Its mandate is to manage the surplus moveable assets disposal program for the government, providing quality service to clients while obtaining the best value for the Crown. The legislative base for its operations is the Surplus Crown Assets Act along with the Treasury Board Policy on the Disposal of Surplus Moveable Crown Assets. With a few exceptions, the legislation and policy require PSPC to manage the disposal of surplus assets on behalf of federal organizations. The Act was amended in 1993 to provide departments with additional options for the disposal of surplus moveable assets, subject to terms and conditions to be prescribed by the
Treasury Board of Canada. Surplus assets are sold directly by GCSurplus or through contracted service providers. Many assets are sold through public sales that attract thousands of buyers, and, in some cases, sales are conducted at GCSurplus sales centres. Many transactions also take place through the GCSurplus website, where each item is listed and described, often accompanied by a photo. The RFP/RFI process to let the contract was released to public view in June 2013, while
Rona Ambrose was Minister of PSPC. The site received over 50,000 visitors per month. GCSurplus also act as agents for foreign governments in the sale of their surplus assets located in
Canada and have working arrangements with certain European governments for disposal of Canadian military surplus located in their countries. ==Sale process==