Goodwill of Greater Washington, which closed retail outlets in March due to the coronavirus, is now shuttering all of its 18 regional donation locations because there is no additional room to house the items.
The closure is effective at 5 p.m. Wednesday, May 6.
Even after renting a 25,000-square-foot warehouse for more storage, the nonprofit said even that space filled up and simply could not keep up with the generosity of donors.
“We’re just very disappointed that our stores are closed and that we can’t resell those goods to fund our mission,” Goodwill of Greater Washington’s Chief Marketing Director Brendan Hurley said.
“We have a lot of clothing, housewares, furniture,” Hurley said. “Our community’s been very generous. As a matter of fact, even though all of our retail stores were closed, we were still getting about 40% of the same volume of donations that we received during the same period last year.”
Hurley said they’re trying to offload some of the items to other Goodwill partners outside the D.C. region in places such as West Virginia, North Carolina and parts of New England.
Still, Hurley said there is one positive in the group’s effort to help during the coronavirus crisis: It’s offering free online workshops on managing finances and finding a job.
“We can’t provide face-to-face training programs, but we did launch a virtual career center,” Hurley said. “We’ve only started it about two weeks ago, and we’ve already had well over 200 people who have registered for the programs.”
- Sign up for WTOP alerts
- Latest coronavirus test results in DC, Maryland and Virginia
- Coronavirus FAQ: What you need to know
- Coronavirus resources: Get and give help in DC, Maryland and Virginia
- DC-area episcopal bishops set plans for resuming public worship
- How Calvert, Howard counties work to quickly disinfect ambulances
- In push for normalcy, industries, nations test the waters