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Carolyn
Gillis has created online Web sites where people can sell items they
don’t want and donate all or part of the proceeds to charity or a
school organization.
Maule photo
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FALMOUTH - Carolyn Gillis is reviving an effort she began 10 years
ago to raise money for charity and schools through online classified
advertisements and auctions.
When her daughter and son were in grade school, Gillis volunteered at
the schools and was on the start-up board for Falmouth Education
Foundation.
She cooked for bake sales and stood in the rain for fundraising events.
She thought there had to be a better and more efficient way to raise
money for the schools than this and having students sell things like
candy, candles and wrapping paper.
Then, one day when she came across a Boston Trader sweater that her son
had never worn, the idea hit her that she could sell the sweater for at
least $50 and share the profits with the school.
She soon organized and printed three classified advertising
newspaper-size newsletters where people could sell items and then donate
all or part of the proceeds to the schools. Volunteers helped her, and
she made a few hundred dollars for each run for the school, but it was a
lot of work and took more time than she had.
That idea, however, evolved into an online classified service called
Classified Circles (classifiedcircles.org) to which sellers can
contribute all or part (from 1 percent to 100 percent) of the profits to
a chosen charity, not just schools. More recently, Gillis has started
Classroom Classifieds (classroomclassifieds.com) where people can sell
items they don’t want or need and donate all or part of the proceeds to
schools.
Gillis’ daughter, Melissa, will be a junior in college, and her son,
Michael, will graduate from high school next year. Gillis is trying once
again to revive the Web sites that are still active but have never
gotten off to the full surge she knows they could.
She put the project “on the back burner” while she went to school at the
University of Southern Maine to work on a degree in business, but now
she is ready to put it on the front burner.
“We haven’t had the big spark yet,” she said this week.
Just the same, about $11,000 in pledges are currently listed on the
classifiedcircle Web site. Only about 20 items, however, are listed on
the classroomclassifieds.com site where you can currently purchase a
ping pong or coffee table, guitar, a golden retriever and a variety of
sporting goods items. If you pay the $100 asking price for the ping pong
table, in Falmouth, 5 percent will be sent by the seller to a school
organization of that person’s choice. A buyer could also make a counter
offer.
People selling on the site are on the honor system to send the money to
the chosen school group, as are people who purchase items on the
Classified Circles site. Currently on that site a woodblock print from
the estate of R. Rockefeller is being offered by a Portland resident at
an asking price of $5,000. The print was done by Kazumi Amano, who has
works in the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Tokyo Museum of
Modern Art. All of the sale price will be donated to the Maine Time
Bank.
The National School Foundation recently became interested in Gillis’
idea They placed a link on their Web site to Gillis’
Classroom Classified site and sent out “Internet news blasts” about
it. She was also flown to a conference Florida to talk about her
project.
The Web sites “have taken over my life,” Gillis said, even though she
has gotten some volunteer help. She is trying to find a way to get paid
for what so far has been voluntary work. She wants to organize the
school classified site as a 501c3 nonprofit organization, and she may do
the same with Classified Circles. Then she can seek sponsorships and
grants with the goal of getting paid a salary.
She plans to charge school systems $200 to list up to 15 schools and
organizations on the site, or one group could pay a $20 fee to be
listed. Recently, Ruth’s Reusable Resources in Scarborough was listed on
the site.
Gillis said Falmouth schools and school organizations are not charged to
be listed on the site, nor will they ever be.
Gillis is working on getting a PayPal-type account on the sites, and she
is also working on other improvements, she said.
Former Gov. Angus King is on her advisory board of directors and has called it an
eBay for education, she said.
People from Australia and Great Britain have expressed an interest in
Gillis’ idea as have people in other states, including California, in
the last few weeks.
Linda Maule can be reached at 781-3661 ext. 108 or lmaule@theforecaster.net
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