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LUGGAGE
LOST . . . AND FOUND
THE UNCLAIMED BAGGAGE CENTER
by Jason Zasky
Spend any time at an airport baggage claim and it won't be long
before you spot a solitary suitcase going round and round on an
otherwise empty carousel. Ever wondered what happens to that suitcase
if the airline is unable to reunite it with its owner? Chances are
it ultimately ends up at the Unclaimed Baggage Center (UBC), a one-of-a-kind
store that purchases lost and unclaimed bags from the airlines,
then re-sells their contents"lost treasures from around the
world"at one of two Alabama outlets.
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Founded in 1970
by entrepreneur H. Doyle Owens, the original UBC was open just one
day a week, a cozy little place where locals would congregate on
Saturdays and troll for bargains. In contrast, today's flagship
outletopen six days a week and spanning more than a city blockis
a cross between a department store and a thrift shop, offering a
bedazzling assortment of merchandise at bargain basement prices.
While locals still frequent the store in Scottsboronot to
mention "UBC Etc.," a satellite located in Boaz, an hour to the
souththe UBC has become a major tourist attraction. A stick
pin-covered world map in the lobby boasts visitors from as far away
as Perth (Australia), Istanbul (Turkey) and Harare (Zimbabwe), not
to mention Turkmenistan, Trinidad & Tobago and Tasmania.
Naturally, most
of the goods for sale are the sort of things one would expect to
find in a suitcase or travel bag. The shelves are filled with men's,
women's and children's clothing, plus cameras, camcorders, jewelry,
eye glasses, perfume, toiletries, and of course, the luggage itself.
There's also a wide selection of CDs, DVDs, books and portable music
playersthe kind of items that airline passengers tend to leave
behind in seat-back pockets.
But at the UBC
one can also expect the unexpecteda luxurious mink coat for
two thousand dollars, or a richly embroidered wedding dress for
$150.
However, a mink
coat is positively unremarkable compared to other items that have
come in over the years, including a medicine man's stick adorned
with a shrunken head and a rare violin made by a student of Stradivarius.
The U.S. Navy once lost track of a guidance system for an F-16 fighter
jet valued at a quarter of a million dollars. And most remarkable
of all, in 1980 the UBC received a large collection of Egyptian
artifacts comprised of faience figures, beads and scarabs, plus
a painted wood sarcophagus mask, all estimated to date from 1567-304
B.C.
Yet, most UBC
shoppers don't come looking for the exotic, they come to find bargains.
Karen Smith, a Microsoft certification teacher from Huntsville,
AL, says she visits the store every two weeks "like clockwork."
With a husband and five kids Smith says she's always on the lookout
for luxury goods that are priced to move. "I once bought a two-hundred
dollar designer banquet dress for my daughter for ten dollars,"
she begins. "But the electronics department is where I typically
do best, especially with DVD's and CD's, which are priced at $3.99."
Tom Gately,
who also hails from Huntsville, says that in 1979 he bought a thousand-dollar
[Italian] Benotto bicycle for eighty-five dollars. He's been coming
to the UBC ever sinceschlepping 45 minutes each way once every
two monthslooking for that tell-all-your-friends steal. Gately
says he knows of one knowledgeable shopper who bought a diamond-tipped
drill bitthe kind used on oil rigsfor five dollars.
"When the UBC first opened the operators had little knowledge of
the value of the things they were getting in," he begins. "Today
it's more of a challenge to find that great deal you just can't
resist."
Interestingly,
the "regulars" don't seem to mind that the merchandise is pre-owned.
Smith says she initially found the idea of buying used goods disquieting
and perhaps even bad karma, but the prices helped her overcome her
discomfort. The UBC claims that all clothingincluding swimwear,
undergarments and lingerieis laundered or dry cleaned before
being offered for sale, but Smith wonders whether the "as is" merchandise
has actually been cleaned. "I will go through pockets and unzip
zippers on 'as is' clothing because you sometimes find things. I
see people going through the pockets on clothes all the time," she
reports.
Certainly, it's
not unheard of for buyers to discover hidden treasures inside the
merchandise. One woman bought her daughter a Barbie doll, and the
rambunctious little girl promptly twisted the doll's head off, side-stepping
punishment by presenting her mom with the roll of bills$500that
was hidden inside. According to UBC employees, the Bonus Barbie
incident prompted a run on dolls that lasted several weeks.
Found-money
stories aside, the UBC can't get around the fact that it benefits
from the misfortune of others. In an effort to minimize this public
relations issue the UBC Web siteunclaimedbaggage.comoffers
a long list of baggage-oriented travel tips. Among the bits of advice:
Make sure the contact information on your ID tags is up-to-date;
place a copy of your itinerary inside your luggage; write your name
and address on all carry-on items; make an inventory of all items
packed inside your bags; and always make sure to tip and be polite
to your Skycap.
Unclaimedbaggage.com
also assures site visitors that airlines take great pains to reunite
owners with their bags, and that thanks to "sophisticated global
tracing systems … less than .005% of all checked bags are permanently
lost." But that's hardly comforting for those who have suffered
a loss. And considering that thousands of items are added to UBC
stock on a daily basis, .005% still adds up to a lot of lost baggage.
Somehow the
idiom "one man's loss is another man's gain" seems particularly
apropos when referring to the UBC. But patrons aren't interested
in getting philosophical; they simply yearn to experience the euphoria
of finding a once-in-a-lifetime bargain. As Gately succinctly puts
it, "You just never know what someone is going to lose."
LINKS
http://www.unclaimedbaggage.com
(Official site of the Unclaimed Baggage Center)
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