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Omaha Steve

(99,624 posts)
Sun Oct 23, 2016, 02:56 PM Oct 2016

Goodwill repackaging for a private company appears to violate federal rules for “Made in America”


REPACKAGING DEAL BENEFITS FROM CHEAP LABOR
A Goodwill Omaha effort to raise money by repackaging hair rollers for a private company appears to violate federal rules for “Made in America” labeling.
COLUMN BY MATTHEW HANSEN | ILLUSTRATIONS BY MATT HANEY | THE WORLD-HERALD

http://dataomaha.com/bigstory/story/109/news/repackaging-deal-benefits-from-cheap-labor

In the past decade, Goodwill Omaha has made an undisclosed amount of money performing a manufacturing magic trick — a sleight of hand that long struck some employees as wrong and may have broken federal law.

The Omaha nonprofit has for years routinely received deliveries from a metro-area beauty supply company named Prestige Products: dozens of giant boxes packed with hair rollers made at a factory in China.

Omahans in several Goodwill programs, including teenagers with mental and physical disabilities, take the Chinese rollers out of these boxes and repack them into smaller plastic bags to ready them for sale. These bags have a brand name, Nylrem, on the front and an eyebrow-raising three-word phrase on the back:

“Made in America.”

FULL story at link.

Your tax dollars are helping fund this practice, too: Most of the Omahans who actually perform the repacking for Goodwill Omaha are being paid from federal, state or local grants.
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Goodwill repackaging for a private company appears to violate federal rules for “Made in America” (Original Post) Omaha Steve Oct 2016 OP
sick Laf.La.Dem. Oct 2016 #1
I know someone who used to run a similar scam Generic Brad Oct 2016 #7
Sheltered workshops have the professed goal of employing the unemployable dembotoz Oct 2016 #11
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Generic Brad

(14,275 posts)
7. I know someone who used to run a similar scam
Sun Oct 23, 2016, 05:55 PM
Oct 2016

If what he told me is correct back in the late 1990's, his company would buy products illegally manufactured by Chinese prison labor, import them to the U.S., and then slap a "Made in the U.S.A." label on their merchandise. When I questioned him on the legality of that he replied, "The labels are made in America, so we are technically not breaking any laws".

That's the sort of twisted thinking taking place with Goodwill.

dembotoz

(16,802 posts)
11. Sheltered workshops have the professed goal of employing the unemployable
Sun Oct 23, 2016, 09:39 PM
Oct 2016

These are the folks too low to work at mc Donalds.
Exploited? I dunno
The made in USA is really wrong,
My wife was a speech therapist at such a facility years ago....some of these folks were really low functioning
The place was really more adult daycare for some of them

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