richarddownunder
Established Member
But charities paying more rent then inflates the market artificially.
If you repair something worth repairing for free nobody will ever learn to repair it thus condemning every item in the future to be landfill. Pay a wage to a person to repair it and people will learn to repair. (Ad infinitum)
It's the "pay a wage" part that wrankles. A £5 donation to a charity that uses 70% to pay for running costs isn't the same. Look at good old capt Tom's charity.
Hi - I've been involved in a repair cafe for some time (in New Zealand, but under the same umbrella oganisation as the UK). As has been mentioned by several, the aim is really to help folk fix things that would otherwise end up in landfill and at the same time, try and pass on a few skills and a realisation that things often can be repaired. Some people don't want to know, it is just a service and a free cuppa and cake, but others get involved and learn something and that is rewarding for all concerned. The range of things we undertake is hugely variable from sewing and darning to book repairs to some basic wood and metalwork, bikes etc - and sometimes electrical, if we have a qualified electrician available. The other aim is not to take work from local businesses and if a repair is beyond the scope of the cafe (and the item is worth spending money on), we refer them to these businesses. We have the backing of the local men's shed (and sewing group) so larger woodwork repairs for example often go to the men's shed where they have the gear to do a proper job - yes, it is a bit harder to pass on skills in this situation. Again, these are usually things that people can't afford to get fixed and would otherwise be dumped. Also, we have very few (no) local businesses I know of that could be bothered with repairing, say, an old wooden chair that has much sentimental value but little monetary value, and if there were, it would be impossibly expensive. So, I figure that RCs do the community a service.
From a money point of view, the local council provide our building and if people want to make a donation, or pay for their cuppa, it is up to them.
I have a fairly expensive domestic water blaster/pressure washer. It sprung an internal leak. I asked numerous businesses including the manufacturer to fix it or for parts and all of them said bin it - we don't fix stuff. I eventually got a $5 part from Australia, fixed it myself and it is better than ever. It's a great feeling beating the system!
I'm sure we have investigated liability when we set it up, but this has all been a good prompt to re-look at that, especially for the times we have a sparky available to look at domestic appliances that have stopped working.
Cheers
Richard
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