All posts tagged press

Plane Used For Shipping Drugs Auctioned Off In Montgomery County

municibid plane for auction

Originally appeared on philadelphia.cbslocal.com

By Brad Segall

MONTGOMERY COUNTY, Pa (CBS) – The Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office is auctioning off a plane seized from a Colorado man who used it to fly methamphetamine he picked up in Las Vegas into the area.

The single engine Piper Comanche was forfeited to prosecutors in April after James Handzus was convicted of drug violations.

The plane is now up for sale on Municibid.com, a website designed for auctioning government property. The minimum bid for the 1959 baby blue aircraft is $4,000.

“I don’t imagine that he’s happy at all, but he’s spending nine to 22 years as a guest of the state and I don’t think he’ll have any need for the plane,” says prosecutor Jim Staerk.

According to Staerk, any profits will be plowed back into the fight against drugs on the streets of Montgomery County.

The plane and its log books will be available for inspection Wednesday and next Saturday at Wings Field in Blue Bell. The auction closes July 12th.

Want Some Used Library Furniture?

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Article originally appeared in the Minnetonka Patch 

Hennepin County Purchasing and Contract Services periodically hosts auctions of county items that are no longer needed.

There is an online auction of library furniture going on now through the website Municibid.com scheduled through Tuesday, June 19.

The 19 items for sale include many different sizes of library chairs and tables.

The county has seen a significant increase in the number of items to be auctioned off, according to Senior Contract Services Analyst Jacki Boeke.

“It’s an easy process,” says Boeke. “Anyone can go to the website and click on ‘stores,’ then the Hennepin County icon.” To bid on an item, you must first register.

For further information on all auctions conducted by the county, go to the Hennepin County websiteor contact Hennepin Purchasing at 612-348-3181.

Baton Rouge city-parish govt. holds another online auction

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Taken from WAFB.com

BATON ROUGE, LA (WAFB) -

Baton Rouge city-parish government is auctioning off items ranging from courtroom furniture to cars.

Officials said a total of 101 items are on the online auction block.

The auction ends June 28.

Some of the items available include:

Judges benches

Court reporter benches

Jury chairs

Witness box

Audience benches

Cars

Trucks

Vans

Harley-Davidson motorcycles

Computers

And more

All of the items can be found at br.municibid.com.

This is Baton Rouge’s second time using this online auction service. In May, the auctions generated $125,000 in revenue from the sale of 45 items, at no cost to the city.

Baton Rouge City-parish auctions moving to Internet

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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.

Northhampton Township has upcoming auction using municibid

Excerpt taken from Northampton Township to apply for block grant funding to re-energize senior center in the Bucks Local News

By Jeff Werner
BucksLocalNews.com

In other business, the board authorized the administration to sell five pieces of surplus equipment at public auction.

The township will sell five vehicles through Municibid.com. Up for auction are: 1999 Chevy one ton dump truck (127,472 miles) that need steering work, cab rot, broken front frame; a 1997 GMC Yukon (206,017 miles) that needs a fuel pump); a 2001 Chevy Tahoe (190,270 miles) that needs a transmission; a 2002 Chevy Impala (128,000 miles) and a 2006 Ford Expedition (139,460 miles) with front end damage.

Lynn councilors set sights on auction website

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This article was featured in “The Daily Item” written by By Chris Stevens

Originally Published on Saturday, September 24, 2011By Chris Stevens / The Daily Item

LYNN – City Councilors Daniel Cahill and Brendan Crighton are exploring the idea of using the Internet to pedal public property.

The pair have sent a proposal to councilor Richard Colucci, chairman of the Public Property Committee, to sell public property via an online auction website, www.Municibid.com.

“This doesn’t cost the city a dime,” said Cahill. “We put it on the website, they market it.”

Cahill said he and Crighton had questions about how the city disposed of its public property, be it parcels of land or old cell phones, and they took their concerns to Colucci.

“He said to do some research and come up with a good and creative way to discard the property, so we did,” Cahill said.

The website, Cahill said, is the largest of its kind “and it’s definitely the most widely used.”

Nearly 42 communities across the commonwealth use the site, according to the Municibid brochure, including, locally, Marblehead, Salem, Chelsea, Reading, Stoneham, Haverhill and Boston.

The categories on the site range from automotive to sports equipment and kitchen equipment to electronics, jewelry, farm equipment and water/sewer. There is police and fire apparatus, heavy equipment, real estate, signs and parking meters. There is heavy equipment for sale in New Jersey, a Hobart potato peeler in Pennsylvania and more than a dozen small parcels of land in Haverhill.

“It’s like a giant yard sale,” Cahill quipped.

Cahill said the city could bundle items to sell together, such as office equipment or singularly. The city can set a base price and if it goes higher, it makes more money. If the bids come in lower, Cahill said it can reject the bid.

“We’d have the right to reject or accept any bid,” he explained. “It’s not like eBay where the top bidder wins.”

Municibid makes 8 percent on the deal, but it is added to the bidder’s cost Cahill said.

Not long ago, Cahill said the city had six Motorola phones it was not using. Generally, items such as that would be recycled into another department.

“If we can’t reuse them then we just get rid of them,” he said. “With this we could put them up online. Who knows, someone might be looking for Motorola phones.”

Cahill said the city also has a certain amount of real estate. Some of it is small parcels, some are landlocked and some are due to foreclosures.

“We don’t market it at all,” he said. “Some residents wouldn’t even know that a parcel of land right next to their house might be available. This would be a great way to put it out there.”

Municipalities Finding More Value in Online Auctions

statehousenews

By Colleen Quinn
STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE

STATE HOUSE, BOSTON, SEPT. 12, 2011…..Looking to buy an old police cruiser, outdated fire engine, or perhaps a traffic signal? A Massachusetts community nearby may have it listed for sale online.

Several communities around the state are turning to an online auction website, Municibid.com, to sell their wares, hocking everything from heavy equipment to computers, furniture, bicycles and office supplies. Haverhill this month has 32 parcels of land for sale on the website.

Town officials say the site gives them the chance to receive more for items that in the past sold for very little. The online auction site markets the goods and creates competition, compared to the closed auctions they used to participate in that attracted fewer potential buyers, several town officials said. The site broadens their audience so they can sell items all over the country.

Municibid.com is free to communities, with the buyer paying a 5 percent fee on the purchase price.

The site handles sales for more than 40 Massachusetts cities and towns, including Boston, Salem, Springfield, Haverhill and Mansfield, according to the company’s chief executive.

Michael Ahern, public buildings and special projects manager in Mansfield, has sold many town items on the site. He plans to list 40 to 50 more items soon. The prices of auction items spiked once they turned to the web, Ahern said.

Recently, Mansfield had two fire trucks to sell because the town was buying new ones. A dealer offered $1,500 but the town received $44,000 for the pair by selling them online.

“I was shocked it went that high,” Ahern said, adding that the state of Colorado bought one, while the other was sold to a fire engine dealer in Tennessee.

Before using the online auction, an old police cruiser would sell for anywhere from $200 to $1,000, Ahern said. Online, the town has received between $1,000 and $4,000 per car.

“I think it gives communities a better way to sell surplus that is open to a broader audience so they get the best bang for their buck. Anytime you get more competition you get better prices,” Ahern said.

Greg Berry, founder and CEO of Muncibid.com, said he started the company after he was a borough councilman in Pottstown, Pennsylvania. He often saw town items sell for practically nothing.

“I saw the traditional process of no longer needed items, police cars, trucks, tools, cars that were worth $4,000 selling for $400. The problem was no one knew the items were for sale. The process was not truly competitive,” Berry said in a phone interview with the News Service.

So he launched Muncibid.com in 2007. Since then, the privately-held company has taken off, he said. The site serves more than 600 government agencies across the United States, and adds more all the time. Berry said his business is built by word of mouth.

“I guess I am really surprised by the success. It is happening faster than we thought,” said Berry.

Geoff Beckwith, the executive director the Massachusetts Municipal Association, said selling and buying online is something more communities are turning toward. A 2010 municipal relief law – aimed at making it easier for cities and towns to manage certain areas of business – allows communities to request bids for products and services online in what is known as “reverse auctions.”

Haverhill was one of the first communities to take advantage of online bids to get competitive prices for products and services for the city, according to Robert DeFusco, the purchasing director for Haverhill. City officials have posted “reverse auctions” for the water department, buying pipe fittings and hydrants. Haverhill has posted bid requests on the state’s purchasing website, Compass.com. The city saved approximately $100,000 by getting bids online, DeFusco said.

“Basically, in a reverse auction people bidding get to see what the lowest price is. The bidder decides if they want to win,” DeFusco said.

Haverhill also sells online, and currently has 32 parcels of city land for sale on Municibid.com.

Tom Watkins, the purchasing agent in Salem, said he used Municibid.com for the first time last spring. Salem sold more than a dozen city cars. In the past, the city sold cars for around $100 to $200.

“We gave it a shot and we have been very successful with it,” Watkins said. “We put seven or eight cars out there and got $6,000.”

Along with posting on its own website, Muncibid.com markets a community’s goods, posting them on Craigslist, Facebook, Twitter or YouTube

 
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