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Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army Tour Donation Processing Center By Dr. Celia Stall-Meadows OSU-Tulsa Jan. 5, 2010

Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

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Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army. Tour Donation Processing Center By Dr. Celia Stall-Meadows OSU-Tulsa Jan. 5, 2010. Clothing donations are loaded into wheeled carts (5 long x 3 wide x 5 high). What happens to donated textiles?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Tour Donation Processing CenterBy Dr. Celia Stall-Meadows

OSU-TulsaJan. 5, 2010

Page 2: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Clothing donations are loaded into wheeled carts (5 long x 3 wide x 5 high)

Page 3: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

What happens to donated textiles?

• All beneficiaries (rehabilitation program workers) are part of the Salvation Army Adult Rehabilitation Center (SA-ARC). The 40-hour work week in the processing warehouse is part of the 180-day drug and alcohol rehabilitation program. 80-85 men prepare donated items for resale in Tulsa’s three Salvation Army Stores. The men wear donated clothing, too.

• Sales at these stores are the primary source of income for the SA-ARC and pays for the food, clothing, shelter and supplies for the 80-85 residents.

Page 4: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Donated antiques and other items of value

• The SA-ARC has an “antique lady” who extracts and handles all the valuables, but they are also sold in the stores

• Jewelry and other valuables may be under lock and key or in a restricted area of the stores

Page 5: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Sorted clothing, ~100 items per roll rack

Page 6: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Processing• Beneficiaries unload trucks into big blue bins • Female employees are paid an hourly wage for to

sort donated clothing into six price points (2.99, 3.99 9.99). Sorted clothes are tossed into plastic barrels.

• Beneficiaries hang presorted clothing on hangers and hang on roll racks that hold 100 pieces. Each roll rack gets its own price point.

• Beneficiaries staple price on collar of item.• Female employee assigns sorted clothing to one

of the three stores (8-9 roll racks/store per day)

Page 7: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Merchandising in stores

• Each store is stocked with 1,500-2,000 new items everyday

• Blue tag is full price for “new” items during weeks one and two

• After three weeks, it goes to ½ price• After four weeks, it is available at even greater

discounts• Then sent back to processing warehouse for

reconsideration

Page 8: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

What happens to items that don’t sell in S.A. stores?

• The items are brought back to the processing warehouse and evaluated. Should it be reprocessed and sent to a different stores? May be sold at the “as is” auction to junk dealers (auction occurs twice weekly for non clothing items—furniture, bric-a-brac, electronics, etc).

• Unsellable apparel is bundled in 1500-1600 lbs bales & sold for 15 cents/lb as “raw” (unsorted) rags to rag dealers from Dallas and K.C. This is called “ragging it out”

Page 9: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Unsold furniture for “as is” auction to junk dealers twice weekly (Mon & Thurs)

Page 10: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Baler: Steel plates from above are lowered to compress clothing

Page 11: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Baler

Page 12: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Baler has a 10-12 feet deep bin in floor of the warehouse that is filled with

unsold clothing

Page 13: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Once full, compactor compresses clothing, leaving another six feet of bin space to fill

Page 14: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

One bale of clothing (1500-1600 lbs)

Page 15: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Stacks of bales of unsorted apparel

Page 16: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

Bales awaiting rag dealer pick up

Page 17: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

What happens to these bales?

• Each bale is valued at approximately $225 (.15 x 1500 lbs)

• Sold to rag dealers• May be shredded and used for stuffing and

padding, such as for caskets, carpet padding• May be transported to a port city and shipped

to textile dealers in foreign countries (an entire study in itself!)

Page 18: Tulsa Adult Rehabilitation Center, Salvation Army

In summary: There is no trash when it comes to clothing and textiles, or any donated items

• Unsalable clothing is baled and sold by the pound

• Comforters and bedspreads are given to the homeless

• Mattresses are cleaned with Steri-Fab (multi purpose) and sealed for a time before reselling

• Furniture is shampooed and vacuumed

• Appliances repaired or sold at “as is auction”