How Helpsy Works: What Really Happens to Unwanted Clothing?
How Helpsy, the Largest Clothing Collector on the East Coast, Works
What really happens to the clothes that are put into a Helpsy® clothing collection bin, left curbside for a municipal partner pickup, or handed over during a clothing drive? It is a misconception that these items are given directly to the needy. Helpsy does provide clothing, coats, and, on occasion, garment transportation to shelters, churches, and other relief organizations and partners with others to raise funds.
The company’s ultimate objective, however, is not charity but to preserve the environment. Textile waste is the fastest-growing waste stream in the United States. By extending the useful life of clothing, Helpsy strives to keep unwanted textiles from becoming trash.
The church is not only a bin host but is also a recipient of donated coats through HELPSY. During the months of November, December, and January, St. Peter’s Church switches gears and offers a shopping event to the community, offering FREE warm winter coats provided to them by Helpsy.
“Helpsy has really gone out of its way to make this event possible again this year. "We are expecting hundreds of coats to be delivered for our event,” Rev. Nathan said. “We have just enough storage to keep the coats left over until the next event. We would never have been able to collect and store this many coats without Helpsy. "
“The average person throws away more than 100 pounds of clothing every year,” said Dan Green, Co-Founder and CEO of Helpsy. “Only 15% of textiles are currently reused or recycled, while 95% of what winds up in landfills could be." Helpsy is working to change this lopsidedness. "Recycling or otherwise reusing clothing can help save natural resources such as water and fuel and help to reduce toxins from pesticides,” he said.
While preservation of the environment is a noble mission, recycling is also an industry. Helpsy strives to balance profit and purpose… to use business as a force of good™. These efforts have earned them a Certified B Corp designation. (To find out more about the certification process, click here). Helpsy has also earned a Real Leaders Impact Award for 2020, 2021, and 2022, ranking as one of the top 150 impact companies solving business problems in socially constructive ways.
What Happens to the Clothing?
Of the textiles that Helpsy collects, 95% are salvageable. Broken down further, 75% is reusable, and 20% is recyclable. Items collected are first sorted by Helpsy and its many partners and then divided into grades. The higher grades are resold on Helpsy’s new online marketplace, helpsy.com, as well as to resellers that make a living reselling secondhand clothing online, to thrift partners in North America, and to other secondhand markets around the world. The lower grades go to industrial use or things like rags, stuffing, and insulation.
One such thrift partner is PossAbilities, a chain of thrift boutiques in Flemington and Phillipsburg, New Jersey. Danielle Crouse, Area Manager, takes pride in offering the local community quality and affordable secondhand merchandise. She says, “Once our clothing and accessories are sorted and processed, they are neatly displayed by size in their appropriate department for easy browsing." This helps customers visualize the endless possibilities of giving fashion a new life. " Helpsy works with PossAbilities to manage their unwanted inventory items not sold in their boutique. These items are sorted and sent to both domestic and international resale markets. The remaining textiles, unfit to be re-worn, will be recycled and turned into wiper cloths and fiberfill for furniture.
“While the situation is dire, there has been a shift in the perception of used clothing,” said Alex Husted, CIO and co-founder of Helpsy. “In 2020, there was a 27% increase in the sale of used clothing, coupled with a decrease in fast fashion manufacturing. Americans are on a trend toward more sustainable clothing,” he added.
Helpsy’s environmental mission is to radically change the way people think about clothing reuse and recycling. In the process of serving this mission, it has created jobs, saved municipalities millions of dollars in disposal fees, and reduced the enormous environmental burden of the second most polluting industry in the world. Considering those numbers, recycling clothes makes sense both environmentally and financially. For additional information about Helpsy or to join in our environmental preservation efforts, contact us.