothes before putting them on the racks, GW and SA don't, and they resell working electronics and appliances, which GW and SA both just give to local scrappers. All in all I have found that the quality at VV is far superior to the other 2 and I have found many good deals from toys to clothes with the tag still on at a fraction of retail pricing. I'm guessing it's a regional thing. Also, VV employees are generally younger and far more polite then the dinosaurs working at the other 2 that have been working there forever and are completely jaded to the public and the service they are supposed to be providing.

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    The Savers in my metro closed as well as the Salvation Army store. We have 3 Goodwills, Saint Vincent DePaul's, and a couple others I hardly get to. The Catholic store has cheaper prices because they have a lot of volunteers working for them, I've flipped some cool baseball style hats that I can buy there for 50 cents and then sell anywhere from a buck to up to $5 or so (usually start them off at $4.95). The best hat flip was a Rolex 24-Hour Race Anniversary somehting or other. I think that one went for over $16.

    Focker- I don't actively "dig" through people trash unless something salvagable is sticking up. And then any material moved to get the item out is placed make very tidy. Generally, people will never know I was there. And these are only cans siding in the public domain end of the drive way. I don't how it works in CAN (Focker, your from CAN right?) but in the U.S. or at least around here, we don't actually own our sidewalks and "boulevards" between the sidewalks and the street or the curb & gutter. At least in the sense that the city can tell use what to do with them. They are public space. So taking things in the trash from public access space I have no problem with, just like Admiral Alum said. I'm doing a societal good by getting these materials back in the manufacturing streams...

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    I am in the U.S yeah nobody owns there side walk but it is illegal in some places to get in peoples trash.

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    unfortunately a little research will quickly show you bvy and far the vast majority and the biggest thieves are the "charities" themselves' check out Goodwill, or Uninted waythe Cancer society, or some of the others. Donate to a local cherity.

    WE dont go curb co but I do agree with the above. mcw
    "anyone who thinks scrappin is easy money ain't doin it right!"

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    I don't like people taking items intended for a thrift store, nor do I like people going through my trash. I also think we have too many laws and many of them not always handled fairly!

    It’s 1988 and the Supreme Court says its OK for cops to search through your trash without a warrant. The court says this ruling doesn’t infringe upon your Fourth Amendment rights— "Unreasonable Searches and Seizure.”

    The ruling stems from a narcotics case, California vs. Greenwood, in which the State Superior Court and State Court of Appeals both agreed that it was unlawful for law enforcement to rummage through someone’s trash left out for collection in order to obtain warrants to search someone’s home. Eventually, though, the Supreme Court decides trash at the curb is fair game and there is no reasonable expectation of privacy once you cart out your junk to be picked up by the local sanitation department.

    Why? Because, trash left out on the curb is accessible to anyone and anything—animals, scavengers, snoops, curious passersby and mischievous children. Many still find this ruling arguable but, let’s take that ruling and flash-forward to TODAY!

    Where I live: The City of Chino passed an amended ordinance in 2009 that outlaws scavenging and makes it a ticket-able offense. So, police can get their mitts all over your trash but no one else?

    Where’s the fairness in that? According to the City of Chino, it’s fair.

    Why? Well, because “any recyclables left on the curb as part of a recycling program become the property of the City or the City’s authorized recyclable collector” You pay for the city to collect and remove trash and so, City Hall’s argument goes, the City owns your trash. Hands off, trash diggers!

    Part of the problem, apparently, is the potential for scavengers to make extra change off someone else’s soda cans. “When recyclables are removed from waste containers, it is diverting dollars away from the program” says city of Chino. If the program gets impacted like this, refuse rates would go up and this, in turn, would cost residents and the city more money to keep it running, city officials say.


    “Scavenging has become a concern as issues regarding privacy and theft needs to be addressed,” Chino's Mayor Dennis Yates said and so the ordinance was passed. The fine for the first infraction is $50. Police are set to target areas where high incidences of scavenging are being reported. “Left unaddressed, scavenging would cost everyone,” Chino Mayor Yates said.

    Yes some cities have laws against taking trash from cans and dumpsters, my city does.
    Last edited by bigburtchino; 10-25-2015 at 12:55 AM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by bigburtchino View Post
    I don't like people taking items intended for a thrift store, nor do I like people going through my trash. I also think we have too many laws and many of them not always handled fairly!

    It’s 1988 and the Supreme Court says its OK for cops to search through your trash without a warrant. The court says this ruling doesn’t infringe upon your Fourth Amendment rights— "Unreasonable Searches and Seizure.”

    The ruling stems from a narcotics case, California vs. Greenwood, in which the State Superior Court and State Court of Appeals both agreed that it was unlawful for law enforcement to rummage through someone’s trash left out for collection in order to obtain warrants to search someone’s home. Eventually, though, the Supreme Court decides trash at the curb is fair game and there is no reasonable expectation of privacy once you cart out your junk to be picked up by the local sanitation department.

    Why? Because, trash left out on the curb is accessible to anyone and anything—animals, scavengers, snoops, curious passersby and mischievous children. Many still find this ruling arguable but, let’s take that ruling and flash-forward to TODAY!

    Where I live: The City of Chino passed an amended ordinance in 2009 that outlaws scavenging and makes it a ticket-able offense. So, police can get their mitts all over your trash but no one else?

    Where’s the fairness in that? According to the City of Chino, it’s fair.

    Why? Well, because “any recyclables left on the curb as part of a recycling program become the property of the City or the City’s authorized recyclable collector” You pay for the city to collect and remove trash and so, City Hall’s argument goes, the City owns your trash. Hands off, trash diggers!

    Part of the problem, apparently, is the potential for scavengers to make extra change off someone else’s soda cans. “When recyclables are removed from waste containers, it is diverting dollars away from the program” says city of Chino. If the program gets impacted like this, refuse rates would go up and this, in turn, would cost residents and the city more money to keep it running, city officials say.


    “Scavenging has become a concern as issues regarding privacy and theft needs to be addressed,” Chino's Mayor Dennis Yates said and so the ordinance was passed. The fine for the first infraction is $50. Police are set to target areas where high incidences of scavenging are being reported. “Left unaddressed, scavenging would cost everyone,” Chino Mayor Yates said.

    Yes some cities have laws against taking trash from cans and dumpsters, my city does.
    ya know with a well worded petition and enough signatures that can be overturned but I do see it. The City owns 5 feet from the edge of the road and their offset of the cost of the program is to make it illegal for scrappers to go through your trash. When I lived in Twentynine Palms we never had that issue. Set a couch on the corner or by the dumpster? It was usually gone the next day. Here I get to fight the city for them to come and get a couch lol. I think the collection agency's on strike again(happens every winter).

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    When I used to drive a garbage truck-yes I was a Sanitation Engineer! Lol. I drove past a house going westbound and there were a bunch of plain clothes cops standing at the end of a driveway on the eastbound side of the road. One of them crossed the road in front of me and asked if I could "help" them by taking the trash cans off the curb.

    Apparently in that town, they needed a warrant to grab the cans themselves-they were behind the sidewalk. I told the cop I didn't want to get involved in a police matter nor did I want the homeowner mad at me because I picked up that garbage every week when they aren't around.

    I radioed my boss and he told me to cooperate-so when I came back eastbound they grabbed the cans garbage and all after I dragged them off the curb and loaded them in a pick up truck and drove away. Strangest thing I ever saw as a Sanitation Engineer.

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    I noticed saturday that someone had actually pulled into my driveway and loaded up a stove, some metal doors, and a bit of my other scrap. Let me catch that person. please.

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    Quote Originally Posted by acain View Post
    I noticed saturday that someone had actually pulled into my driveway and loaded up a stove, some metal doors, and a bit of my other scrap. Let me catch that person. please.
    I've had things stolen from my driveway. So things I've paid for come indoors, and things I picked up for free can stay outside. It's a bummer when it happens but obviously they needed it more than I did. That's what I tell myself anyway.

    Thread Diverter
    Last edited by nutpie; 10-26-2015 at 02:57 PM.


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