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- Government Auctions and Surplus Property
- Federal Government Auctions
-
- Looking for a bargain? Year round, the federal government offers hundreds
- of millions of dollars worth of property and goods -- from animals to real
- estate -- at remarkable prices. The Customs Service sells seized property
- -- jewelry, camera, rugs -- anything brought in from another country. The
- IRS auctions off everything imaginable -- boats, cars, businesses. The
- U.S. Postal Service sells unclaimed merchandise, including lots of books.
-
- There is one story to inspire: a New Yorker bought surplus parachutes from
- the Pentagon and became a supplier selling clothesline cord. If you are
- looking for a business, try the Small Business Administration, which sells
- equipment and businesses it has acquired through foreclosure. Want a good
- deal on a house? U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development offers
- repossessed homes -- sometimes for practically nothing -- on government
- foreclosures.
-
- Very few people know about these unique bargains because the federal
- government doesn't advertise them. Described below are 30 of Uncle Sam's
- Red Tag Specials. Contact the appropriate offices for more information.
- And remember, if you don't find what you want, stay at it. This is
- ongoing, and new merchandise and property are coming in all the time.
-
- * Burros and Horses: Bureau of Land Management
- Division of Public Affairs
- Bureau of Land Management
- U.S. Department of the Interior
- Room 5600, 18th & C Sts., N.W.
- Washington, DC 20240 202-208-5717
- Wild Horse and Burros Program Office 202-653-9215
- Or contact your local Bureau of Land Management office. The
- "Adopt-a-Horse" program is aimed at keeping wild herds at in the West at
- manageable levels, and allows individuals around the country to purchase a
- wild horse for $125 or a burro for $75. The animals usually have their
- shots. Aside from the purchase price you only need pay for shipping. If
- you live west of the Mississippi, call the Program Office above to find out
- which of the 12 adoption satellites are nearest you. If you live east of
- the Mississippi, call 703-461-1365 to arrange an adoption. Representatives
- of the BLM travel around the country, so that you don't have to travel to
- Wyoming to participate. The only qualifications for adoption are that you
- have appropriate facilities to house the animal, that you are of legal age
- in your state, and that you have no record of offenses against animals.
- The horses and burros may not be used for any exploitative purposes such as
- rodeos or races, nor may they be re-sold. Upon adoption, you sign an
- agreement to that effect, and no title of ownership is given until one year
- after an adoption. Animals are usually from two to six years in age, and
- must be trained. The offices listed above have a brochure called So You'd
- Like to Adopt a Wild Horse or Burro on the "Adopt-a-Horse" program that
- gives more details.
-
- * Christmas Trees, Seedling, Wooden Poles
- and Posts: Bureau of Land Management
- U.S. Department of the Interior
- Bureau of Land Management
- Division of Forestry
- 1849 C Street, N.W.
- Washington, DC 20240 202-653-8864
- or U.S. Forest Service 202-205-1657
- Contact your local Bureau of Land Management (BLM), U.S. Department of
- Interior. In the 11 Western states, the Bureau of Land Management has a
- program for obtaining low-cost Christmas trees from Federal lands. By
- contacting your local BLM office, you may obtain a permit for a nominal fee
- (usually $10) to cut a tree for your own use. You will be given a map with
- directions as to which are permissible areas for tree-cutting. Non-profit
- organizations may also qualify. Non-profit may get free use permits and
- cut larger amounts. Trees must be for their own use and may not be resold
- at fundraisers.
-
- In addition, under the Minor Forest Products program, you may collect or
- cut specified small trees for use as poles or posts; or, you may obtain
- cactus or plant seedlings from areas of natural growth where there are
- abundant supplies -- again at a very low cost. These items are free for
- non-profit organizations for their own use. Permits for commercial usage
- may also be available. Cost depends on market value. Below are the
- addresses and phone numbers of Regional Bureau of Land Management Offices.
-
- Alaska
- 222 W. 7th Ave. #13, Anchorage, AK 99513-7599; 907-271-5555.
-
- Arizona
- 3707 N. 7th Street, P.O. Box 16563, Phoenix, AZ 85001; 602-640-5504.
-
- California
- 2800 Cottage Way, E-2841, Sacramento, CA 95825-1889; 916-978-4746.
-
- Colorado
- 2850 Youngfield St., Lakewood, CO 80215-7076; 303-239-3667.
-
- Eastern States
- 350 S. Pickett St., Alexandria, VA 22304 703-461-1369.
-
- Idaho
- 3380 Americana Terrace, Boise, ID 83706 208-384-3014.
-
- Montana
- Granite Tower, 222 N. 32nd St., P.O. Box 36800, Billings, MT 59107;
- 406-255-2913.
-
- Nevada
- 850 Harvard Way, P.O. Box 12000, Reno, NV 89520-0006; 702-785-6586.
-
- New Mexico
- Joseph M. Montoya Federal Bldg., South Federal Place, P.O. Box 1449, Santa
- Fe, NM 87504-1449; 505-988-6316.
-
- Oregon
- 1300 NE 44th Ave., P.O. Box 2965, Portland, OR 97208-2969; 503-280-7287.
-
- Utah
- P.O. Box 45155, Salt Lake City, UT 84145-0155; 801-539-4019.
-
- Wyoming
- 2515 Warren Ave., P.O. Box 1828, Cheyenne, WY 82003 307-775-6011.
-
- * Federal Depository Insurance Corporation (FDIC)
- Federal Depository Insurance Corporation
- 4340 Connecticut Ave., NW
- Washington, DC 20008 202-537-2250
- The FDIC sells at auctions the furnishings and equipment of failed
- commercial banks. Consult the blue pages in your phone directory for the
- regional FDIC office nearest you. Each regional office handles their own
- personal property disposal. Professional auctioneers are contracted to
- auction off the accumulation of desks, calculators, chairs, computers and
- other furnishings that banks normally have. These auctions will be
- advertised in the auction section or classifieds of local newspapers.
-
- The FDIC also holds open for offers costly commercial property and real
- estate. For a full catalog of these listings across the country, which
- also includes homes over $250,000 call 1-800-678-3342 or 1-800-445-3683.
- They will send The Liquidation Book which is the marketing list that is
- most current. All the property the FDIC has to sell is in this book, but
- if you are interested in bidding on a house under $250,000, it is wise to
- ask them for the phone number of the FDIC sales office in your area that is
- in charge of selling them, and then contact them directly. About 97
- percent of the listings in it are commercial offerings such as hotels,
- offices, and industries. Sales of commercial real estate are advertised
- nationally by the FDIC in such papers as The Wall Street Journal.
-
- * FHA Money May Be Waiting For You
- DHUD-Distributive Shares Division
- 541 7th Street, SW
- Washington, DC 20410
- HUD Locator 202-708-1422
- DHUD-Insurance Operation Division 703-235-8117
- If you or someone in your family has successfully paid off a mortgage on a
- house, there may be money waiting for you at the Department of Housing and
- Urban Development. HUD oversees the Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
- which insures mortgages that your bank lends to house buyers. Each year
- FHA predicts how many people will default on their loans, and based on that
- prediction, they calibrate how much mortgage insurance home buyers will pay
- during that year. If it turns out that there are fewer loan defaults than
- FHA predicted, those borrowers that have continued to pay their mortgages
- have what are called "Mutual Mortgage Dividend" checks coming to them upon
- completion of the loan agreement. Call 703-235-8117 if you think you are
- due a one time mortgage insurance premium refund or a distributive share.
-
- Another way you may qualify for an FHA insurance refund is to have taken
- out, say, a 30 year mortgage and paid the entire FHA insurance premium up
- front instead of in installments over the entire period of the loan. If
- you have completed the loan agreement in less than 30 years, you may have
- money coming back to you since you didn't use the insurance for the entire
- 30 years you've already paid for. In most cases, though, you have to carry
- a loan for at least 7 years to qualify for a dividend, and the longer you
- have a loan, the more likely it is that you will qualify for a dividend
- check.
-
- In these cases where you prepay all of your mortgage insurance premium up
- front, your bank should let you know that you may eventually be eligible
- for a mutual mortgage refund upon fulfillment of the loan agreement. Also,
- after you have paid off your loan, your bank should notify HUD, who in turn
- should notify you if you have any refund coming, usually within six months.
- However, if HUD cannot locate you, they will add your name to a list of
- other individuals who cannot be located but have HUD money coming to them.
-
- Through the Freedom of Information Act many individuals have gotten their
- hands on copies of this list from HUD and gone around the country tracking
- down the people and charging them fees to recover this HUD money.
- Depending on the size of the original loan, your dividend refund could be
- several thousand dollars, and since some of these "bounty hunters" may ask
- for up to 50% of the refund just for making a phone call that you could
- make yourself, you could be losing out on a substantial sum of money by
- letting them do it. In fact, all you have to do to get the same list the
- bounty hunters are using is to call 703-235-8117. DHUD staff will mail to
- you, free of charge, an "information package" which contains the names of
- all the mortgagors in the state in which you reside (or request the list
- for), forms and basic information you would need to apply for a refund.
-
- If you feel you may have money coming to you, or if a member of your family
- who took out a mortgage is now deceased and you are an heir, try to locate
- the original loan contract number, and then make a few calls. To apply for
- a refund you will need the loan number and FHA case number, which you can
- find on the Recorded Deed of Purchase, kept at your local county
- courthouse.
-
- * Firewood: U.S. Forest Service
- U.S. Forest Service
- Department of Agriculture
- 14th & Independence Ave. S.W.
- Box 96090
- Washington, D.C. 20090-6090
- Operations and Technology Information 202-205-0855/0857
- Contact your nearest National Forest Office (list below) to find out about
- the firewood program and to learn which national forest is near you. Also,
- ask these regional offices about firewood from state forestry organizations
- and private timber companies. Ask about availability of firewood before
- you make the trip. In any National Forest, you may pick up downed or dead
- wood for firewood for a nominal charge of $5 per cord, $10 minimum fee,
- after requesting a permit from the Forest of your choice. You may phone to
- request the permit, and must have it in your possession while collecting
- the wood. The Forest Service allows you to gather 2-10 cords worth of
- wood. Six cords are equal to 12 pick-up truck loads. Wood may not be
- collected for commercial purposes. All permits to cut wood are issued
- locally, so you must purchase permits directly from the district ranger.
- Regional offices do not sell permits.
-
- Northern Region
- Federal Building, 200 East Broadway St., P.O. Box 7669, Missoula, MT 59807;
- 406-329-3511. Includes Northern Idaho and Montana.
-
- Intermountain Region
- Federal Building, 324 25th St., Ogden, UT 84401; 801-625-5354. Includes
- Southern Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and Western Wyoming.
-
- Southern Region
- 1720 Peachtree Rd. N.W., Atlanta, GA 30367; 404-347-4191. Includes
- Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi,
- North Carolina, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, South Carolina,
- Tennessee, Texas, Virginia.
-
- Rocky Mountain Region
- 11177 West Eighth Ave., P.O. Box 25127, Lakewood, CO 80225; 303-236-9431.
- Includes Colorado, Nebraska, South Dakota, Eastern Wyoming.
-
- Pacific Southwest Region
- 630 Sansome St., San Francisco, CA 94111; 415-556-0122. For California.
-
- Pacific Northwest Region
- 333 SW First Street, P.O. Box 3623, Portland, OR 97208; 503-326-2955.
- Includes Oregon and Washington. (Mt. Hood is the most popular national
- forest and may be sold out of permits. Call them in advance at
- 503-666-0700. Try also the state and private timber units at 503-326-2727
- or the U.S. Forest Service at 503-326-2877.)
-
- Southwestern Region
- Federal Building, 517 Gold Ave. S.W., Albuquerque, NM 87102; 505-842-3292.
-
- Eastern Region
- 310 West Wisconsin Ave., Room 500, Milwaukee, WI 53203; 414-291-3693.
- Includes Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New
- Hampshire, Maine, Pennsylvania, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin.
-
- Alaskan Region
- Federal Office Building, 709 West Ninth St., P.O. Box 21628, Juneau, AK
- 99802; 907-586-8863. Abundance of wood results in extensive free-use
- permits.
-
- * Homes: Department of Agriculture (USDA)
- USDA, FmHA
- Single Family Housing Division
- 14th & Independence Ave., S.W., Room 5334
- Washington, DC 20250 202-382-1474
- Contact your local Farmers Home Administration Office. There are 1900
- around the country. The Farmers Home Administration, part of the
- Department of Agriculture, makes low-interest loans available to qualified
- applicants to purchase homes or farms in rural areas (among other things).
- Rural settings are small towns with a population under 10,000. Check to
- see if the locale you are interested in qualifies. Sometimes areas of up
- to 25,000 in population are approved. Farmers Home Administration is also
- charged with disposing of properties that are foreclosed. First, they make
- any necessary repairs to the properties, then offer them for sale to people
- who have the same qualifications as those applying for FmHA loans (based on
- income, credit worthiness and other criteria). Eligible applicants also
- qualify to purchase the properties at special low FmHA interest rates (as
- low as 1%). If no eligible applicants purchase a property, it is then put
- up for sale to the general public at competitive prices. If the property
- is not sold within 10 days, it may be reduced by 10%. Sales to the general
- public may be through FmHA offices or through private real estate brokers.
- FmHA "eligible applicants" must reside on the property purchased; but if no
- such eligible buyers are available, other buyers may use it for investment
- or rental purposes. A separate program applies for farms. This program is
- designed to serve people of modest income and good credit who don't have
- enough to make a down payment on a home. Credit evaluation is done on the
- most recent 12 months. Bankruptcy is not looked at after 36 months. The
- current loan budget is one-third of what is was in the 70's. This program
- is being changed to eventually act as insurers to guarantee loans from
- professional lenders. Applicants may work in a city if their home is
- rural.
-
- * Homes: Department of Housing and Urban
- Development
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
- 451 7th St. S.W.
- Washington, DC 20410-4000
- HUD Locator 202-708-1422
- Multi-Family Property Dispositions 202-708-1220
- Single-Family Property Dispositions 202-708-1832
- HUD homes are properties HUD owns as a result of paying the balance on
- foreclosed FHA insured home mortgages. Any qualified buyer can purchase a
- HUD home. Generally, your monthly mortgage payment should be no more than
- 29% of your monthly gross income. Many HUD homes require only a 3% down
- payment. You can move into some HUD homes with a $100 down payment. HUD
- will pay the real estate brokers commission up to the standard 6% of the
- sales price. HUD may also pay your closing costs. HUD homes are priced at
- fair market value. Consult your local newspapers for HUD listings; or,
- your regional HUD office, listed below; or, the real estate broker of your
- choice.
-
- HUD's Property Disposition facilities are located within ten regional
- offices and various field offices around the country. Contact the nearest
- office for details (see listing below). Frequently, HUD will advertise
- upcoming auctions of foreclosed properties in a local newspaper. The
- properties may be apartments, condominiums, or various kinds of
- single-family homes. The condition of these properties varies widely,
- including some that are little more than shells; and that, of course,
- affects the price. Some may be located in less than desirable
- neighborhoods; but others may end up being bargains, either as investments
- or personal residences. Bids are placed through private real estate
- brokers, who then submit them to HUD. Some offers for HUD homes are made
- to the seller and there may be negotiations. Offers for other HUD homes
- are done by bids placed during an "Offer Period." If you bid the full
- asking price, it may be accepted immediately. Otherwise, all the bids are
- opened at the close of the "Offer Period." The highest bidder wins.
- Contact the participating broker of your choice to show you the property
- and submit your bid. HUD broker contracted services are free to
- prospective buyers. Earnest money is a flat scaled fee ranging from
- $500-$2000 and must accompany the bid. Bidders must furnish their own
- financing. HUD stresses that properties sell "as is," so HUD will not make
- any repairs. It is up to a potential buyer to determine the value and
- condition, although the listings will state major problems.
-
- Newspaper ads list houses that will be available for the next ten days, as
- well as others that did not sell in previous auctions. Listings include
- addresses, number of bedrooms and bathrooms, and suggested prices.
- Remember that HUD contracts are binding and non-negotiable: once your bid
- has won, there's no turning back. For a step by step buying guide to
- purchasing HUD owned homes, call the HUD Homeline, 1-800-767-4483, and
- request the brochure, A Home of Your Own. To learn about other programs at
- HUD that may be useful to you, call 202-708-0685.
-
- HUD Region I (Boston)
- Thomas P. O'Neill Federal Building, 10 Causeway St., Room 375, Boston, MA
- 02222-1092; 617-565-5234. Field offices are located in: Bangor, ME;
- Burlington, VT; Hartford, CT; Manchester, NH; and Providence, RI. Ask for
- Property Distribution Division in these offices.
-
- Region II (New York)
- HUD New York Regional Office, 26 Federal Plaza, New York, NY 10278-0068;
- 212-264-8068. Field offices located in: Albany, NY; Buffalo, NY; Camden,
- NJ; Hato Rey, PR; and Newark, NJ.
-
- Region III (Philadelphia)
- HUD Philadelphia Regional Office, Liberty Square Building, 105 South
- Seventh St., Philadelphia, PA 19106-3392; 215-597-2560. Field offices
- located in: Baltimore, MD; Charleston, WV; Pittsburgh, PA; Richmond, VA;
- Washington, D.C.; and Wilmington, DE.
-
- Region IV (Atlanta)
- HUD Atlanta Regional Office, Richard B. Russell Building, 75 Spring St.,
- S.W., Atlanta, GA 30303-3388; 404-331-5136. Field offices located in:
- Birmingham, AL; Columbia, SC; Coral Gables, FL; Greensboro, NC; Jackson,
- MS; Jacksonville, FL; Knoxville, TN; Louisville, KY; Memphis, TN;
- Nashville, TN; Orlando, FL; and Tampa, FL.
-
- Region V (Chicago)
- HUD Chicago Regional Office, 626 West Jackson Blvd., Chicago, IL
- 60606-6765; 312-353-5680. Field offices are located in: Cincinnati, OH;
- Cleveland, OH; Columbus, OH; Detroit, MI; Flint, MI; Grand Rapids, MI;
- Indianapolis, IN; Milwaukee, WI; Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN; and Springfield,
- IL.
-
- Region VI (Fort Worth)
- HUD Fort Worth Regional Office, 1600 Throckmorton, P.O. Box 2905, Fort
- Worth, TX 76113-2905; 817-885-5401. Field Offices are located in:
- Albuquerque, NM; Dallas, TX; Houston, TX; Little Rock, AR; Lubbock, TX; New
- Orleans, LA; Oklahoma City, OK; San Antonio, TX; Shreveport, LA; and Tulsa,
- OK.
-
- Region VII (Kansas City)
- HUD Kansas City Regional Office, Professional Building, 1103 Grand Ave.,
- Kansas City, MO 64106-2496; 816-374-6432. Field offices are located in:
- Des Moines, IA; Omaha, NE; St. Louis, MO; Topeka, KS.
-
- Region VIII (Denver)
- HUD Denver Regional Office, Executive Tower Building, 1405 Curtis St.,
- Denver, CO 80202-2349; 303-844-4513. Field offices are located in: Casper,
- WY; Fargo, ND; Helena, MT; Salt Lake City, UT; and Sioux Falls, SD.
-
- Region IX (San Francisco)
- HUD San Francisco Regional Office, Phillip Burton Federal Building and U.S.
- Courthouse, 450 Golden Gate Ave., P.O. Box 36003, San Francisco, CA
- 94102-3448; 415-556-4752. Field offices are located in: Fresno, CA;
- Honolulu, HI; Las Vegas, NV; Los Angeles, CA; Phoenix, AZ; Reno, NV;
- Sacramento, CA; San Diego, CA; Santa Ana, CA; and Tucson, AZ.
-
- Indian Programs Office, One North First Street, Suite 400, Phoenix, AZ
- 85004-2360; 602-261-4156.
-
- Region X (Seattle)
- HUD Seattle Regional Office, Arcade Plaza Building, 1321 Second Ave.,
- Seattle, WA 98101-2054; 206-442-5414. Field offices are located in:
- Anchorage, AK; Boise, ID; Portland, OR; and Spokane, WA.
-
- Other HUD Programs
- HUD offers over 100 housing programs. Some may be useful to you. To find
- out about all the programs offered, and what they do, call 202-708-1420 and
- request Programs of HUD. This 119 page booklet will be sent to you free of
- charge. HUD offers free counseling to HUD homebuyers, homeowners and
- tenants. Contact your nearest HUD field office to find an approved housing
- counseling agency.
-
- * Homes: H.O.P.E. 3
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
- Office of Community Planning and Development
- 451 7th St., S.W
- Washington, DC 20410-7000 202-708-0324
- The HUD Urban Homesteading Program has been replaced by the HOPE 3 Program
- -- with a $95 million budget -- as of June 1991. It is designed to provide
- homeownership for low income families and individuals. The funds will be
- distributed to the 10 HUD regions and awarded to local governments and
- non-profit organizations on a competitive bidding basis. It will generally
- provide down payment assistance for groups to acquire or rehabilitate
- affordable low income housing. After June or July, 1992, call your
- regional HUD office to find out who has been awarded grants, and then
- contact them directly to see what is available.
-
- You qualify for housing help through HOPE 3 under the Low Income Family
- Housing Act if you are a first time homebuyer and are below 80% of the
- median income in your area. You must also meet the affordability criteria
- -- which requires that the cost of principal interest, taxes and insurance
- for the home comes to no more than 30% of your income. Since the program
- is new, the quality of public dissemination of information about these
- programs remains to be seen. These programs are instituted to help you, so
- don't be afraid to be persistent in asking for information about what HOPE
- 3 programs are available in your area from the Community Planning and
- Development Office at the Field or Regional HUD office nearest you.
-
- To find out what the programs will provide and how to apply for a grant,
- contact John Garrity, DHUD, Office of Urban Rehabilitation, Room 7185, 451
- Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 20410-7000, 202-708-0324 or look up the
- Monday, February 4, 1991 issue of the Federal Register, Part X, DHUD, 24
- CFR Subtitle A called HOPE for Homeownership for Single Family Homes
- Program; Notice of Program Guidelines.
-
- * Homes: Veterans Administration
- U.S. Veterans Administration
- 810 Vermont Ave., N.W.
- Washington, DC
- 20420
- 202-233-4000
- Contact the local Veterans Administration Office in your state, or a real
- estate broker. Watch newspaper ads in local papers for listings of
- foreclosed properties. The "For Sale" signs on VA foreclosed properties
- are distinctive. The National Veterans Administration office in
- Washington, DC is not directly involved in handling the sales; for any
- inquiries you will be referred to a real estate broker or local VA office.
-
- The Veterans Administration sells foreclosed properties through private
- real estate brokers. Properties are frequently advertised in local
- newspapers, giving information such as address, number of bedrooms and
- bathrooms, particular defects in the property, and price. Almost any real
- estate agent can show you the property. No broker has an exclusive listing
- for any of these properties. Local VA offices are the best source of
- information on the procedures involved in purchasing these properties.
- Regional offices publish lists of foreclosed properties with descriptions
- in multiple listing code and phone numbers to call about the property. In
- some cases, they will also directly send you lists of properties currently
- available in your area. These offices will mail out a list each time you
- write in a request, but unless you are a broker, they will not send the
- list for foreclosures to you on a monthly basis. You can, however, have
- the agent of your choice put on the mailing list. Others will not mail
- lists to you, but allow you to pick up the list from their office and/or
- will refer you to a broker. In either case, you must go through an agent
- to purchase the house, since they have the keys to the premises, and the
- process is very much like a regular real estate transaction. The listing
- has the price on it the VA wants. It will also state if the VA is willing
- to entertain a lower price. Except, remember, once you have put a bid on a
- house and won, there is no negotiating or turning back. Houses come "as
- is" with no guarantees, so it is important to inspect them carefully. Some
- are located in less than desirable neighborhoods, but there are bargains to
- be had as well. For the most part VA financed homes are mainstream
- suburban, not inner city. They are often found in neighborhoods located in
- economically hard hit areas -- such as the Southwest. Prices may drop on
- homes that are not sold in a certain period of time. VA financing is
- possible, but you get a 10% discount for paying cash. Also, if you plan on
- VA financing, in cases of a tie, the other bidder gets priority for cash
- offers (pre-approved financing through a commercial lender.) You must state
- at the time of the bid whether you intend to use VA financing or have found
- your own.
-
- There are two basic avenues to arrange financing. You can be pre-qualified
- by lenders and then go shopping. More commonly, the real estate broker you
- are working with will tell you what is available in the mortgage market.
- The usual way it works is that you find a broker, find a house, bid on it,
- wind the bid and then the broker helps you to find financing.
-
- If you should win a bid on a VA foreclosed home but be unable to procure
- financing, some regional offices will pu the home up for bid again. Others
- hold backup offers and will contact the next highest bidder if the original
- successful bidder is unable to complete the purchase. Most listings offer
- to sell financing at the current rate of interest for GI loans, even if the
- buyer is not a GI. A purchaser who is a GI can get these rates without
- using his GI benefits. Call 202-233-6388, the Central Office, if you have
- questions. They will direct you to the appropriate department of your
- regional office. If you are a GI and wish to find out about a Certificate
- of Eligibility, whereby you can purchase a home worth up to $184,000
- without a down payment, call 202-208-1325 or your regional office. To
- discusses VA loan qualifications generally, call 202-872-1151 or your
- regional office.
-
- Purchase is done through a sealed bidding process. Earnest money
- requirements are published in the listing, usually ranging from $500 to
- $1000 and are nonre-fundable if the bid is accepted. This is a salvage
- program designed to recover what it can of the cost to the VA for
- purchasing the property, within a reasonable amount of time after
- foreclosure -- usually around 6 months.
-
- * Miscellaneous Property: U.S. Customs Service
- E.G.& G. Dynatrend
- 2300 Clarendon Blvd., Suite 705 703-351-7887
- Arlington, VA 22201 703-351-7880
- E.G.& G. Dynatrend, under contract with the U.S. Customs Service, auctions
- forfeited and confiscated general merchandise, including vehicles, on a
- nationwide basis. Items include everything from vessels--both pleasure and
- commercial--to aircraft, machinery, clothes (in both commercial and
- individual quantities), jewelry, household goods, precious stones, liquor,
- furniture, high technology equipment, and infrequently, real estate.
- Public auctions and sealed and open bid methods are all used. Items are
- sold only by lot and number of items in a lot vary from one to many. You
- must bid on the entire lot.
-
- The U.S. Customs Public Auction Line is 703-351-7887. Call it to subscribe
- to the mailing list of locations and dates of sales, to obtain general
- information about the custom sales program, dates of sales in your region
- or information about real estate sales. For $50 dollars per year you can
- subscribe to a mailing list of items to be auctioned nationwide; or you may
- subscribe to a list limited to one region of the country for $25. You will
- then receive fliers with descriptions of items available in upcoming
- auctions. Regions are divided as follows: General, Northeast sales;
- Southeast Sales; Northwest sales; and Southwest sales. Send your name,
- address, telephone number, and a money order to the above address. Allow
- six to eight weeks for the first flier to arrive. The fliers will then
- arrive three weeks prior to the viewing period and will tell you when and
- where the items are available for inspection and details of auction
- procedures. Catalogs are also available a week before the sale with
- additional details. For sealed bids, a deposit in cashier's check for the
- total bid must be submitted along with the bid. Make the cashier's check
- payable to U.S. Customs Service/E.G.& G. Dynatrend, Agent. Indicate sale
- number on cashier's check and outside on the envelope.
-
- U.S. Customs auctions are held every nine weeks in the following eight
- cities: Los Angeles, CA; Laredo, TX; Nogales, AZ; Miami, FL; Edinburg, TX;
- Houston, TX; Chula Vista, CA (San Diego, CA area); Jersey City, NJ; El
- Paso, TX. Other auctions are scheduled at different times at various other
- cities also.
-
- * Miscellaneous Property: U.S. Department of Defense
- The Defense Reutilization Marketing Service
- P.O. Box 1370 616-961-7331
- Battle Creek, MI 49016-1370 1-800-222-DRMS
- Imagine what kinds of items are used, then discarded, by a government
- department as big as the Defense Department: literally everything from
- recyclable scrap materials and weapons accessories, to airplanes, ships,
- trains, and motor vehicles; to wood and metalworking machinery,
- agricultural equipment, construction equipment, communications equipment
- and medical, dental and veterinary supplies. Not to forget photographic
- equipment, chemical products, office machines, food preparation and serving
- equipment, musical instruments, textiles, furs, tents, flags, and sometimes
- live animals such as goats and horses. No activated items with military
- applications are included. Neither are real estate or confiscated items
- such as sports cars or luxury goods.
-
- Goods sold are either surplus or not usable by other government agencies.
- First priority is given to designated groups which qualify for donations.
- The rest is then put up for public sale. By contacting the Defense
- Reutilization Marketing Service at the above address or telephone, you can
- receive a booklet called How to Buy Surplus Personal Property which
- explains what DOD has for sale and how to bid for it. The Defense
- Department also lists notices of Sealed Bid property sales in the Commerce
- Business Daily, available from the Superintendent of Documents, Government
- Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402-9325; 202-783-3238.
-
- Sales are conducted by regional Defense Reutilization and Marketing Region
- (DRMR) sales offices which coordinate sales in their geographical area.
- Listed below are addresses and telephone numbers of the regional offices,
- which can direct you further as to exactly where items are physically sold.
- Local sales are by auction, spot bid, or on a retail basis. Auctions are
- held where there are relatively small quantities of a variety of items.
- Spot bids are made through forms submitted in the course of a sale--usually
- when the property is something with a high demand or interest. The retail
- sales offer small quantities at fixed, market-level prices. There are 214
- retail sales offices, located on military bases.
-
- Large quantities of goods are usually sold by sealed bid, which you submit
- by mail, along with a deposit, on a form you obtain in a catalog which
- describes the items. (You receive the catalogs once you are on the mailing
- list). Recyclable materials are sold through the Resource Recovery
- Recycling Program or through the Hazardous Property Program. Call the
- above listed number for further details. You can be put on a mailing list
- to receive advance notice of DOD sales in your region, but if you don't
- make any bids after two notifications it will probably be removed unless
- you make an additional request to remain on the list. You can also be
- placed on a National Bidders List for sales throughout the country. By
- contacting the DOD Bidders Control Office, P.O. Box 1370, Battle Creek, MI
- 49016-1370, 616-961-7331, 961-7332, or 1-800-222-DRMS. People under age 18
- and members of the U.S. Armed Forces, including civilian employees, are not
- eligible to participate in these sales.
-
- Following are the Defense Reutilization and Marketing sales offices:
-
- DRMR: Columbus, P.O. Box 500, Blacklick, OH 43004-0500, 614-238-2114. This
- region includes: MN, WI, MI, IA, NE, KS, MO, IL, IN, OH, WV, VA, DE, NJ,
- PA, , MD, CT, NY, RI, MA, ME, VT, NH, and District of Columbia
-
- DRMR: Memphis, 2163 Airways Blvd., Memphis, TN 38114-0716, 901-775-6417.
- This region includes: TX, OK, AR, LA, MS, AL, TN, KY, GA, FL, SC, NC.
-
- DRMR: Ogden, P.O. Box 53, Defense Depot Ogden, Ogden, UT 84407-5001,
- 801-399-7257. This region includes: ND, SD, MT, WY, ID, UT, CO, AZ, NM,
- WA, OR, NV, CA.
-
- You can also take advantage of DOD sales if you live outside the United
- States. The DOD booklet, How to Buy Surplus Personal Property, lists
- addresses for various regions in Europe and the Pacific.
-
- * Miscellaneous Property: U.S. Postal Service
- U.S. Postal Service
- 475 L'Enfant Plaza, S.W.
- Washington, DC 20260-3100 202-268-2000
- Vehicle Management Facility 202-268-2000
- Contact the Dead Letter Branches listed below for undeliverable goods; or
- your local Postmaster for Vehicle Maintenance Facilities and surplus
- property auctions. To receive advance notice of the auctions you can write
- to a Dead Letter Branch and request that your name be put on the auction
- sales mailing list. To be on all of them, you must write to each one
- separately. Usually 10 days before the auction, you will be notified by
- postcard of the time, date and place. Viewing inspections are usually held
- 2 hours before the auction begins.
-
- The Postal Service holds auctions of unclaimed merchandise which includes a
- wide range of property -- from electronic and household items -- to
- clothes, jewelry, linens, toys, all types of equipment, and lots of books.
- Sales are handled through five dead letter branches throughout the country
- listed below. However, any high value items such as art works, are sold at
- the New York auction. Contact your local Postmaster to ask about their
- auctions of surplus property and used vehicles. There are 225 post office
- vehicle maintenance facilities throughout the country. Their addresses and
- phone numbers are all listed at the back of the Zip Code Directory kept at
- post offices. The used vehicle sales can be good bargains, since the
- vehicles are somewhat fixed up, painted, and occasionally in good
- condition. Some jeeps, for instance, may sell for between $1200 and $1500.
- Recently a man bought 15 jeeps for $100 each at auction. Vehicles that do
- not sell off the storage lot are auctioned. Sometimes cars such as Pintos
- can be picked up for as little as $750. The sales conducted by the 225
- Vehicle Maintenance Facilities around the country are usually fixed price
- sales, but 5 or 6 times per year auctions have been held at larger cities.
-
- The dead letter items are usually sold in lots of similar goods, with the
- volume or quantity varying widely. Prices depend on what the goods are and
- the number of people bidding at a particular auction. There may be a
- minimum bid required, such as $20; and often cash is the only acceptable
- payment. Bidders are responsible for removing the items purchased.
-
- A flier for a Postal Service auction of unclaimed and damaged merchandise
- in St. Paul, Minnesota advised that only those already on an established
- check register may pay by check; otherwise, cash is required. It also
- advised that potential bidders to bring their own containers -- boxes,
- crates, and bags -- for packing. The Postal Service in San Francisco,
- California, announced that books, jewelry, sound recordings, speakers, and
- cabinets, as well as miscellaneous merchandise would be available.
-
- Eastern Region
- U.S. Postal Service Claims and Inquiry, Room 531 A, 2970 Market St.,
- Philadelphia, PA 19104-9652; 215-895-8140 (auction information and number
- to call to be notified by postcard of next upcoming auction). Includes
- Pennsylvania, Southern New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, Ohio, Kentucky, part
- of Indiana, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina.
-
- Central Region
- U.S. Postal Service Dead Letter Office, 180 E. Kellogg St., Room 932, St.
- Paul, MN 55101-9511; 612-293-3089. Includes Minnesota, Michigan,
- Wisconsin, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa,
- Indiana, and Illinois.
-
- Northeast Region
- U.S. Postal Service Dead Parcel Office, J.P. Farley Bldg., Room 209A, New
- York, NY 10099-9543; 212-330-2931. Includes: New York, Massachusetts,
- Puerto Rico, Connecticut, New Hampshire, New Jersey, and Rhode Island.
-
- Southern Region
- U.S. Postal Service Undeliverable Mail Branch, 730 Great Southwest Parkway,
- Atlanta, GA 30336-9506; 404-344-1625. Includes: Georgia, Florida,
- Louisiana, Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Texas, and parts of
- South Carolina.
-
- Western Region
- U.S. Postal Service Claims and Inquiries, 1300 Evans Ave., Room 293, San
- Francisco, CA 94188-9998; 415-550-6500. Auctions are held at 228 Harrison
- St., San Francisco, CA. Includes: Alaska, Oregon, Idaho, California,
- Washington, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, part of Texas, and Hawaii.
-
- * Miscellaneous Property: General Services
- Administration Property
- William Tesh, Chief of Sales Branch
- U.S. General Services Administration
- Property Management Division
- Crystal Mall 4, Room 709
- Washington, DC 20406 703-557-7785/0807
- Contact your local GSA office listed below. The GSA disposes of surplus
- property for most of the government agencies, and has items ranging from
- vehicles and scrap metals, to office furniture, office and industrial
- equipment, data processing equipment, boats, medical equipment, waste paper
- and computers; as well as aircraft, railroad equipment, agricultural
- equipment, textiles, food waste, photographic equipment, jewelry, watches,
- and clothing.
-
- Some regional offices have no mailing list. Instead, there is a number
- they will give you to call that is a recorded message of all upcoming
- events. It will give the time, date, and location of the auction and type,
- such as warehouse, vehicles or office furniture. Other regions allow you
- to have your name placed on a mailing list to receive advance notices of
- auctions at no cost. Catalogs list the specific items and their condition.
- Sales are conducted as regular auctions, spot auctions (where bids are
- submitted on-the-spot in writing) and by sealed bid (written on a form and
- mailed in). For auctions and spot bids, you will have two days prior to
- the sale to view and inspect property, and one week prior for sealed bids.
- For sealed bid items you receive a catalog, once your are on the mailing
- list, describing the merchandise. If your region does not have a mailing
- list, you may pick up catalogs at the office or the sale. Announcements
- come out as property is accumulated, with March to October being the
- busiest period. The highest bidder wins in all cases.
-
- Prices may range from way below wholesale for some items to close-to-market
- prices for others, especially automobiles and boats. Cars tend to be
- common American-made brands, such as Tempos, Citations, and Reliances.
- Prices for 4-6 year-old cars may range from around $1500 to $3000 depending
- on the condition. Seized cars may be newer and of a foreign make. A
- Mercedes-Benz was recently sold at a National Capitol Region auction.
- Payment may be by cash, cashier's checks, money orders, traveler's checks,
- government, or credit union checks; but any personal or business checks
- must be accompanied by an Informal Bank Letter guaranteeing payment. Full
- payment must be made by the following day, and bidders are responsible for
- removal of all property. To bid in GSA auctions, you must register at the
- site and obtain a bidder number. Once you are on the bidders mailing list,
- you must bid at least once while receiving five mailings or your name will
- be removed from the list. Then you must contact the appropriate office
- again to continue receiving mailings.
-
- Some listings for a GSA sale in Bismarck, North Dakota included the
- following items: miscellaneous kitchen equipment, meat slicers, coffee
- makers, cameras, film, binoculars, screens, paper, postage meter, nuts and
- bolts, typewriters, lettering set, mailboxes, lamps, and a streetlight.
-
- For information about GSA auctions in your area, contact one of the
- regional offices listed below:
-
- National Capitol Region (Washington DC and vicinity)
- 6808 Loisdale Rd., Building A, Springfield, VA 22150; 703-557-7785, or
- 703-557-7796, for a recording.
-
- Region I (Boston)
- GSA, Surplus Sales Branch, 10 Causeway St., 9th Floor, Boston, MA, 02222;
- 617-565-7326.
-
- Region II (New York)
- GSA Surplus Sales Branch, 26 Federal Plaza, Room 20-2016, New York, NY,
- 10278; 212-264-4824, or 212-264-4823, for a recording.
-
- Region III (Philadelphia)
- GSA Surplus Sales Branch, 9th and Market Sts., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- 19107; 215-597-5671 or 215-597-SALE for a recording. (This is NCR
- Headquarters).
-
- Region IV (Atlanta)
- GSA Surplus Sales Branch, 75 Spring St. SW, Atlanta, Georgia 30303;
- 404-331-5177.
-
- Region V (Chicago)
- 230 S. Dearborn St., Chicago, Illinois 60604 312-353-6061 or 312-353-0246
- for a recorded announcement.
-
- Region VI (Kansas)
- GSA Surplus Sales Branch, 15 East Bannister Road, Kansas City, KS 64131;
- 913-236-2565.
-
- Region VII (Ft. Worth)
- GSA Surplus Sales Branch, 819 Taylor St., Ft. Worth, Texas 76102;
- 817-334-2351.
-
- Region VIII (Denver)
- GSA Surplus Sales Branch, Denver Federal Center Building 41, Denver,
- Colorado 80225-0006; 303-236-7705.
-
- Region IX (San Francisco)
- GSA Surplus Sales Branch, 525 Market St., 32nd Floor, San Francisco,
- California 94105; 415-944-5001. Northern area call 415-744-5120. Southern
- area call 213-894-5162.
-
- Region X (Washington)
- GSA Surplus Sales Branch GSA Center, Auburn, Washington 98002;
- 206-931-7566.
-
- * Miscellaneous Property: Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
- IRS National Information Hotline 1-800-829-1040
- This office appears to be understaffed. Overloads are automatically put on
- busy. It is very difficult to get through. If you call before 3:30 at
- 202-566-3636, Donica Davis may be able to help you.
-
- The hotline can tell you which local office to call. It will tell you to
- consult your local newspaper, in classifieds, for a listing of IRS seized
- property to be sold. The listing will give phone number and details. The
- property sold by the IRS is seized from delinquent taxpayers rather than
- being used or surplus government property. Many kinds of merchandise are
- put up for auction, including real estate, vehicles, and office and
- industrial equipment. Sales are by both sealed bids and public auction.
- Regarding property sales, the IRS warns that land may still be redeemed by
- the original owner up to 180 days AFTER you, the bidder, purchase it at an
- auction; and therefore no deed is issued until this time period has
- elapsed. Buildings on land being sold by the IRS are NOT open for
- inspection by a potential buyer unless permission is granted by the
- taxpayer/owner.
-
- Payment may be by cash, certified check, cashier's check, or money order.
- In some cases, full payment is required the day of the sale. Otherwise, a
- 20% downpayment (or $200, whichever is greater) is needed to hold the
- property, with the balance due at a specified time from the date of the
- sale, not to exceed one month.
-
- * Miscellaneous Property: U.S. Marshals Service
- U.S. Marshals Service
- Seized Assets Division
- Department of Justice
- Constitution Ave. & 10th St., N.W.
- Washington, DC 20530
- Contact your local Sunday newspaper for auction notices in the legal
- section, or the nearest U.S. Marshals Office under U.S. Department of
- Justice. Usually the Marshals Office is located in the Federal Building of
- a city. The U.S. Marshals Service or a contracted commercial sales or
- auction service may handle disposal of the property. Sales are always
- listed every other Wednesday in USA Today newspaper.
-
- In 1991, the Drug Enforcement Agency managed 1.4 billion dollars worth of
- property from convicted drug dealers. The U.S. Marshals Service, which
- holds crime-related property accumulated in Federal drug-related and other
- confiscations, auctions much of this off to the public through 94 offices
- around the country. Items sold include everything from entire working
- businesses, to cars, houses, copiers, jewelry, rare coin and stamp
- collections, apartment complexes, and restaurants. The government is not
- giving these properties away by any means, but bargains are possible as
- well as opportunities to purchase some exotic goodies. Confiscated viable
- businesses are managed by the Service until the time of the auction in
- order to keep up or increase the businesses' value.
-
- Auctions are not scheduled regularly, but occur when items accumulate.
- Auctions may be conducted by private auctioneers or the Marshals Service
- itself. No mailing list is kept to notify you individually, and there is
- no national listing of items, since new properties are seized daily and
- adjudication of drug-related cases may take years. Payment at these
- auctions is by cash, certified check, or special arrangements when large
- amounts of money are involved. One note, the Marshals Service checks out
- people paying for large items with cash to make sure the government is not
- re-selling things to drug dealers. The Marshals Service also auctions off
- property seized by the Drug Enforcement Agency.
-
- * Natural Resources Sales Assistance
- Small Business Administration
- 409 Third Street, SW 1-800-827-5722
- Washington, DC 20416 202-205-6600
- The federal government sells surplus property and natural resources, such
- as timber. SBA works with government agencies which are selling the
- property and resources to assure that small businesses have an opportunity
- to buy a fair share of them. Occasionally natural resources that the
- federal government is releasing on the market are made available. Small
- fuel companies and producers may get the option to buy their fair share of
- federal government coal leases. The royalty oil program enables small and
- independent refineries to buy oil at valuations set by the federal
- government - which is in excess of spot market prices. Agricultural leases
- may be had for land on which to graze cattle or grow crops. This SBA
- program is designed to ensure that small businesses get their fair share of
- real and personal federal property put on the market. Don't expect
- bargains. Write for The U.S. Government Purchasing and Sales Directory at
- the above address. This book tells you how to sell to the U.S. government,
- how to be put on its bidder's list, and what agencies sell property. For
- more information, contact Bill Berry at 202-205-6470. To find out what SBA
- Natural Resources Sales Assistance programs are in your area, contact your
- nearest SBA office. For information on other SBA services, call
- 1-800-827-5722 (recorded listing from which you can order brochures.)
-
- * Real Estate: General Services Administration
- Property Sales
- General Services Administration 1-800-GSA-1313
- Call this toll-free number for national listing of properties, and then
- contact local GSA office for the area you are interested in. You can also
- obtain the list by calling 202-501-0067. The phone number of the local GSA
- office to contact will be provided on the list that is mailed to you free
- of charge upon request.
-
- * Real Estate: Small Business Administration (SBA)
- U.S. Small Business Administration
- Portfolio Management Division
- 409 Third Street, SW
- Washington, DC 20416 202-205-6660
- Recording from which to order brochures 1-800-827-5722
-
- Contact your local SBA office located in 10 Regional Offices around the
- country, or any of the 68 District Offices. SBA does not maintain a
- mailing list. No district or regional SBA office is aware of what the
- other offices are offering. The SBA auctions off properties of people who
- have defaulted on home loan payments in SBA-sponsored programs. Listings
- of auctions are printed in local newspapers, usually in the Sunday edition
- in the classified section. Merchandise is identified as SBA property and
- sold by brokers, none of whom have the exclusive listing, or by private
- auctioneers. The auctioneers are chosen on a rotating basis. SBA attempts
- to sell to the highest bidder, but may reject a winning bid if too low.
- Sales are infrequent. Do not expect bargains. Items sold range from
- office furniture and equipment to buildings or entire bakeries,
- drycleaners, or other businesses. There may be parts or whole businesses
- available. The auctioneer may have an entire auction of SBA items, or a
- mixture of things from various sources. You may request to bid by sealed
- bid if you desire; and a deposit is required. Payment is by cash or
- certified check. If you are interested in certain categories of
- merchandise, you might want to be placed on the mailing list of one or more
- auctioneers who specialize in that particular type of item, such as farm
- equipment, for example. Since the SBA is often the guarantor of bank
- loans, SBA auctions are relatively infrequent and bargains are not easy to
- find. SBA Regional Offices follow:
-
- Dallas: 8625 King George Dr., Dallas, TX 75235-3391; 214-767-7643
-
- Kansas City: 911 Walnut St., 13th Floor, Kansas City, MO 64106;
- 816-462-2989
-
- Denver: 999 18th St.,Suite 701, Denver, CO 80202; 303-294-7001
-
- San Francisco: 450 Golden Gate Ave., San Francisco, CA; 415-556-7487
-
- Seattle: 2615 4th Ave.,Room 440, Seattle, WA 98121; 206-442-5676
-
- Boston: 155 Federal Street, 9th Floor, Boston, MA 02110; 617-451-2047
-
- New York: 26 Federal Plaza, Room 31-08, New York, NY 10278
-
- King of Prussia: 475 Allendale Rd., Suite 201, King of Prussia, PA 19406;
- 215-962-3750
-
- Atlanta: 1375 Peachtree St. N.E., 5th Floor, Atlanta, GA 30367-8102;
- 404-347-2797
-
- Chicago: 230 Dearborn St., Room 510, Chicago, IL 60604-1593; 312-353-0359
-
- * Ships: Maritime Administration
- U.S. Department of Transportation
- Office of Ship Operations
- Maritime Administration
- 400 7th St., S.W.
- Washington, DC 20590 202-366-5111
- When the government decides that a merchant ship is no longer needed or
- useable, it may put that ship up for sale by auction, through a sealed bid
- procedure. A ten percent deposit is required. It is sold to the highest
- bidder usually for its scrap value. Contact the above address to be put on
- the auction mailing list.
-
- * Timber Sales for Small Business
- Small Business Administration
- 1441 L St NW
- Washington, DC 20416 202-205-6470
- The U.S. Government regularly sells timber from the federal forests managed
- by the U.S. Forest Service, Department of Agriculture, and the Bureau of
- Land Management, Department of Interior. On occasion, timber also is sold
- from federally-owned forests which are under the supervision of the
- Department of Defense, the Department of Energy, and the Tennessee Valley
- Authority, and the Department of the Interior. The SBA and these agencies
- work together to ensure full opportunity for concerns to bid on federal
- timber sales. SBA and the sales agencies jointly set aside timber sales
- for bidding by small concerns when it appears that, under open sales, small
- business would not obtain a fair share at reasonable prices. Contact your
- local SBA office for further specific information. It is listed in the
- blue pages of the telephone directory. General information, if needed, is
- available from Bill Berry at 202-205-6470.
-
-
-
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