By: Bailey Wheeler

In movies and magazines, the fashion industry is depicted as luxurious and glamorous. However, the reality is more complex. According to a report by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the fashion industry is a huge contributor to the generation of waste. In 2018, the US generated 12,970 tons of clothing and footwear. That same year 9,070 tons of clothing waste ended up in landfills.
“I really do think that the issue with all of the waste is due to corporations pushing fast fashion and everything being made out of plastic, so nothing lasts,” Kyla Tacker, six-year resident of Fayetteville, Arkansas said.
Tacker hosted a clothing swap event on February 28. According to Tacker, she was inspired to host a clothing swap event after spring cleaning. Ultimately, Tacker wanted to prevent her old clothes from ending up in a landfill or in the hands of a reseller.
“Sustainability is not just about recycling and reusing. It’s resisting something becoming trash,” vice president of the University of Arkansas U of A’s University Programs, Annalise Robins said.
University Programs hosts several sustainable markets throughout the year, including an annual clothing swap event called Swap Till You Drop. On March 6, University Programs hosted a physical media swap for books, CDs and DVDs. According to Robins, the sustainable markets hosted by University Programs are often U of A students’ first introduction to clothing swaps.
“I’d much rather swap something with one of my peers for free than buy it from Goodwill,” said Cecilia Acosta, a political science and earth science major at the U of A.
Acosta attended her first clothing swap event during her freshman year. Since then, Acosta has been to several swap events hosted by University Programs, the Sustainable Fashion Club and even one hosted by Fayetteville High School’s eco fashion club.
“It reveals the nature of sustainable fashion cycles,” Acosta said.“It really is just someone in your community that doesn’t want a certain item, you do want a certain item. It gets a new life.”
University Programs’ “Swap Till You Drop” event does not just accept clothing donations; participants are also encouraged to bring canned food donations.
“I literally watch people go into Club Red and buy one of the cans of soup and then come back,” Robins said.
Ultimately Robins wants the people who participate in the University Programs events to learn that sustainability can be fun.
“I read that there are enough clothes on this earth to clothe the next six generations, which I think is crazy,” Acosta said.
Acosta explained that thrifting and attending clothing swaps are great alternatives to consuming new clothes. When wearing something that already exists, you can prevent clothing from ending up in landfills.
“I think more people should be conscious of how they consume, and be aware of what happens to their clothes after they’re done with them,” Acosta said.
“Goodwill [doesn’t] even let people in our area look at the good stuff because it all just ends up going to auction on eBay,” Tacker said “So it doesn’t end up going back into our community at all.”

Robins said that people need to take a step back and not just not blame corporate greed for Goodwill’s prices. Goodwill provides training and education to people who were previously incarcerated or never received a GED or high school diploma.
“There is no perfect thrift store, and by blaming goodwill, you’re not actually giving a new hot take,” said Robins.
Acosta said she has a hard time finding cute clothes at the Goodwill in Arkansas. Instead, she is disappointed by having to pay $11 for a pair of pants.
“I definitely think swap meets build community because it cuts out the middleman,” Acosta said.
At Tacker’s clothing swap event she hosted last month, community was the focus. Guests sat together in a circle and took turns displaying the clothes they brought, putting their names in a bowl if they were interested in “buying” an item up for auction. Excited shouts of how cute clothing items would look on the lucky person who was picked were heard around the room.
“When you’re an organizer, you have to think about meeting the needs of the community and seeing where there’s an open want and how you can fill that want,” Acosta explained.
Acosta is a Depop ambassador and has been working towards hosting her own swap events at the U of A. Through the processes of planning those events she has been surprised to learn that many people on campus are interested in clothing swaps.
“Whenever I go to the mall and I see all the fast fashion, it’s easy to feel like I’m the only one who doesn’t like that kind of thing,” Acosta said.
However, because of her experience as a Depop ambassador, Acosta has been encouraged to continue pushing for sustainable fashion. Instead of buying new clothing, she hopes that more people can find joy in shopping for thrifted clothing.
“I think that having events, specifically in the Arkansas Union, which is kind of like the living room of campus, does impact Fayetteville because we take so much space up here and to know that is what we’re valuing tells the city that that’s something that should be valued,” Robins said.