I am very conservative. First as mentioned before, make sure you have permission. Second I use the land lease agreement (1/3-2/3). Being honest and telling them any bid would benefit the buyer because they are not going to loose money on the deal and with my offer they get 1/3 without any effort. I have had several communities suspend an auction on scrap because they felt my offer was fair, they know what they were getting, and the city council knew who they were dealing with. IN smaller communities, the landfill is an opportunity. They have to pay to have the scrap buried, but if you give them 1/3 of it's value and turn around and make the same offer on their non-ferrous utilities scrap they remember and shoot business your way. I am not sure about other states, but where I live it is required the community gets fair market value, not a public auction. Therefore the residents of these communities feel they were treated fair, with sincerity, and feels a community member will return their confidence in them. This is more advice for rural scrappers, not those in the big city although I believe the same strategy would work with time. Some large landfills will not allow you to remove items, but I have found that a meeting with the city council explaining the money they are loosing will allow an honest scrapper a deal. Just an idea from an independent part of the country.
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