Monday, November 09, 2015

ORNGE plane among thousands of items sold on government auction website: Some 20,000 items were sold in the space of a year on the government of Canada website GCSurplus



A former ORNGE airplane and thousands of decommissioned law enforcement vehicles were among the items sold by Canada’s Crown asset surplus site over the past year, an analysis of auction sales data shows.

According to the GCSurplus website, roughly 20,000 items were sold between August 2014 and August 2015.

The highest-ticket item sold in that period was a 2010 Pilatus PC-12 aircraft that went for $3.12 million (Canadian) in July. The plane, which featured a custom medevac interior, was originally purchased along with nine other aircraft in 2008 at a cost of $4.56 million (U.S.) per aircraft.

The PC-12 was purchased by Kudlik Aviation, a Quebec City-based company whose corporate affiliate, Kudlik Construction, has numerous building contracts in Nunavut. Jean Labrecque, director of flight operations for Kudlik Aviation, says the plane was first stripped of its medevac interior in order to accommodate more passengers.

ORNGE originally paid $400,000 U.S. for the custom medevac configuration, which was included in the $4.56-million purchase price.

“It’s not our best workhorse, but we appreciate it,” said Labrecque.

Since a 2012 Star investigation revealed serious problems at ORNGE — financial and safety related — the agency has been steadily divesting itself of unnecessary vehicles purchased under the governance of ex-CEO Chris Mazza, whose tenure is being looked at in an ongoing RCMP investigation.

GCSurplus is a federal government organization operating under Public Works and Government Services Canada. Its online auction website, launched in January 2009, sells everything from high-end jewelry to pallets of unused printer toner on behalf of municipal, provincial and federal government agencies across the country through a closed bidding system.

According to Public Works, GCSurplus reported gross sales of $53 million for the 2014-2015 fiscal year, with proceeds for the sales returned to the departments or agencies that provided them.

Some of the items for sale have been seized by federal and provincial law enforcement agencies. GCSurplus says that its sales of seized goods were in excess of $3.2 million in 2011 alone.

In April, media outlets including the Star reported when a cache of hockey collectibles, including an autographed Maurice (Rocket) Richard jersey, was offered for sale on the website.

See more at:  http://www.thestar.com

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