Archive for May, 2010


“It’s Not a Free lunch, but it’s a Free Shirt: the free bins at Community Closet”, by Lynette Zwerneman

The Community Closet Thrift Store has become a true Livingston tradition, a place where anyone can find just about anything, very inexpensively.

Executive Director Caron Cooper was looking for a way to offer an even better deal to community members, and also put more already-made items back into use, when she came up with the free bin concept.

“Our inventory is free, so we can afford to be generous with it,” said Cooper. “Also, the Free Bins mean that less is hauled away as waste by the City. And people who donate items to the store can know we make every effort to put things back into use.”

Less items thrown out also means lower expenses for Community Closet, which pays a hefty garbage fee each month, and more money to distribute to the community.

Rain or shine, the Community Closet Free Bins are parked on the sidewalk near the front door of the thrift store. The plastic, wheeled containers are yet another temporary home for items which are, in philosophy, free from the earthly cares and woes of perfection.

These items are still good, and sometimes even new, but maybe not quite good enough to sit on the shelves or hang from the rack in the Community Closet environs proper. They may have even lingered too long in the store or The Annex next door.

“Mondays are the best days to browse through the Free Bins,” recommended Cooper.

On the first day of the week, clothing, books, thing-a-ma-gadgets which didn’t find homes over the weekend during the thrift store’s Early Bird Sale on Saturday, or The Annex’s most-excellent clothing markdown (.25 cents or less) on Sunday, migrate to The Free Bins.

According to Community Closet employee Robin, the staff “tries to get the bins out for the day at least a half hour before opening the store each day.” Thus, Free Bin patrons may browse in peace. Free Bins are wheeled back into the store after closing.

Free Bin Binning is an art, or a science, actually. No one has the intestinal fortitude to walk past the Free Bins without at least glancing in one of the bins. A few hardy souls stop there, but most passersby at least dig though a few items.

Some hard core visitors go through pieces in the bins, even straightening and folding clothing to help facilitate a more orderly excavation by the next Free Bin archaeologist.

The following locals were found perusing the Free [...]

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