Epsom Freecycle has started up.
Shortly before Christmas 2009 Epsom Freecycle invited local people to join in one of the recycling phenomena of the decade. There are Freecycle networks across the country, doing a fabulous job of re-using unwanted items, finding them new homes, keeping them out of landfill, and creating a great local community of exchange, and saving waste. Epsom Freeycle already has several hundred members, and loads of good stuff changes hands each week.
http://groups.freecycle.org/epsom
The idea is so simple. Using the Internet members can post ‘Offer’ ads for items they no longer wanted, and which would normally end up in landfill.
Other members who want items can receive them for FREE! If you need something and someone might be about to throw it away - you can post a ‘Wanted’ ad and if you're lucky you may soon receive a response giving you the item for FREE!
A simple message board allows members to see all the Wanted and Offered ads in their area and to respond to those they were interested in. The rules are simple: everything offered must be free; the items must be things that otherwise would end up in landfill; it was entirely up to the giver as to who received items, so no ‘first come first served.
Each Freecycle group covers an single area so locally we have Epsom, Kingston, Sutton and Banstead.
Members join Freecycle and are free to join as many groups as they like. However, more groups is more information to search through. To receive information on what ‘Offers’ and ‘Wanteds’ have been posted the member can elect to either visit website, receive an email for each one or to receive one ‘digest’ email roughly once per day containing all posts for day.
So if you’re aiming to clear out the attic or back bedroom what better way to do it that give your ‘rubbish’ a new lease of life and post it on Freecycle Epsom Freecycle
http://groups.freecycle.org/epsom
A Brief History On May 1st, 2003, Deron Beal sent out the first e-mail announcing The Freecycle Network™ to about 30 or 40 friends and a handful of nonprofits in Tucson, Arizona. At the time Deron founded The Freecycle Network, he worked with a small nonprofit organization, RISE, which provides recycling services to downtown businesses and transitional employment to Tucsonans in need.
As the team recycled, rather than watching perfectly good items being thrown away, they found themselves calling or driving around to see if various local nonprofits could use them. Thinking there had to be an easier way, Beal set up that first Freecycle e-mail group in a way that permitted everyone in Tucson to give and to get. Freecycle was off and running.
The Freecycle concept has since spread to over 85 countries, where there are thousands of local groups representing millions of of members -- people helping people and 'changing the world one gift at a time.' As a result, we are currently keeping over 500 tons a day out of landfills! This amounts to five times the height of Mt. Everest in the past year alone, when stacked in garbage trucks!
By giving freely with no strings attached, members of The Freecycle Network help instill a sense of generosity of spirit as they strengthen local community ties and promote environmental sustainability and reuse. People from all walks of life have joined together to turn trash into treasure.
Incorporation The Freecycle Network is incorporated as a nonprofit in the State of Arizona.
Nonprofit Status The Freecycle Network is a private, nonprofit organization incorporated in the State of Arizona. Our application for federal nonprofit status -- what's known as a 501(c)3 ruling -- was approved in November, 2006 by the IRS. This means that any donations made to The Freecycle Network are tax deductible retroactively stretching back to our original application date in July of 2004.
Trademark The 'Freecycle™' name is a registered trademark in the European Union (R) and is a trademark in the United States and Canada, or 'TM.' When the mark has been registered by the USPTO as well, this TM will also become an R, for registered.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here