In addition to the proper disposing of electronics, Goodwill provides shredding of confidential documents in their facility at 19th Street West. They guarantee that material delivered to this facility is properly secured while awaiting destruction. Upon request, a certificate of destruction is provided to assure that all documents have been destroyed. Material that has been shredded is recycled into the production of cardboard containers.
Ever wonder why the stadium lights are left on after Marshall's home football games? Goodwill employees are cleaning up tons of debris left after each game. They also clean carpets, strip and wax floors, clean office facilities, banks, and manufacturing facilities. If it needs cleaned, chances are, Goodwill has been trained to do it.
Need help with consumer credit counseling? Goodwill offers classes by qualified instructors in Debt Management, Consumer Education, Pre-filling Bankruptcy Procedures, Free Budget, Credit, and Home Loan Counseling.
Harper?s premeditated destruction of the CWB spelled out in secret
In a secret Cabinet briefing document dated August 10, 2006, the Harper Government spelled out a methodical, step-by-step plan to destroy the Canadian Wheat Board (CW
single desk for wheat and barley. The document listed nearly every totalitarian tactic the government subsequently used against the CWB, including: a gag order, an attempt to change the CWB mandate through Cabinet Order, firing CWB CEO Adrian Measner and other appointed Directors and replacing them with Directors who "favour marketing choice," a plebiscite with a three-part question and "no specified percentage" for victory.
The previously-classified Cabinet document was made public by lawyers representing the CWB during a court hearing in Winnipeg June 16. The six-page document contained several blacked-out portions, but listed a number of "options" the Harper Cabinet could use to circumvent the democratic Parliamentary process.
Manteca planning second document shredding event
Solid waste employees will help with the event as well as the Manteca Police Department to make sure all documents are secure while awaiting shredding. Volunteers from the CVB - lead by that organization's president Steve DeBrum who is also a city councilman - will also be on hand to help move items to be shredded from vehicles that pull into the Library Park parking lot that night.
The Manteca Police Department handles over 120 stolen identification cases a year. And one of the leading ways for crooks to steal your ID and cost you well over $1,000 - even if fraudulent charges are covered by credit card companies - is your garbage and your mailbox.
The Federal Trade Commission indicates there are 10 million victims of identity theft a year in the United States with a good number of the cases involving serious breaches that take the victim an average of 175 hours to clear up their credit with average losses not covered by financial institutions pegged at $1,500.
