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Baton Rouge City-parish auctions moving to Internet

Downtown_Baton_Rouge_by_happygilmo07

Taken from http://theadvocate.com/news/2562161-123/city-parish-auctions-moving-to-internet

Anyone wishing to purchase surplus equipment by auction from the city-parish will have to do it electronically starting next week — a new process city-parish officials say they expect to reduce costs and increase revenues.

The types of surplus equipment that previously were sold at auctions held on site will instead be auctioned off through the online auction site municibid.com, said Patti Wallace, the city-parish’s interim purchasing director.

The website caters to municipalities and government agencies, she said.

Wallace said the city-parish’s first auction on municibid.com will begin April 20 and end May 4.

The switch to the new system is part of an effort by the Mayor-President’s Office to use technology to reduce costs and increase revenue, Wallace said.

“We wanted to get our inventory greater exposure to the public,” Wallace said.

The increased exposure should result in higher bids, she said.

“We were having on-site auctions before,” Wallace said, noting that the on-site auctions were expensive.

“We have just two inventory staff,” Wallace said. “We would have to borrow employees from other departments to put on our auctions.”

The city-parish hosted only one auction per year because of overtime payments for workers and other costs associated with hosting on-site auctions, Wallace said.

The city-parish will be able to auction off surplus inventory more quickly, and with less overhead, with an online auction, Wallace said.

“Absolutely it will be ongoing as soon as we get inventory,” she said.

The first auction will give officials a chance to compare the prices with the last auction, held in June, she said.

“We wanted to conduct a representative sampling of our inventory: vehicles, lawn equipment, office equipment,” Wallace said. She said officials will compare the auction prices for individual items in the online auction to the June 11 auction.

The city-parish will be selling items seized by police, in addition to surplus equipment.

“I anticipate getting more for items,” Wallace said. “And in terms of expenditures, I expect to see a significant decrease.”

Friday afternoon, municibid’s “Baton Rouge Store” listed 48 items up for auction, including minivans, lawn mowers, copiers and tractors. Wallace said more items will be added to the list in the days ahead.

Wallace said municibid does not charge the city-parish a commission for its sales, rather it collects an 8 percent “buyer’s final sale fee” directly from the winning bidder, according to the company’s website. For auctions in some other cities, municibid charges a 5 percent buyer’s fee.

Payment for the items can be made by electronic funds transfer, wire transfer or cashier’s check, certified check or money order, municibid founder and CEO Greg Berry said in an email. The 8 percent fee must be paid with a credit or debit card, he said.

The municibid site was chosen after a “request for proposals ” was published, said Bob Abbott, an assistant parish attorney.

Wallace said companies that submitted proposals, including municibid.com, govdeals.com, Brown’s Auction Company of Lafayette, and Kunstler Newton Services of Baton Rouge. The proposals were evaluated by a committee that included Wallace and representatives of the city-parish’s information technology, finance, public works and police departments, she said.

The city has a one-year contract with municibid, with two 12-month renewal options for a maximum contract length of 36 months, Wallace said.

Wallace said the request for proposals was written after she researched ways to use technology to reduce costs and increase revenue from surplus inventory.

“I did contact two in-state and several out-of-state agencies,” she said, referring to entities that have used municipal auctions. “One said it was the same, but the majority said they saw a significant increase.”

Ascension Parish tried something similar last year, said Trent Woodard, a project coordinator in the parish’s Information Technology department.

“We went back to doing it with an on-site auction,” Woodard said. The problem wasn’t with the online auction service — Ascension Parish used govdeals.com, a similar site to municibid — but with the parish’s internal logistics.

“Most of the problems were … about having multiple people pick up items over several days,” he said, adding that the inventory and location that could accept payment were often not the same place.

Govdeals charged between 7 percent and 10 percent of the final sale price to use their service, Woodard said.

“We liked that it was advertised to more people,” he said. “The logistics didn’t really work out for us.”

For Baton Rouge, municibid will process all the payments from the winning bidders, Wallace said. Once municibid sends a certification to the city-parish, the buyer will have 10 days to pick up the equipment, she added.

Municibid serves as auctioneer for approximately 600 municipalities and agencies across the country, but Baton Rouge is the first city in Louisiana served by municibid, Berry said.

“Once we demonstrate success with Baton Rouge, we will reach out to other Louisiana agencies,” Berry said in an email.

The company serves as the online auction site for the cities of Boston and Philadelphia, he said.

Baton Rouge Mayor Holden announces plan to hold City-Parish auctions online

Taken from http://www.wafb.com/story/17388977/mayor-holden-announces-plan-to-hold-city-parish-auctions-online#.T4bOUW6PQhc.twitter

BATON ROUGE, LA (WAFB) -

Baton Rouge Mayor-President Melvin “Kip” Holden announced Wednesday that the City-Parish has contracted with an online government auction site, municibid.com, to auction off surplus and police-seized items.

Holden said the use of an online auction will provide greater exposure of the surplus items to a broader audience, and ultimately result in greater benefits and cost savings to the City-Parish and taxpayers. The Mayor also said online auctions are widely recognized as a “best practice” approach to inventory management for local governments.

Municibid was chosen because it is designed for local and state government entities. The move will increase non-tax revenue by enabling the City-Parish to more effectively sell surplus items by using municibid’s online government auction platform. Unlike other auction services, municibid does not charge commission on sales.

The first round of auction is scheduled to begin on April 20, 2012 and end on May 4, 2012. Items up for auction include cars, trucks, heavy equipment, lawn equipment and computer equipment. Bidding is open to the public.

For more information, go to www.brgov.com/dept/purchase/auction/.

RI Town selling surplus property online

RI town selling surplus property online: wpri.com

Taken from http://www.wpri.com/dpp/news/local_news/east_bay/middletown-selling-surplus-property-online by Darren Soens

MIDDLETOWN, R.I. (WPRI) – The town of Middletown plans to begin raising extra revenue by selling its old, unwanted items online.

The town used to sell its surplus property the old fashioned way, through a sealed bid process at Middletown Town Hall.  Now Middletown officials hope integrating in the internet into the auctions will draw more interest and help raise thousands of extra dollars.

Middletown’s information technology director, Matthew Wainwright, explained how people can bid on the surplus property.

“The user will come onto our website, they can click on the bid system, it will take them to the Municibid website. They will see all of Middletown’s items that are for sale, and they can actually bid on that.”

Middletown’s surplus items will be featured on theMunicibid website beginning April 9.

“We’re going to have computer equipment, monitors,” Wainwright explains.  “There’s a safe, a fire-proof safe we want to get rid of, so several different items, all different categories.”

The town also auctions off unused vehicles, such as old police cars.

“We will also try to incorporate some vehicles in the coming weeks.  We have to identify which vehicles, and deem whether they’re safe or not to be sold.  Once they’re deemed safe, we’ll put those online as well.”

Wainwright hopes the auctions will bring in between $5,000 and $10,000 at first, and possibly more as the auctions catch on.

“I can see that possibly reaching 15 thousand dollars.  It’s nominal but it’s still making use of stuff that otherwise may just sit around for ten years and potentially be deemed surplus and destroyed.”

Wainwright says the online auctions will not cost Middletown any money.  Instead, the bid system will keep eight percent of each item’s value as a service fee.

With the Help of municibid, Elizabethtown Borough replaces old traffic signals with energy-efficient alternatives

traffic-lights-featured-610x250

This article originally appeared on www.etownian.com written by HUNTLEY MCGOWAN
Seventeen traffic lights and 33 “Walk/Don’t Walk” signs in Elizabethtown were recently swapped out for energy efficient LED lights and sold on municibid.com. The traffic lights and signs were replaced as part of a regional traffic signal synchronization project with surrounding municipalities such as West Donegal and Mount Joy townships. The funding for the project was through a state/federal grant for transportation improvements. The project did not result in direct costs to the borough.

Cindy Foster, assistant borough manager for Etown, could not give an exact date regarding the length of time that the old lights and signs were functioning in town before they were in need of being replaced. As the traffic signals and signs were originally installed when the intersections were first given signals, it has been quite some time since any renovation or upgrade has taken place.

Township Administrator and Engineer for Mount Joy Steve Gault explained that the cost to upgrade the signal heads to LED was about $10,000, including labor and traffic control. This cost is typical for a four-way intersection that contains eight overhead vehicle traffic signal heads with three lights in each head (red, yellow, green) and two heads facing each direction of approaching traffic, and eight pedestrian signal heads controlling four crosswalks.

Gault explained that he compared the electricity usage for an intersection in Mount Joy that was also recently upgraded. His research showed that, prior to the upgrade to LED signals, the electricity costs averaged around $125 per month. After the conversion, the cost dropped to around $47 per month, a savings of approximately $78 each month.

Gault remarked that, in addition to the electricity savings, the LEDs also last longer, which means fewer service calls to replace burnt-out bulbs. Although there is an upfront cost for the conversion, Gault believes that the savings in electricity costs make it worthwhile. “Since the LEDs use less electricity, we were able to install a battery backup system to keep the traffic signals operational during power outages,” he said. “You may have noticed that during the snowstorm in late October, the traffic signals [in Mount Joy] remained operational although much of Elizabethtown was out of power.”

While these new traffic lights and signs provide a renewed ambiance in Etown, the old materials are required to be disposed of in an appropriate manner. After considering many options regarding the fate of the old supplies, Foster was referred to Municibid by Penn Bid, an online bidding service the borough uses for projects and contractors they are thinking about hiring.

The company’s website states: “Municibid is an online government auctions website designed specifically for the sale of surplus and forfeited/seized goods directly by the government.” All bidding on the site is open to the general public.

“We love working with government agencies to increase non-tax revenue by helping them market and sell items they no longer need for maximum dollar, at no cost to the agency,” said Grey Berry, CEO and founder of Municibid.

Since Municibid’s launch in 2007, the company has added 600 government agency sellers nationwide, ranging from cities as large as Philadelphia and Boston to small towns, counties, authorities and educational organizations. The company grew by 600 percent last year and they continue to add government agencies on a daily basis.

Berry’s interest in this field of work started when he was a borough councilman in Pottstown, Pa. “I saw the poor results of the sealed bid process most government agencies use to sell surplus and no longer needed items,” Berry said. “Few people knew this surplus was available for purchase and the process of facilitating bids was not competitive, leading to government agencies selling surplus for pennies on the dollar instead of a true market value.”

According to the Elizabethtown Borough Council meeting agenda, three separate people were awarded different lots of traffic signals. Robert Eakin of Tallmadge, Ohio received six “Walk/Don’t Walk” signs at 13.5 x 26.5 inches, two traffic lights with 12-inch lenses and turn lane arrows and five traffic lights with 12-inch lenses and turn lane arrows. In total, Eakin paid $139 for his new merchandise. He told Chad Umble, a correspondent for Lancaster Online, that he is planning on fixing and wiring up the lights to hang in his “man cave” and his friends’ garages as well. “It is just one of those things that when someone looks at it, they like it,” Eakin said.

Other recipients include Zee Mah of West Roxbury, Mass. and Ian Andersen of Levittown, Pa. Mah is now the recipient of 27 9.5 x 19.5 inch “Walk/Don’t Walk” signs after shelling out $61 Andersen received 10 traffic lights with 12-inch lenses for $125.50.

Overall, the Etown Borough was pleased with the service and results they received by using Municibid. “I will be using them again in the future,” Foster said.

Wanted: Bidders For Pieces Of Pottstown’s Past

Taken from Article on Pottstown Patch by Teresa McMin

In the market for a used front end loader, large format scanner or sludge pump?

Pottstown-based Municibid is an online auction where government can sell surplus, forfeited and seized goods. Bidding on the site is open to the public.

Pottstown resident Greg Berry, the company’s CEO, founded Municibid to help municipalities find buyers for unwanted items. The business operates similar to eBay, he said.

Berry, a Pottstown councilman a few years ago, got a firsthand look at the antiquated sealed bid process the borough had to follow in order to sell its unwanted stuff. The method required costly newspaper advertisements that often went unread by the general public, he said.

“I saw how ridiculous it was … Very few people knew the items were for sale,” Berry said. “Typically, we would get lowball bids … literally pennies on the dollar.”

To streamline the process and help municipalities make money, Berry formed the company in 2006 and launched the business the following year.

“It worked,” he said. “This opened it up to a whole new audience.”

Today, the company employs five workers, serves about 600 agencies across the U.S. and continues to grow. Baton Rouge is the latest city to use Municibid, Berry said.

“We get … a variety of items,” he said of unwanted municipal merchandise including a wooden train trestle and field of corn awaiting harvest. Municibid also sold police seized items such as comic book collections and jewelry, Berry said. “You just never know what’s going to come across.”

Bidders come from across the country, he said.

“It’s a pretty simple process,” Berry said.

Municibid raises revenue for local governments and “takes pressure off taxpayers,” he said.

“They really need to be doing this,” Berry said of municipalities. “Otherwise, they’re just throwing money away.”

The company’s services are free for government, he said.

“And we do all the marketing … It really is amazing when you see the results,” Berry said.

Pottstown Manager Jason Bobst agrees.

The borough started using Municibid a couple years ago, he said.

Pottstown sold items — so far, mostly vehicles — on Municibid for roughly three times more than the traditional bid process would have collected, he said.

And unlike the old method of selling municipal surplus, which uses sealed bids, borough officials can view the offers on Municibid, Bobst said.

“I like the concept,” Bobst said of Municibid. It saves the borough money, time, work and brings in more revenue, he said. “It’s easier for us.”

Didn’t Get the Fireboat You Wanted for Christmas?

fireboat

Taken from article on Boston Magazine “Didn’t Get the Fireboat You Wanted for Christmas?”  By Courtney Hollands

Well, cross it off your list. Boston posted a 72.5-foot retired MV Firefighter on municibid.com earlier this week — and bidding starts at $10,000. The Pottstown, Pennsylvania-based online auction site is like an eBay for surplus government equipment, except that it doesn’t charge a seller fee (the winning bidder does pay a fee, which is 5 percent of the final sale price).

Founder and CEO Greg Berry called the fireboat “one of the more unique items” to come up for bid, and said that about 50 Massachusetts cities and towns use the site. Some places have really profited from it: Mansfield, for one, recently sold off 75 items — snowplows, bikes, tools, and more — to the tune of $160,000. The only other local offerings currently for sale are a scrap trailer from Boston and an old Wurlitzer Spinet piano from Norwood. However, if you’re willing to travel to the Quaker State, you can score a police cruiser, Crayola washable paint, or traffic light signals.

Getting back to the fireboat: The auction closes at 1 p.m. on January 30. There are public viewings between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. next Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday at the Boston Harbor Shipyard & Marina.

You may want to check with your local marina about slip availability before throwing your (captain’s) hat in the ring.

Surplus auction nets Mansfield $160,000

Taken from article in the Mansfield Sun Chronicle by Lauren Carter 

MANSFIELD – The town has made almost $160,000 by auctioning off surplus equipment.

The town auctioned off 78 extra items on Municibid.com, a site that hosts online government auctions. The auction closed Dec. 22. Town Manager William Ross said a number of items sold have already been sent out, and the formerly cluttered rear section of the highway department has cleared out considerably.

“Sanford and Son’s is going out of business rapidly,” Ross joked, referring to the popular TV show about a junk dealer and his son.

Some of the auctioned items include old police cars, plows and sanders, as well as trucks, trailers, tools and some bicycles that will be going to Africa.

“Hopefully they don’t send them to Kenya, because that would lessen the impact of the marathon there,” Selectman George Dentino joked.

Ross said that since he took over as town manager, he has been eager to eliminate the town’s excess equipment.

The auction not only earns the town some additional money and reduces clutter, but removes the items from the town’s insurance list.

“There’s so many advantages to cleaning house that really benefit everyone, so kudos to you and the whole staff,” Selectmen Chairman Jess Aptowitz said.

Mike Ahearn, public buildings and special projects manager, helped to oversee the auction.

Ross said the process is now in place to auction items and move surplus vehicles and other unnecessary equipment out of town on a regular basis.

The auction earned more than expected. Ross initially estimated the town would receive something in the range of $75,000.

Ross said the majority of the income will go to the water and wastewater utilities, which had the biggest items sold.

Aptowitz called the results “awesome” and said auctioning off no-longer-needed equipment was long overdue.

“We got money into the town,” Aptowitz said. “It doesn’t matter where it goes – it’s going to be used for good purposes.”

LAUREN CARTER covers Mansfield for The Sun Chronicle. She can be reached at 508-236-0336 or at lcarter@thesunchronicle.com.

Mansfield auctioning off surplus items

mansfield

Taken from the Sun Chronicle Article “Need a Police Car?” By Lauren Carter

MANSFIELD - The town is clearing out some clutter and bringing in a bit of extra cash by auctioning off some surplus items.

Town Manager William Ross said the town is auctioning off 78 surplus items including former police cars, tools, plows, sanders, trucks, trailers and a late model screening plant.

“You name it, we have it,” Ross said.

The auction is taking place at www.municibid.com, an online auction platform that allows government agencies to sell unneeded items. The auction, which closes on Dec. 22, is open to the general public.

Ross said he has been pushing since he took over as town manager to eliminate the town’s extra, unused equipment.

“It gets them out of our inventory, it gets them off our insurance list, and it gets us a little bit of resources,” Ross said.

Ross estimates that in addition to freeing up some space, the auction could generate in the range of $75,000 for the town.

“It’s a win-win for everybody,” said Selectmen Chairman Jess Aptowitz.

East Whiteland Sells Township Vehicles

East Whiteland Township

This article written by  Amanda Mahnke originally appeared in the Malvern Patch 

East Whiteland Township recently sold five vehicles at auction, whose winning bids totaled $27,736.

Since the township started using Municibid, a website for online government surplus auctions, East Whiteland has been able to get much better prices on its auction vehicles than it had in smaller, local auctions, Director of Public Works Bill Steele said at East Whiteland’s Board of Supervisors meeting on Nov. 9.

The vehicles sold at auction include a police car sold for $875 (which doesn’t run, Steele said), and a 1999 dumptruck that sold for $16,801. The winning bid for one vehicle came from as far away as Michigan.

Township Vehicles Recently Sold At Auction

Vehicle Bid Amount
1999 Ford F-550 Dump Truck (With snow plow & spreader) $16,801
1999 F-450 Service Truck (Sewer Department) $5,100
1999 Chevrolet Tahoe Police Car $875
1999 Chevrolet Tahoe Police Car $2,650
2006 Ford Crown Victoria Police Car $2,310

Freehold Township to Hold Online Car Auction

townhall

Taken from the Freehold Patch Article “Freehold Township to Hold Online Car Auction” By Jacklyn Corley

Freehold Township will put 14 vehicles on the auction block.

The Freehold Township Committee unanimously approved a resolution during its workshop meeting at Town Hall on Tuesday, Oct. 11 to sell the cars in an online auction. The cars include impounded vehicles that have gone unclaimed or were otherwise abandoned, as well as municipal vehicles that are no longer required for public use, according to the resolution.

The online auction will be held from Thursday, Oct. 27 through Thursday, Nov. 10 on municibid.com.

The vehicles to be sold include the following:

Make & Model Year VIN
Dodge Wagon 1999 2B4FP2536XR373951
Chevy Corsica 1994 1G1LD5548RY271034
Olds Royale 1989 1G3HY54C4KW401984
Toyota Camry 1994 4T1SK12EORU401017
GMC Wagon 2002 1GKDT13S922213052
Ford Van 1992 1FTDE114Y5NHB27828
Ford Van 2001 2FMZA514X1BA82933
Toyota Echo 2001 JTDAT123510154889
Honda Accord 2005 1HGCM56495A044932
Toyota Echo 2008 2T1BR32E78C901831
Nissan LSX 1997 JN8AR05Y7VW169921
Chevy Pickup 1995 1GCDT14Z8SK239956
Dodge Wagon 2004 2D8GP44L44R554791
Ford Wagon 1998 2FMZA51U7WBD41434

 

 

 

 
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