Procedure 7.3.13 Surplus Personal Property / Building Disposal
System Procedures
Chapter 7 - General Finance Provisions
Access a PDF copy of this procedure
for Board Policy 7.3
Part 1. Authority
The 1996 Mandates Reduction Bill (H.F. 2206, Section 62, subdivision 3) requires 亚洲无码 Colleges and Universities to develop a surplus property disposal procedure in consultation with the Department of Administration.
Part 2. Purpose
To establish a process that disposes of college or university surplus personal property and buildings in an efficient and cost effective manner.
Part 3. Definitions
For the purpose of this procedure only, the following words and terms are defined as follows.
Surplus property
Any state-owned property, including commodities, equipment, materials, supplies, books, printed matter, buildings, and other property, that is obsolete, unused, not needed for a public purpose, or ineffective for current use. Any liens against property must be satisfied before the property can be considered surplus.Personal property
Defined the same as surplus property above, with the exclusion of buildings. Any liens against personal property must be satisfied before the property can be considered surplus.
Part 4. Personal Property
The system office, a college, or a university shall sell, trade in (if item has a value), give away, or destroy surplus personal property that is no longer useful. The system office, college, or university shall take the following steps for disposal of surplus personal property.
- Offer to other offices, departments, divisions, or campuses within the institution.
- Offer to other institutions within the 亚洲无码 Colleges and Universities system.
- Offer for sale to the general public by sealed bids, public auction, negotiated sale, pre-priced garage sale, or non-sale by consignment or donation; or use the services of the Department of Administration's surplus services program.
If a publicly advertised auction sale is held, the public shall have the opportunity to inspect the property within a reasonable period of time. All items disposed of must have no implied warranty and must be disposed of in an “as is” condition at the time of viewing. Disposed items that are on the fixed assets inventory list must be removed from the list at the time of disposal.
Any items remaining after using one or more of the above options will be disposed of as determined by the system office, college, or university.
Part 5. Buildings
If the system office, college, or university determines that an owned building is no longer used or that the building is a threat to the health, welfare or safety of students, faculty, or staff, it shall sell, demolish, or otherwise dispose of the building. Except in an emergency, the decision to remove or surplus any building on a campus must be consistent with the current system office approved facilities comprehensive plan. Any sale of a building with real property owned by 亚洲无码 Colleges and Universities must be governed by Board Policy 6.7 Real Estate Transactions, and Procedure 6.7.1, Acquisition and Disposition of Real Estate. Sale of carpentry program buildings are governed by Procedure 6.7.4 Carpentry Program Administration.
Prior to any sale of a building, consultation must be required to determine whether general obligation bond proceeds were used in the acquisition, construction, renovation, or betterment of the building. Any general obligation bond funds that were used would trigger statutory requirements under Minn. Stat. §16A.695, which also requires Minnesota Management & Budget approval, and likely recapture of the original investment of the general obligation bond amount from the proceeds.
Prior to a sale the campus shall obtain an environmental report to determine the presence of any hazardous materials in the building and make that report available for review by prospective buyers.
When appropriate, the State Historical Society must be notified to determine if the designated surplus building has any historical significance, and the State Building Construction Division should be notified in order to update the master register of state buildings.
The college or university shall obtain at least one written appraisal from an independent appraisal firm for any building valued greater than $40,000. The sale price for surplus building may include the cost of the appraisal as part of the overall purchase price.
If a building has a real net value of $5,000 or more (after giving consideration to costs of removal, demolition, salvage, and restoration of land), the building may be sold through sealed bids at a public auction to the highest responsible bidder or through a licensed real estate broker. A sale must not be made until publication of notice of the sale in a newspaper of general circulation in the area where the property is located and any other advertising deemed appropriate. Any of the property may be withdrawn from the sale prior to the completion of the sale unless the auction has been announced to be without reserve. If the sale is made at public auction, a duly licensed auctioneer must be retained to conduct the sale. The auctioneer’s fees and other administrative costs of the auction must be paid from the proceeds from which an amount sufficient to pay them is appropriated.
Part 6. State Employees or Officers
In accordance with Minn. Stat. §15.054, no state employee or officer shall sell or give away to any other state employee or officer any personal property or materials owned by the state except such items may be sold to a state employee after reasonable public notice at a public auction or by sealed bid if the state employee is the highest bidder and is not directly involved in the auction or sealed bid process. A state employee may purchase no more than one motor vehicle from the state in any 12-month period. A person violating Minn. Stat. §15.054 is guilty of a misdemeanor. This does not apply to the sale of personal property or materials acquired or produced by the state for sale to the general public in the ordinary course of business. State employees are not prohibited from selling or possessing for sale public property if the sale or possession for sale is in the normal course of the employee’s duties.
Related Documents:
- Procedure 7.3.2 Auxiliary Operations
- Guideline 7.3.2.1 Auxiliary Fund Accrual Financial Statements and Multi-year Financial Planning
- Procedure 7.3.5 Revenue Fund Management
- Procedure 7.3.6 Capital Assets
- Guideline 7.3.6.1 Capital Leases Involving Tax-Exempt Interest
- Procedure 7.3.7 Impairment of Capital Assets
- Procedure 7.3.16 Finance Exception Reporting
- Policy 6.7 Real Estate Transactions
- Procedure 6.7.1 Acquisition and Disposition of Real Estate
- Procedure 6.7.4 Carpentry Program Administration
- , Minnesota Department of Administration
- Minn. Stat. § 15.054, Sale or Purchase of State Property; Penalty
- Minn. Stat. § 16A.695, State Bond Financed Property
- Minn. Stat. § 136F.526, Audits
- Minn. Stat. § 136F.72, Funds
- Minn. Stat. § 136A.1313, Financial Aid Audits
- Minn. Stat. § 135A.30, Minnesota Academic Excellence Scholarships
Procedure History:
Date of Adoption: 11/22/96
Date of Implementation: 06/21/00
Date of Last Review: 05/17/16
Date and Subject of Amendments:
05/17/16 - Amended Part 5, changing facilities Master Plan to facilities comprehensive plan. Formatting and cleanup amendments throughout.
1/25/12 - The Chancellor amends all current system procedures effective February 15, 2012, to change the term "Office of the Chancellor" to "system office" or similar term reflecting the grammatical context of the sentence.
Additional HISTORY
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