lunes, 7 de marzo de 2011

Freecycle

On a tous un petit stock de trucs inutiles, pas cassés et qu'on a des scrupules à jeter ; Vieux canapés, reste de carrelage, rideaux inutilisés, écran démodé...

Freecycle est un mouvement international dont l'objectif est de favoriser le don et la réutilisation d'objets pour éviter leur mise en décharge. Son slogan est « Don après don, nous changeons le monde » (en anglais : « Changing the world one gift at a time »).

Comment ça marche ?

Les utilisateurs du réseau proposent gratuitement des objets et ces objets sont récupérés par d'autres utilisateurs.

Il ne s'agit pas de troc ni de marché d'occasion : les objets sont donnés. Contrairement à d'autres sites fonctionnant sur le même modèle, Freecycle à l'avantage de permettre à ses membres de faire des demandes de type « cherche » (en plus du type « donne ») au reste de la communauté.

Il s'agit d'un système de don local, il n'y a généralement pas d'envoi des objets mais une remise en main propre. Les groupes sont donc rattachés à une ville ou à une zone géographique restreinte.

En Belgique, il y a des groupes freecycle à Anvers, Lier, Alost, Leuven, Liège, Mons, Bruxelles, Malines, Gand et Charleroi.


Welcome! The Freecycle Network™ is made up of 4,926 groups with 8,193,125 members around the world. It's a grassroots and entirely nonprofit movement of people who are giving (and getting) stuff for free in their own towns. It's all about reuse and keeping good stuff out of landfills. Each local group is moderated by local volunteers (them's good people). Membership is free. To sign up, find your community by entering it into the search box above or by clicking on 'Browse Groups' above the search box. Have fun!


History & Background Information

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.


More info: here

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