Located just a short drive away in the Bon Air neighborhood of Chesterfield County, the St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store is the latest effort of the Richmond Diocese’s St. Vincent de Paul council to raise funds for the poor within the diocese’s 33,000 square miles.
Founded in 1833 — within just a few years of the Little Sisters of the Poor — the St. Vincent de Paul Society is a voluntary Catholic organization in which participants “seek personal holiness through service to those in need and in defense of social justice.”
Countless “conferences” of the society have been established around the world; often working across entire dioceses, the organization frequently coordinates at the parish level to direct volunteers, funding, donations, and other charitable activities toward local needy recipients.
Dan Kearns, the executive director of the Richmond council, told CNA the council worked “for the better part of a year” to open the facility.
The society, Kearns said, addresses “basic needs” among the needy, those who “can’t pay their electric bill, their water bill, their rent; they don’t have food.”
“We’re kind of first responders for emergency needs,” Kearns said. “We send out home visitors. What makes us different is we do home visits rather than have them come to an office. We go to them.”

Kearns said there are several hundred St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Stores around the country; the Bon Air store is the first one in the Diocese of Richmond. It arose after the Richmond council began collecting furniture and people started encouraging the group to launch an organized retail effort.
“People kept saying, ‘You should start a thrift store!’” Kearns said. “I said, ‘I don’t really wanna,’” he added with a laugh.
“We started doing some research,” he said. “We talked to some other people who started doing St. Vincents across the country.” The store came together in rapid time, going from a tentative vision to open for business in less than a year. In April, prior to its official launch, Bishop Knestout blessed the store and its charitable mission.
The store has just two employees — Kearns himself as well as manager Kim Domingo. Its day-to-day staffing needs are taken care of by approximately 60 volunteers.
(Story continues below)
After just a few months, Kearns said the store has succeeded beyond expectations.
“Your first year in business, you always think it’s going to struggle,” he said. “We’ve had just the opposite. We’ve been well above our goals and projections.”
“Every metric has gone up,” he said. “Our sales have gone up. Our customers have gone up. The donations have been quality. The customer base is diverse.”
“It’s only four months in but we’re projecting a very healthy ‘profit’ for Year One,” he said, “so much so that we’re thinking, what does the future look like? Is there a place for future stores down the road?”
Like Thrifty Sisters, the St. Vincent de Paul store is well-stocked, with high-quality merchandise at good prices. A recent purchase included a high-quality “rocket stove,” an ultra-efficient outdoor cooker that uses small pieces of wood to generate intense heat. It’s the perfect way to cook a camping breakfast — perhaps atop a newly purchased cast iron skillet.
Kearns said shoppers can feel good knowing that their purchases are going to help the needy in the community.