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Oxfam scandal

Keith Parkins | 09.04.2008 13:08 | Ecology | Education

Oxfam are trashing perfectly good books that people have donated to them in good faith.

I was recently in the Oxfam Bookshop at the top of Guildford High Street.

 http://www.heureka.clara.net/surrey-hants/gu-ford.htm

The staff were stripping novels off the shelves, on the floor were half a dozen large plastic sacks full of books.

Suspecting what was happening, I asked. The staff confirmed my worst fears, the books were being trashed, 'recycling' they called it. I was told recycling was good, that the books had been on the shelves for a couple of months and they'd been unable to sell them.

These were not falling apart, moth-eaten old books where the only realistic option was recycling. These were contemporary novels given to Oxfam in good faith, albeit some were a little dog-eared, scuffed, with creased and broken spines.

The reason Oxfam was not able to sell these books, was sheer unadulterated greed. They were asking £2-50 for novels that were often dog-eared, with creased and broken spines.

The same novels could be had for little more, brand new, in pristine condition, from a discount bookshop a few minutes walk further down Guildford High Street. In Asda, two for £7.

These were books that people had donated to Oxfam in good faith, in the hope that they'd find a new home, give other people some pleasure, and raise some money to help Third World poor.

Instead Oxfam destroyed perfectly good books.

There was a lot Oxfam could have done with these books.

They could have reduced the books to 50 pence or a pound. But then that would only have served to highlight how greedy they were being in the first place.

They could have put the books outside the shop with a help yourself sign.

They could have given the books to a local school or hospital.

They could have passed them on to another charity shop.

A few minutes walk down the High Street in Jeffries Passage, is a Save the Children charity shop. They can never get enough books.

They could could have given them to Guildford College, who would have used the books to fund raise for a project in Tanzania.

Once a year, a church at the bottom of the High Street has a massive book sale for Feed the Minds. They would have been only too grateful for the books.

Two weeks later, I looked in the Oxfam Bookshop. Painted in large letters across the window We Need Books, the shelves were looking bare, large gaps, from where the books were stripped. I was told they needed books as they were now short of books!

A week later, I looked in the shop again. At the back of the shop were about a dozen or more sacks full of books. They were now going through the same exercise with their non-fiction books.

I walked out of the shop in disgust, but not before noticing £2-50 for a dog-eared copy of The Alchemist, £2-50 for a dog-eared copy of By the Flowing River. Two excellent books by the Brazilian author Paulo Coelho.

A couple of days later I picked up a copy of The Alchemist in as new condition for £1 from a local charity shop.

 http://www.bookcrossing.com/journal/6024947

At the weekend I picked up The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy, large format (50p) and A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian by Marina Lewycka (95p). Both books in excellent as new condition.

 http://www.bookcrossing.com/journal/6024924
 http://www.bookcrossing.com/journal/6024918

Yesterday I picked up in pristine as new condition for 69p the excellent The Shadow of the Wind by Spanish author Carlos Ruiz Zafon.

 http://www.bookcrossing.com/journal/6027749

I have spoken to many people about the Oxfam Bookshop scandal, and without exception they are appalled and disgusted. At the high asking price for the books, and that books that people have donated in good faith are then being destroyed.

I have had the same reaction from charity shops.

Locally, charity shops are selling books for around 50p to a pound, sometime a little more if they are in pristine condition. Their main problem is they cannot get enough books.

RSPCA shop (paperbacks 50p, hardbacks £1) told me they could not get enough books, the books go as soon as they get them in.

Parity put the books by the door at 10p to get rid of them if they have not sold.

Sailor Boy has a periodic half price book sale if they are overstocked.

Red Cross shop told me they can not get enough books. They thought it sacrilege that books were being destroyed. If the are overstocked, they have a book sale.

Last week, I had an e-mail from Oxfam asking that instead of landfill, could they please have any unwanted items!

I have bagged up, books and clothes. Oxfam will be the one place I will not be taking them.

The Oxfam action is a no win for everyone. Oxfam gets a bad name, money is not raised for worthy causes, books are destroyed, someone is deprived of a good read.

Keith Parkins
- Homepage: http://www.heureka.clara.net/books/

Comments

Hide the following 13 comments

Knowledge is power! Wield a good book today!

09.04.2008 13:47

Where I live there are 2 Oxfam book shops in nearby towns. This is in the North of England. You are lucky if Oxfam charge £2.50 for a book in Guildford. That was last year's price here. From January this year the usual price of a book went up to £3.49. More for anything a bit different.

This is way in excess of prices charged by other charity shops and blatant profiteering by Oxfam. I have noticed that the books are not selling like they used to and it is obvious why this is.

Jolly Roger


Cancer Research UK shop, Finchley Road, north London

09.04.2008 14:34

Hi, the other evening I was passing by the above shop and there were a number of glossy green sacks dumped by the kerb (not the doorway) outside. A man who is often seen in the nearby Sainsburys just before closing time carting off a trolley load of final reduction bargains (presumably to a car) was rummaging through them, picked out a few hardback books and left with them. So I suspect there was some worthy stuff in there.

Onlyme


It's happening all over the place

09.04.2008 16:35

In the past week, several people have commented to me on charity shops, not just Oxfam, which put perfectly good stuff in skips, including books and clothes etc.

One woman left a voluntary job in a charity shop because she was so disgusted at what they throw away.

Another found good stuff she'd donated in the charity shop skip, and it hadn't even been sorted - it was all still in the bag, just as she'd sent it.

Someone else told me they never give to charity shops because they've seen what goes in the skips - in particular they were incensed that school books and reference books were being skipped rather than sent to places where they could be used.

My daughter spends a lot of her time in skips and can vouch for the fact that most charity shops throw away stuff they could easily sell more cheaply or give away.

Where should charity begin? At home. I think this maybe needs a bit of a campaign to embarrass the big corporate charities into cleaning up their environmental acts. Any ideas?

freeconomist
mail e-mail: freeconomywrexham[at]yahoo.co.uk


Good idea

09.04.2008 18:26

Either freecycle it or send it overseas to flood victims etc who've lost all their stuff. But hey that's not sending white western "rescuers" in 4x4s to save the savages from themselves is it?

Definitley some embarrasment needed.

Sim1


As far as books are concerned

10.04.2008 04:04

OXFAM is positioning itself, or tries to, as quality second hand bookshops. Here they have two stores who only do books, and a bit of records and CDs. One of them is the best second hand bookstore in town IMO.

Yeah I find they are a bit too expensive as they happen to have slightly higher prices than I what would pay for in a second hand bookshop for the same book.

But they certainly offer a better service than other charities and throw way less books, if any round here, than them as well.

I lived in a street for a couple of years not long time ago where there were 7 or so charity shops at a period I had barely any money.

Well I got hundreds of good books from their bins, but none from OXFAM, many of which I could sell for at least for a quid to a second hand bookstore.

Stuff OXFAM would sell was generally speaking thrown away by others systematically without it even seeing the shelves of the shops.

Nearly anything can be found in a charity shop bin when it is accessible. Most remakable items I found were a gold ring with garnet, real pearls, quality collector minerals, a small vessel in massive silver, an Oxford encyclopedia of history from 1901 in very good condition.

As I have worked for a few months in a charity shop as well, doing sorting and pricing of all that was not clothes, I know pretty much why that is.

It depends on the amount of thought and work if any that is made where all donations are centralized as to in which shop such or such item goes. OXFAM seems good at it and, to my local observation of a few years ago, its shops generate the less waste whereas I sometimes felt I could open a shop from what some others where throwing away.

It depends on the quality/knowledge/care and amount of staff as well as the turnover of the shops. Stuff on the shelves does not get sold for a while, new stuff of similar quality comes in. What can you do ? You throw the old stuff away even if it's good and could sell anytime which might eventually shock a casual well-minded volunteer who comes once a week for a couple of hours and witnesses such a dumping.

And not every shop have baskets for doing "sales" nor the personal to manage that, which is rather heavy as it usually involves moving in and out such baskets full of items at 10p in and out every day. Anyway selling twenty items out of that everyday would only make two quid per day. And as it may also negatively affect the sale of normally priced items it is unsurprising that there are little of those sales.

What I find quite sad is that now, most of the bins I used to visit are not visitable anymore. They are locked, some have even been caged and padlocked. And that's partially if not entirely due to some people partially emptying them on the backstreet where they are to look for gear and leaving the mess like that for the shop staffers to clean up in the morning...

skunk


It happens all over

10.04.2008 10:20

The Oxfam shops in Oxfordshire are doing just the same.

Some years ago we found the dozen or so trade waste sack outside Oxfam Cowley Rd full of good quality books, toys etc.
Upon our investigation of these bags the manageress came out and started (literally) screaming at us
and she called the police- who seemed surprised at the amount of stuff Oxfam throws away on a regular basis. They did nothing to hinder our investigation of the bags, apart from mentioning that if we left a mess it would be littering...

The Oxfam bookshop in Thame also has two wheelie bins full of books destined for landfill most weeks - and they are padlocked shut to stop anyone helping themselves.

As someone who has dealt in s/h books with a stall at many fairs and festivals I have a good idea of the value of what Oxfam is throwing away and know that much of the stuff is perfectly saleable.

The fact that all these perfectly good donations have been given in good faith and are then landfilled by the fast growing Oxfam corporation is disgusting.

Needless to say I no longer give any donations to Oxfam...

Bookworm


British Heart Foundation

10.04.2008 17:16

British Heart Foundation are another charity shop blatantly ripping of its customers.

They too are charging £2-50 for a paperback novel. More often that not, dog-eared, broken spine.

Locally, they are seen as a joke by the other charity shops. Thye often have customesr complaining that they are being ripped off by British Heart Foundation.

Keith


it's not just books

10.04.2008 17:28

Most of the charity shops have become greedy, are ripping people off, which is why they no longer have the support of the public.

Clothes are often only on display for two weeks, then either moved to another shop (CO2 emissions) or trashed. The asking price can be more than new!

Glassware is simply smashed!

One charity shops was caught ripping the covers of books before they were trashed, to ensure no one could salvage the books they threw out.

Speaking to one chaity shop in Lincoln, they told me they were spending £100 a month to dispose of their surplus.

The obvous, to drop that prices and shift their stock, stock that they got for free, is lost on them.

Some have area managers cruising around in company cars, calling the shop to ask 'have you met your targets this week'.

The Guildford Oxfam Bookshop, used to have LPs at several times the cost of Ben's Collectors Records around the corner in Tunsgate.

Charity shops get their stock for free, pay half price rates, pay no tax, often pay a pepercorn rent. Basically they are taking the piss.

This is the dark side of of charity shops. The side they do not want the public to learn about, becuase they know they will lose what little public support tey have left.

Please go in shops like Oxfam, British Heat Foundation, and tell them what you think of being ripped off.

They are two charities to which I will NOT be taken any unwanted possessions.

Keith


Oxfam book scandal

10.04.2008 17:35

£2-50 is only the price for contemporary paperback novels, for non-fiction, they greedily ask much more.

I remember a few years ago seeing a copy of the excellent No Logo by Naomi Klein.

I was going to pick it up for a friend, until I saw the price which was maybe £4 or £5 and its very tatty condition.

Keith


BookCrossing

15.04.2008 16:51

If charity shops, in particular Oxfam, cannot be trusted with our books, then why give to charity shops?

Leave instead as BookCrossing books for others to pick up and enjoy.

 http://www.heureka.clara.net/books/bookcrossing.htm

Keith
- Homepage: http://www.heureka.clara.net/books/


Oxfam books

21.06.2008 23:54


i find it rather amusing that you mention many charity shops who sell books for between 10p and £1 who don't have another stock to continue to sell at that price/rate

might there not be some connection there!

mark
mail e-mail: markbaldwin69@hotmail.co.uk


Any comment from Oxfam?

18.04.2012 12:03

I was interested in your post. I am Chair of my children's parents school association - a comprehensive in haringey and we run an annual jumble sale and give left over books to Oxfam. I do sometimes think you have to recycle dog eared books we have the same dilemma - but they should not destroy quality books. Did you get a reply?
JANE

JANE WIFFIN
mail e-mail: jane.wiffin@btinternet.com


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