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This holiday season Second Chance Toys was blessed to have 10 different Kidville locations collecting gently used plastic toys. In Manhattan, participating locations included the Upper East Side, Upper West Side, Midtown West, Union Square and FiDi. In the Bronx, the Riverdale location collected toys, In Brooklyn, they were collected at the Park Slope and Carroll Gardens locations, and in New Jersey, toys were collected in Montclair and Hoboken.
We are so grateful for the efforts of Kidville and for the impact they have had on hundreds of children in their local areas. They truly made a difference for children less fortunate. And for the children that donated their toys, there are invaluable life lessons too. According to Rammy Harwood, Co-Founder/President and CEO of Kidville, "Our collections teach selflessness, empathy and giving at an early age. By donating a once-loved toy of their own, children learn firsthand about the importance of giving and reuse," he continued.
What better way to instill and celebrate the true spirit of the holidays.
Pictured are some of the 300 toys that were picked up all over Manhattan by 1-800-GOT-JUNK? and delivered to Greater Harlem Healthy Start. The mothers were ecstatic. Thank you, Kidville!
Tashua Elementary School in Trumbull, CT has consistently collected with Second Chance Toys and always with great results!! They not only hold the collection outside their school, but in front of Town Hall as well. Pictured are just a few of the 645 toys they donated to Community Closet, the beneficiary of thousands of their toys over the years. A special thanks to Jim Sullivan for spearheading this at the school. And many thanks to the Tashua Elementary School community for their generosity. Nothing stops them. Not even the snow!!!
For a second year in a row, PS 132 The Conselyea School, demonstrated the generosity of their school community with an incredible donation of 1,500 toys. Danielle Sanchez, school parent and organizer of the collection, made this happen in a big way, with lots of outreach and promotion to the parent community. As a result, a truckload of toys was donated to various Ascend Schools, to be used for indoor recess and by school clinicians with the children. That’s
not all! There were more to be donated to P396K Special Education School, and Bushwick Parish United Methodist Church. Thankfully, our friends at 1-800-GOT-JUNK? were ready to volunteer with the pick-up and drop-off of this enormous collection of toys. We are so grateful to Danielle and her team of hardworking parents, Thea Z., Suzanne P., and Christian P., who dedicated their time to sorting toys, along with the support of PS 132’s Principal Ms. Lubeck, Parent Coordinator Ms. Bach, and Head Custodian, Tommy. What a winning team!!
A first-time collection in Blairstown, NJ yielded great results-- over 600 toys collected! Donations were gathered through the Blairstown Museum, and spearheaded by volunteer extraordinaire Brianna Miller (pictured). Together with Brianna, a team of volunteers gathered to clean and distribute the toys throughout Warren County. Thank you, Blairstown!
For several years now, Ridgewood Savings Bank has been collaborating with Second Chance Toys to collect for children in NYC. Over the years they have donated hundreds of toys. This holiday, Amral Khan once again coordinated a bank-wide collection. Through the generosity of its employees, Ridgewood Savings Bank was able to donate 300 toys to Cienfuegos Foundation in Queens.
The toys have made a real difference this holiday for the children we serve" exclaimed Bethania Perkins, director of Cienfuegos Foundation. "We are so grateful for the bank's efforts to help the community. Some of the children had not had a reason to smile for a long time. The bank’s efforts helped bring many smiles, much laughter and cheer into their lives and they could concentrate on being children," she continued.
Thank you Ridgewood Savings Bank.
We all know how new toys magically find their way to good little girls and boys for the holidays. But did you ever stop to wonder how so many gently-used plastic toys get into the hands of those that need them? Most collectors with 50-100 toys work out arrangements with their matched organizations for pickup or drop-off. But when we have a collection of several hundred to over a thousand toys, who can we always count on for their generosity of time, trucks and manpower.... our friends at 1-800- GOT-JUNK?
For close to 10 years now, they have volunteered to deliver our collections in NY, NJ, PA, DC, MD, VA, MA, IL, FL, MI, SC, CT, GA, CA... basically wherever and whenever we ask them to help out!!
Over the past decade, 1-800- GOT-JUNK? has helped us transport hundreds of thousands of toys to children in need and kept as many toys out of the landfills as well. There are no words to express our gratitude for their willingness to help and deliver thousands of toys at a time. They are polite, efficient and generous and stand by their mission of promoting reuse vs. waste. Thanks to the generosity of 1-800- GOT-JUNK?, Second Chance Toys is able to scale our efforts and impact many more children. They are indeed responsible for making magic happen for so many children this holiday season.
Thank you 1-800- GOT-JUNK? for all that you do.
A public collection at one of three Manhattan TD Bank locations
This year, at the annual Winter's Eve celebration in the Lincoln Square neighborhood of Manhattan, TD Bank kicked off their holiday collection of gently used plastic toys. Three branches on 62nd, 68th and 117th streets participated in the collections and brought in an amazing amount of toys! Then they took their participation to the next level and attended the toy distribution at United Yes We Can/Unidos Si Se Puede holiday party, in East Harlem. TD Bank volunteers helped organize and select age- appropriate toys for each family.
Because of TD Bank's efforts, so many children in need were positively impacted and parents were given the dignity of being able to provide a toy for their child for the holidays. We are so grateful for the participation of TD bank. They are community minded in every sense of the word.
Year after year, we are so grateful for the efforts of the controllers group at Viacom. Not only do they support our program on Viacommunity Day, but they consistently volunteer their time and effort to hold an internal collection of gently used plastic toys for the holidays.
The photos display the care and enthusiasm poured into the effort, the incredible number of toys collected, their careful preparation of the toys and their team effort. As a result of the collection, 120 toys went to deserving children at Urban Resource Institute in Manhattan.
We are so grateful to Viacom NY controllers for setting aside time each holiday to help children in need.
As a result of the amazing collections conducted by hundreds of volunteers throughout the country, Second Chance Toys was able to coordinate donations of 25,000 toys in 2017. And the volunteer efforts of our partners, 1-800- GOT-JUNK?, make it possible to transport very large collections to multiple organizations. We are so happy to have kept thousands of plastic toys out of landfills that are now helping to inspire children to create, imagine, play and learn.
Thanks to everyone involved with Second Chance Toys for your time, efforts, and enthusiasm for our mission. You have made a real difference.
With gratitude,
The Second Chance Toys Team
The student body of McGinn Elementary in Scotch Plains responded overwhelmingly to the call for gently used plastic toys. Thanks to Kelly Sachetti, the PTA moms and the help of fourth graders, they were able to collect, inspect, clean and bag 830 toys within an hour of school bell.
They certainly helped make magic this holiday season for so many children served by Union County Council for Young Children. And as a bonus, the children at McGinn experienced firsthand the importance of giving and the special feeling of helping others less fortunate. Now that's what the holidays are all about!
Thank you McGinn for your continued support of Second Chance Toys!
The fourth grade class of Solomon Schechter Day School of Greater Monmouth County coordinated a toy drive to benefit Second Chance Toys, with help from their teachers, Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Markowitz and the school administration. Students in the class informed other students in the school of the fundraiser by creating posters to spread the word. Children in the school generously donated both new and gently used toys. The whole school community got involved including students, teachers and other staff.
Due to the competitive nature of this particular fourth grade class, their teachers split the class into two teams. The in-class competition encouraged everyone to participate in donating toys.
Once the competition was finished, they had collected 300 toys, which were donated to Community Refuge Education Center. The class shared all of the details of the collection in a school-wide Thanks & Giving assembly in which the students relayed all the things they were thankful for and that there were children who were not as fortunate as they. They explained how they reached out to family, friends and community to help children that might not receive toys for the holidays. By doing the skit, they taught the entire school how important it is to give back.
Bottom line: The students were very excited to help others and are determined to do more drives to help the less fortunate.
The holiday toy collection at Evergreen School in Scotch Plains is proof that when a community comes together, great things happen. The collection was promoted well in advance. The Kids Care Committee posted e-blasts for weeks, the PTA president sent out reminders about making sure the toys were clean, that loose pieces were put together in bags and attached to the toys, and that toys were in the same condition that parents would want to give to their own children. Not only did the community respond with everything bagged so neatly, but a record number of toys were donated! In only one hour, the fourth graders inspected, wiped down and bagged up the collection of 950 toys.
Then, like clockwork, 1-800-GOT-JUNK? pulled in front of the school to load up the toys and cart them to Newark, where they were donated to Vince Lombardi Centers for Hope. We could never move as many toys as we do and impact the thousands of children we do without the volunteer services of 1-800- GOT-JUNK? their trucks, time and manpower. Special thanks to Evergreen Principal, Colleen Haubert, for supporting the collection twice yearly at the school, and to the Kids Care parents, Lindsay DeMasi and Kathleen Migliaccio, for their consistent dedication and hard work year after year!! Thank you all.
Representatives from the Mid Fairfield Child Guidance Center joined the Stamford JCC Nursery School at their weekly Shabbat celebration to receive the toys the children collected. The representatives shared with the children how the toys will benefit other children. The experience of collecting and donating was a great life lesson for the kids at the JCC, and will help make a wonderful holiday experience for others.
With the “season of giving,” the Women of AT&T (WOA-SJ) employee resource group recently hosted a toy drive at the AT&T Middletown, NJ office. Their collected toys were distributed to Lunch Break in Red Bank, NJ who in turn offer them freely to their clients in need.
Established in 1983, Lunch Break freely provides food, clothing, life skills and fellowship to those in need who live in Monmouth and Ocean Counties. Lunch Break strives to break the cycle of poverty for those they serve and guide community members in need to self-sufficiency and healthier, more productive lifestyles.
We were happy to work with Women of AT&T (WOA-SJ). This marks their second successful collection, and one that conincided with a generous monetary donation. They enjoy working with SCT specificially because it provides a wonderful lesson in giving and reuse, and allows them to support local charities and make a positive difference in the lives of people in their own backyard.
Kidville has been collecting toys with Second Chance Toys for years. Beginning this week, they are accepting gently used plastic toys at their various locations in New York including Upper East Side, Upper West Side, Midtown West, Union Square and FiDi locations in Manhattan, Park Slope and Carroll Gardens in Brooklyn, and in New Jersey at their Hoboken and Montclair (Nov. only) locations. Please click here for specific dates and times. Toys will be matched with local organizations to benefit the children in those areas. Thank you Kidville for your years of dedication and efforts to help children and the environment!!
Shop to support Second Chance Toys! This holiday season, our generous partners at rose & rex are donating 25% of the sale price of two adorbale Hazel Village plush animals to Second Chance Toys.
Nicholas Bear Cub and Penelope Rabbit are beautifully crafted from eco-friendly materials and feature hand-stitched faces. By helping Second Chance Toys reach more children with each purchase, it's a win-win for anyone seraching for a unique and heirloom-quality plaything for a special child in their life. Shop today!
“I just want to say one word to you. Just one. Are you listening?”
“Yes, sir”
“Plastics.” -Mr. McGuire to Benjamin Braddock in The Graduate (1967)
It was that thinking, along with a sense of helping the environment, that led to the birth of Second Chance Toys (SCT), and getting used plastic toys into the hands of children in need. Children who probably would NOT receive a toy if not for the efforts of SCT.
Possibly one of the industry leaders along these lines is Little Tikes Inc., based in Hudson, Ohio [Akron area]. Famous for their Cozy Coupe Cars, Cape Cottage Playhouses and other designs. The things simply never wear out! And even with a few scuffs and minor wear and tear, with some tender loving care they can be restored to nearly good as new.
I know this first hand. When we were starting our family years ago, my wife decided to stay home and be a full-time mom. We stretched our single income through garage sales and thrift shops, but by selecting good quality products, that hold up.
Second Chance Toys brings as much joy the second, third and even multiple times around. Especially to a child expecting nothing.
Todd Winninger is a Freelance Writer, specializing in volunteer assignments with non-profit organizations. His online portfolio is at http://www.linkedin.com/in/winncomm. He lives in South Florida.
For the past three years, Virginia-based management consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton (NYSE: BAH) held gently used plastic toy collections as part of April’s Earth Day events. Not only does the quantity of collected toys continue to grow, but so does the participation of more Booz Allen offices.
This year, the Booz Allen Sustainability Program Management Office coordinated the involvement of eight offices throughout Virginia, DC, Maryland, Tennessee, and South Carolina. Each team provided collection areas or boxes within their offices, cleaned the toys to look good-as- new, and donated them to local organizations matched by Second Chance Toys. This year’s program was co-chaired by employee volunteers Elaine Soya and Kathy Medici, with the cleanup supported by employee forums as part of Take Your Children to Work Day.
"We are thrilled to see enthusiasm for this program growing internally," said Sustainability Program Manager Elizabeth Wayt. "Teams are helping local children in need while doing something meaningful in celebration of Earth Month."
In some instances, volunteers themselves delivered collections of used toys directly to their local organization. "Seeing the smiling faces of the deserving children and knowing that we were directly responsible for bringing so much happiness warmed our hearts," remarked DC volunteer Nadine Goff.
Here's how the Booz Allen volunteer efforts helped make a difference:
• Booz Allen offices donated a total of 1,500 toys
• Approximately 6,000 lbs. of plastic were kept out of landfills
• Eight organizations benefited from the toy donations
• Employee children who donated learned important life lessons of giving and reuse
• An average of 4,500 smiles will be generated with each round of play (an average of three children per toy)
Second Chance Toys is grateful for the time, effort, and enthusiasm devoted to this growing Earth Month program at Booz Allen and for the firm’s recognition of our mission in the way of a generous grant.
Why is Buzz Lightyear smiling? Because thousands of his plastic toy friends were saved from landfills this Earth Month!!
Second Chance Toys enjoyed a great response allowing us to match many individual collectors from around the country with organizations in their local area that need toys. Additionally, we enjoyed many repeat collectors who have consistently seen an increase in the number of toys donated year after year. Many locals have now come to rely on repeat collections and know to save up their toys throughout the year.
We have received comments from parents that Second Chance Toys provides a guilt-free way to dispose of plastic toys, knowing they will not end up in a landfill and instead, be played with again. Many parents and grandparents use the donation process to instill in their children the life lessons of giving and reuse.
With over 8,000 toys donated this April, we were able to spread the love far and wide and in the process, keep over 30,000 pounds of plastic out of the landfills!! Thank you everyone who donated, collected, and supported Second Chance Toys. We depend on volunteers to help make magic for children and the environment.
In spite of the downpour, the kids and parents at Evergreen School rallied and collected over 300 toys in just a little more than an hour. The toys were cleaned, batteries were changed and these colorful plastic gems looked as good as new!! On hand were our friends from 1-800-GOT-JUNK? who volunteered their time, manpower and truck to pickup and deliver the toys to Freedom Ministries in Plainfield.
Evergreen has been doing twice yearly collections with Second Chance Toys for 10 years, since 2008! Thanks to the PTA volunteers for getting the word out, organizing the drive and helping the fourth grade volunteers that cleaned and inspected the toys. This was another great success in a string of many!!!