A few years ago as part of an extensive managerial role I oversaw a village based charity shop and the commitment of the volunteers was utterly fantastic. As many others have posted, the only privilege they had was to have an early opportunity to buy the items before they went on the shop floor, but that was only possible if they happened to be volunteering that one day a fortnight the donation was received and only if the sale price had been agreed with another volunteer by using the standard pricing guidelines.
As with any organisation there are those that break the rules, but on the whole, based on my experience, the majority of donated goods, providing they are fit for re-sale, will be placed on sale as the donor intended. If a volunteer buys them first, the money is still going to the charity. The volunteer asking if anyone had a dishwasher might want to know how much to set at a reasonable sale price being an unusual donation if she had no idea of its value.
A lot of donation boxes were left on the doorstep overnight, especially on Sundays after weekend clear outs and recycling depots closed, and most of those would contain absolute rubbish with nothing fit for resale which the volunteers would have to sort and bag up for disposal. Also, the donations would often be ransacked and the doorstep blocked with the contents strewn across the pavement, etc. so before opening the shop the volunteers would have to clear and clean up outside the shop. In my experience the volunteers don’t have it easy helping in a charity shop as donations aren’t always clean and sometimes contain unsavoury items.
It would be a shame for a post like this and some of the subsequent comments to put people off donating to support charities which rely on the funds raised in this way. It’s also not fair to jump to conclusions about volunteers on whom these charities depend.