This is an interesting idea for donatable goods like clothes, but I lose the write off and I'm not sure waiting around for a pick-up is really more convenient than just driving the stuff to a drop off location myself.
The only real advantage I see here is getting rid of stuff that's hard to dispose of: car batteries (you know, cause I'm always throwing those away), poisonous or flammable liquids, medical waste (which I don't think I've ever had), etc... but I can't believe that is profitable cargo for them to haul away at $5/bag.
What am I missing here? Am I just the wrong demographic for this?
I've been researching these services for the past few weeks since I've committed myself to liquidating most of my belongings (I live in a small apartment with no closets -- thanks New York! -- and was inspired by this blog post: http://www.raptitude.com/2011/01/i-dont-want-stuff-any-more-...), and would prefer to see them in the hands of friends and those in need rather than a landfill.
Does anyone have recommendations for where/how to donate more valuable items? For example, I want to donate an expensive drone I never use, but would prefer to see it go to a classroom/after-school program. Thinking I'll search DonorsChoose.org and offer things to teachers, but is there another service?
I've got a propane torch, a fire extinguisher, various household cleaning supplies, and about 100 lb of ceramic tile to get rid of. And I have some 3 mil "contractor bags" than can handle more weight than I can carry.
My current plan is to drive the hazardous waste to recology. If someone could do it for me it'd be nice, but I'm not sure that's even legal. Still working out the tile thing. Not sure Habitat would want it. I've also got a bunch of paint, but I know where to take that.
Asbestos, bodies, nuclear waste .. the possibilities are endless.
I pay something like $50 a month for trash collection services, or around $12 a week. That includes yard waste and recycling.
If I can fit my trash and recycling into two bags per week and find something else to do with my yard waste, I'll save money by using GoodAndTidy for weekly trash pickup.
I like their website and the idea, but it seems like a service that may have trouble becoming profitable based on their $5/bag fees.
We can even imagine an uberpop for thrash with untrained people driving and destroying their car with thrash, and picking up hazardous wastes such as asbestos and everything that should be highly regulated instead.
If there is room for improvement the solution is always an uber for X because people have cars and people need money.
To be a little bit more constructive, there are already lots of convenient ways to get rid of stuff we don't want anymore, most of them requiring some time investment. But that's not so bad since owning and getting rid of stuff should come at a price. A price we generally dont pay when buying stuff (the recycling tax for electric stuff in Europe is a joke for example).
I don't think you're kidding though, are you.
https://teleservices.paris.fr/sira/jsp/site/Portal.jsp?page=...
BTW in the URL: "&form=ramen" I suppose that the developer was hungry.
Edit: Changed trash to "unwanted items"
This seems strictly worse and very expensive if you want to get rid of any significant amount of stuff.
I would use this service. I easily have couple bag of not-quite-trash that wants to be dealt with. But really, what are they going to do with an old Nokia cellphone charger? Or a 24" LCD monitor with DVI and VGA input but the HDMI input is broken. Or slightly damaged clothes with rivets and zippers I keep meaning to repair but have never gotten around it, so might as well throw out.
For $5, I can't imagine I'll get any sort of post-processing report about what they got out of my crap or what they managed to do with it.
Hell, I've got a bunch of crap that I keep meaning to put up for sale on ebay/craigslist that I never get to. I doubt I'm alone in that regard.
At least with the services I already take advantage of, it's all done in batches and my contribution is low compared to the overall haul. This is on-demand, so it's likely not as efficient.
I was surprised to see it say "Thanks, expect an email from us first thing in the morning!"
I can't find a way to cancel the request. Hopefully it'll be in the email. I understand the need for rapid on-boarding but this was a bit of a surprise.
Poor non-profits. It will cost them more to sort through and dispose unwanted items than the value received.
Sorry, I just don't like non-profits being treated as a free dumping site.
Recycling is generally great here, but there are certain things that are actually quite valuable, but are just way too much hassle to get rid of one-by-one.
For my unwanted items, I donate them via https://givebackbox.com/ - which gives you a pre-paid UPS shipping label and lets you ship to Goodwill for free.
Maybe this a specifically urban need? Up here in my small mountain town (< 4000 pop.), Goodwill, Hospice, Hospitality House (homeless shelter), and Habitat for Humanity all pick-up free as do the thrift stores.
Instacartage.
Asbestos. Redefined.
Or something.
For those of us that lived through the first dotcom bubble this is all getting more and more familiar.