DALLAS, Pa. (AP) — Out of toilet paper? Need to pick up a few things for dinner? Take a number and start bidding.Many bargain hunters these days are trading supermarket aisles for the auction circuit in search of discounts on groceries. Past the sell-by date? Bidders are happy to ignore that detail if they’re getting a good deal.As consumers seek relief from the recession and spiraling food prices, grocery auctions are gaining in popularity as an easy way to cut costs. The sales operate like regular auctions, but with bidders vying for dry goods and frozen foods. Some auctioneers accept food stamps.When Kirk Williams held his first grocery auction in rural Pennsylvania last month, nearly 300 people showed up. Astonished by the turnout, he’s scheduling auctions at locations throughout northeastern Pennsylvania.”Right now, people don’t have a lot of spare pocket change,” said Williams, 50, operator of Col. Kirk’s Auction Gallery near Bloomsburg, Pa. “They’re looking to save money.”Rich Harris, 28, who was recently laid off from his welding job, showed up at Williams’ auction in Dallas earlier this month looking for meat for his freezer and snacks for his kids. With his wife pregnant with their third child, “I’m basically trying to expand my dollar right now,” he said. “The deals, they seem to be fairly good.”Grocery sales make sense for auctioneers, too. Sales of baseball cards, estate jewelry and other auction staples have “fallen off a cliff,” Williams said. He hopes to average about $12,000 in sales per auction, which would net him a profit of about $1,000.The popularity of the auctions — which sell leftover or damaged goods from supermarkets, distribution centers and restaurant suppliers — comes at a time when people are stretching their grocery budgets by using more coupons, buying inferior cuts of meat, and choosing store brands.—-Contact The Daily Reveille’s news staff at [email protected]
Bargain hunters shopping for groceries at auctions
March 23, 2009