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Business & Tech

Norcross Freecycle: An Online Trading Post for Unwanted Stuff

A local group lets you give away unwanted stuff--keeping it out of landfills and making someone happy with a new treasure.

If one man’s trash is another man’s treasure than the more than 1,400 members of the Norcross/Berkeley Lake freecycle group are pretty rich.

Freecycle, a worldwide group dedicated to giving away unwanted items to other members rather than adding to the landfills, started in 2003 by Devon Beal in Tucson, Arizona. There are roughly 8,193,125 members broken into about 4,926 different geographic groups--with the Norcross freecycle group numbering among them.

In 2006, Penny Duncan was a member of the Gwinnett Freecycle Group. However, Duncan thought the group had grown too large in number and in area. In December of that year she founded the Norcross/Berkeley Lake branch of Freecycle.

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The members communicate with each other via a Yahoo Group forum, with members posting what they had to freecycle and what they would like to receive. Duncan is adamant that Freecycle is not a charity. The group doesn’t allow members to post “sob stories” or use guilt to pressure someone into offering something they don’t feel comfortable offering.

Rather, it is a group that wants to see older, disused, broken or even brand-new items go to people who want them without a middle man. Recently, the Norcross/Berkeley Lake Freecycle Forum members were offering upright freezers, kitchen dishes, dining chairs and lighting fixtures, all for free for members who can provide their own transportation for the items.

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There are certain items that cannot be freecycled though, including pets, personal care items and medications. It is important to check recall lists, especially with baby or kid items. 

“I absolutely love the freecycle concept! It’s an easy way to de-clutter and get rid of things you don't need and at the same time keep trash out of our landfills,"says Dana Gemer, a four-year member of Freecycle.

"I also love that I can give stuff away I no longer need to someone who is in need, like baby items to a new single mom or pets items to someone who volunteers at an animal shelter.” Gemer says she has freecycled lawn mowers, computer monitors and countless magazines. In return she has received dishes, a patio umbrella and small appliances. 

For those who may be wary about having strangers turn up at their home, Duncan says that there are safety protocols for Freecycle including never posting your phone number or address to the open forum and being able to pick and choose who receives your items. If members are busy or would rather not speak to recipients of their freecycles, members just leave their items outside their house for pickup.

According Freecycle.org the movement keeps 500 tons of would-be garbage out of landfills per day. It's an environmental idea that comes with a lot of cool stuff. 

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