Horizon Goodwill Industries is a human services agency and network of not-for-profit businesses. Our mission is to help people with special needs and barriers to employment improve their quality of life through work and related services. We serve 17 counties in Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Virginia. Goodwill employs over 400 people and operates 12 retail stores and other businesses to help fund programs and to provide job training and employment opportunities for our clients.
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Just drop off your items at any of our retail stores or our Attended Donation Center in Hagerstown, MD. To find the donation center nearest you, click here. You'll receive a receipt for your donations, which can help you at tax time if you itemize, and you'll be helping people in our area overcome barriers to employment.
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Goodwill employees and clients screen, sort and prepare the broad selection of quality donated items for sale in our value-oriented Goodwill retail stores. Incoming items are screened by Goodwill personnel against established quality and selection criteria. The generated revenue from the sale of these donations is then invested in our many programs that give the disabled and disadvantaged in our community a hand up.
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We sort, price and sell your donations in our stores. Ultimately, we turn your donations into good jobs, good homes, and good neighborhoods.
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Yes. Contributions of goods and money made to Goodwill support programs and services provided by Horizon Goodwill Industries in 17 counties in the four state area.
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Goodwill is local and it's linked to a great cause. When you donate to Goodwill, you help us help others right here in the Quad State area to build our community one job at a time. An average of 90.2 percent of all revenue raised by Goodwill from the sale of donated goods supports job-training and rehabilitation programs for people with disabilities and other barriers to employment right here in this area. The other 9.8 percent meets administrative costs. For-profit thrift stores sometimes arrange to use a charity's name to collect donations in exchange for a fee or a percent
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We accept new or used clothing, household items, books and small appliances. All items must be in good, workable condition. Other contributions in the forms of cash gifts or bequests are appreciated as well and may be made by contacting Katie Hollendoner at 301-733-7330 x118. All gifts are tax-deductible, as provided by law.
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Our goal is to try to generate money to fund Goodwill programs from every item that is donated. As for items that can't be sold in our stores, we've found other creative uses for them. For example, some Goodwills recycle old clothing scraps into industrial wipes (cleaning cloths) for industrial buyers. Other items that are too damaged for retail sales are sold to salvage brokers. Roughly 99 percent of all donated goods are re-sold in some way, shape or form.
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We sell left over items to salvage merchants who then ship the material to third-world countries. Goodwill provides a valuable recycling service to our community. We receive more than 189,000 donations every year diverting millions of pounds of goods away from our landfills.
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No. Nowadays, the cost of repairing items greatly exceeds the price we charge in our stores. In addition, we focus our training programs on vocations that meet current employer demands.
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We are unable to resell certain items and in some cases incur excessive costs to dispose of them (open cans of paint, non-working computers and TV monitors, for example). Also, we have neither the specialized equipment nor the staff expertise required to handle large appliances, building materials, etc.
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No. We no longer accept vehicles as donations.
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Yes. Our Home Services division operates inside the city limits of Cumberland, MD and of Hagerstown, MD. Please call the store nearest you to arrange for a pick up.
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Horizon Goodwill serves individuals with special needs, including (but not limited to), people with disabilities, displaced workers, participants in welfare-to-work programs, people with limited work experience, people with limited education or training, older or youth workers, and workers with criminal backgrounds.
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Today's Goodwill stores are attractive, modern retail facilities that function as part of an extensive, full-line discount retail operation, with a special emphasis on clothing. Quality, brand-name merchandise is donated to Goodwill by private individuals, manufacturers and other retailers. As a result, Goodwill shoppers find excellent bargains in clothing, linens, furniture, shoes, small appliances, housewares, collectibles, books and recordings
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From people in the community. They donate household goods they no longer can use but someone else would like to buy at a very low cost.
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The resale of the goods is an important means of paying for our programs that assist people with disabilities and disadvantages.
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We recycle everything we possibly can. In fact, Goodwill has been described as “the original recycler.” We have special programs for recycling metal, shoes, clothing and other materials. Several broker companies purchase items we can’t use very cheaply and in turn resell them to Third World companies or use to make other products. This keeps a great deal of material out of the waste-stream and we’re proud of being good environmental citizens.
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Horizon Goodwill Industries partners with area employers to help recruit employees, provide job placement, job development, retention programs and customized training services. Businesses and organizations can also use Goodwill's production, custodial or wood product services. To learn more, visit our Help for Businesses section of this website.
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Our staff helps them discover what kind of work they would do best so they will likely be successful. We train them for work and we place them in jobs in the community or at Goodwill. In addition to employment-related programs, we assist some people with social services that help them enrich their lives.
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It’s a nonprofit agency and one of the world’s largest providers of education, training, and career services for people with disabilities, disadvantages, or other barriers to employment, funded largely by our retail stores filled with your generous donations..
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We’re a charity that runs a business. Goodwill is a 501 (c) (3), nonprofit organization that funds its social service programs through revenues generated by its donated goods business.
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Goodwill is a one-stop source for job-related services to help individuals with special needs, disabilities and other barriers to employment. From evaluation and testing, to training and education, to placement and employment services no other organization offers such a comprehensive and integrated menu of employment-related services.
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Positions at Horizon Goodwill Industries are always available in several areas. Click here to see our current openings.
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Horizon Goodwill Industries helps individuals find work based on their own interests and abilities. We work with area employers to find jobs for those who train at Goodwill. For those interested in working at a Goodwill store, training and placement assistance is available for this employment option as well. Please see the Jobs & Careers section of our website for more information.
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In addition to hands-on job training programs, we also provide classroom education to help individuals reach their full employment potential. For information on training and education programs, see the Jobs & Careers section of this Website.
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Most of our funds come from the sale of gently used goods in our 12 retail stores. We also receive some grants from foundations and fees for our workforce development and social services from agencies that refer their clients to us. 90.2% of our revenues support our programs; that’s a very high percentage among nonprofits.
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No one. We’re a nonprofit corporation. A Board of Directors, made up of business and community leaders, oversees our agency. Our President/CEO directs our day-to-day operations.
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We assist people with physical, mental, emotional or developmental disabilities, and we serve individuals with disadvantages such as welfare dependency and other barriers to employment.
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In 1902 a Boston minister had the idea of collecting unwanted goods from people in the city, then hiring unemployed men and women to refurbish them and sell them to the public at very low prices. The concept of self-help has worked ever since. Today there are more than 200 different Goodwills in the U.S., Canada, and 22 other countries.
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Goodwill Industries International is an association of more than 200 autonomous member organizations, each governed by a local board of directors.
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In 2003, we helped 2,995 persons. As soon as the figures for 2004 have been finalized we will update this number.
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We serve people with disabilities and special needs, including former welfare recipients, single mothers, recent immigrants, high school dropouts and individuals with a history of chronic unemployment, incarceration or substance abuse.
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No. All of our services are offered free of charge.
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No. They are employees. An important component of our mission is to provide employment opportunities.
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We incur many expenses while collecting, transporting, sorting and selling the donated goods. They include salaries and benefits, light bills, and gas and tires for our vehicles. And we utilize the revenues generated by our stores to fund a wide array of local services.
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