discount mattress oakland ca

discount mattress oakland ca

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Discount Mattress Oakland Ca

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“We ended up buying a Tuft & Needle mattress for way less than retail and it was delivered within an hour of our visit.” “Being a sceptic, I didn't hold any of that back when I met Pete and purchased a latex mattress with organic cover.” “In the end I got a great mattress, box spring and bed frame delivered to me the same day.” "I already own one their beds and just walked in to ask some questions regarding bed frames. Brad was very knowledgeable, helpful, and friendly. He knew he wasn't getting a sale from me but was still very…" "Great bed especially for the price! The comfort is exceptional. 1 star off for their almost great return policy. 100 days seems like plenty of time to try out a new bed. We bought 2, but ended up never…" Yelp users haven’t asked any questions yet about Direct Mattress Outlet. "We have bought thousands of dollars worth of furniture here. We have furnished my husbands offices as well as our girls rooms and our guest house.




The owners are amazingly courteous and they deliver and…" "review for James: My company purchased a pricey office chair for me after some extensive neck and shoulder issues (almost 2 years ago). One of the wheels recently broke off so I called to ask about a…"Sleep Train> Locations> California> Oakland Sleep Train locations in Oakland offer guests a premier shopping experience. Sleep Train provides our guests access to premium mattresses from top name brands combined with superior services and highly trained sleep experts. We also offer a variety of mattress sales and financing offers throughout the year, so check back often! As Sleep Train has grown from its first location to over 300 stores, our mission remains the same: always provide superior service, the best selection, and unbeatable prices – all backed by our 100-day low price guarantee. Our stores in Oakland offer same day delivery on all in-stock purchases made by 2 p.m., plus we will set-up your new mattress and remove your old set.




Whether you are suffering from backaches, snoring or just can’t fall asleep, Sleep Train in CA has the right sleep solution for you. Our highly trained sleep experts are on hand to answer any questions and help match you with a mattress we guarantee you’ll love. Sleep Train’s goal is to provide you with the most comfortable, positive and well-informed mattress-buying experience that you won’t find anywhere else. At Oakland Sleep Train locations, you will find premium mattresses from top name brands, including Tempur-Pedic, Serta iComfort, Sealy Posturepedic, Beautyrest and more. Adjustable bases, pillows and sheets are in stock and ready to complete your personalized sleep system. Sleep Train is your ticket to a better night's sleep.® Sleep Train Oakland Reviews - page 2Sleep Train> Locations> California> Emeryville Sleep Train locations in Emeryville offer guests a premier shopping experience. Our stores in Emeryville offer same day delivery on all in-stock purchases made by 2 p.m., plus we will set-up your new mattress and remove your old set.




At Emeryville Sleep Train locations, you will find premium mattresses from top name brands, including Tempur-Pedic, Serta iComfort, Sealy Posturepedic, Beautyrest and more. Sleep Train Emeryville - San Pablo Ave Reviews - page 2i got a very high quality mattress for a very low price Sleep Train Emeryville Reviews - page 2Every Saturday and Sunday, Oakland City Councilman Noel Gallo spends hours leading volunteer cleanup crews through his Fruitvale neighborhood, clearing the sidewalks and gutters of discards and debris: battered chairs, car stereos, couches, broken vacuum cleaners, wrecked tricycles, even dead dogs.The volunteers pick up 60 to 80 mattresses dumped on the street each week. That’s just a smattering of the more than 6,000 mattresses left on the streets of Oakland this year, mostly in the city’s poorest neighborhoods. Bulky and soggy, they’ve come to symbolize blight and decay in a city that’s enjoying a renaissance. As Oakland’s downtown blossoms, its flatlands remain strewn with garbage.




“It’s an old-school, neighborhood-type thing — people not waiting for the government to come do it,” Gallo said on a recent Sunday as he rode shotgun in a pickup truck piled high with detritus. He and a volunteer from the Oakland Spanish Seventh-day Adventist Church were ferrying the load to a dump site at the lip of the 880 freeway so the city’s Public Works Department could pick it up Monday. Although Oakland residents pay for garbage pickup from Waste Management — which lets them dispose of large items once a year — taxpayers also spend $5.5 million a year for the city to clear bulky junk off the streets. “This is a social problem,” said Kristine Shaff, spokeswoman for the Oakland Public Works Department, noting that residents of other cities routinely dump their trash in Oakland. Mattresses alone have become a major blight because many people would rather chuck them on the street or by the freeway exit than pay a fee to recycle them. By November, the Public Works Department had cleared 6,572 mattresses left out to rot — down slightly from last year’s 6,852, according to staff reports.




Oakland’s biggest mattress dumping hot spot is its deep east corridor, from 82nd Avenue to the city limit, an area that also suffers from poverty and crime. Public Works has addressed the problem for years with bus shelter ads and mailers to encourage good behavior. In January, Alameda County set up a pilot program that pays people $6 to $12 to bring discarded mattresses to an East Oakland recycling facility. In February, Oakland began offering rewards to people who report illegal dumping — up to half of the fines collected if the report prompts a citation. Such fines can run up to $1,000 a day until the debris is picked up. Although these programs have barely reduced the number of mattresses on the street, Shaff said she hopes to see better results next year because the state is expanding its Used Mattress Recovery and Recycling Act of 2013. Sponsored by state Sen. Loni Hancock, D-Berkeley, the act requires retailers to tack an $11 surcharge onto every mattress they sell to help fund a statewide recycling program.




In January, the state will open new collection centers that pay $3 for every mattress they receive. But it might take more than a state law to solve the problem. Oakland, like many other cities, has pockets of highly concentrated poverty. It’s those areas that become magnets for garbage, said UC Berkeley Law Professor John Powell, who directs the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society at UC Berkeley. “There’s a sense of certain neighborhoods literally and figuratively being dumping grounds,” Powell said, pointing out that more garbage piles up in East Oakland, where there are more abandoned buildings and empty lots than in other parts of the city, and where many residents don’t have cars to haul their old mattresses away. Gallo, in contrast, sees blight as a matter of personal responsibility. He said his cleanup crews have helped revitalize the neighborhood — largely by setting a good example. “You see this street, how beautiful it is?” the councilman asked, tooling down International Boulevard after he dropped off the last load Saturday.

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