County holding surplus vehicle auction July 29
Cascade County is selling multiple fleet vehicles and pieces of equipment on the Ox and Sons public auction site.
The auction is July 29 and anything that doesn’t meet the reserve price will be auctioned again on Aug. 5.
Interested bidders can access the auction directly here or through the county website.
All auction items are sold as is with no warranty to the highest bidder once reserves have been met, according to the county.
For questions, contact Bob Wilson, county public works fleet maintenance superintendent at 406-454-6928 with any questions regarding the auction or any auction items.
County to auction surplus vehicles at Ox and Sons in July
The county is trying to sell vehicles that have either been replaced or are obsolete and are no longer needed.
Les Payne, county public works director, said during the June 18 work session that the county has been using an online public auction website, but since COVID haven’t had good luck and now have a stockpile of old vehicles.
He said they’ve never used Ox and Sons for auctioning county surplus vehicles, but were giving that a try to see if they have better luck selling than online.
The auction will be held in July and Payne said he’ll post details to the county website and issue public notices.
The vehicles will be auctioned off to the highest bidder, but items that don’t reach the minimum reserve bid won’t be sold.
Half of the listed vehicles were on the public surplus auction website in May and didn’t meet the minimum reserve price, according to county public works.
“I don’t know what happened at the car market since COVID. Before we could sell Interceptors a lot. We haven’t sold one in two years,” Payne told commissioners during their work session.
The online auction is free for the county, but the county hasn’t been able to sell their inventory for several auctions.
Ox and Sons charges a fee, but it’s dependent on the sale price of a vehicle.
For example, Payne told The Electric, if a vehicle sells for $10,000, that would cost the county $395 and a $30 reserve fee, or a vehicle that sells for $7,000 would cost the county $365 and the $30 reserve fee.
The county sets it’s minimum reserve price, so Payne said he’ll increase that price by $500 to cover any associated fees to ensure the county receives the full sale price.




