Anonymous wrote:If you are a fed lawyer or someone making 6 figures, there is no excuse you don't have at least $20-40K put away, especially if you are a two fed family. I have empathy for low level feds and contractors and support workers who will actually go without pay but for some living a grand lifestyle and overspending because they think the fed salary is stable is no excuse.
Anonymous wrote:I'm split on this. I'm glad that there are resources available for people who need them.
On the other hand, I've been reading a lot of articles lately about how so many feds are out of money and need the government to reopen so they can get another paycheck to eat and pay rent. If you are living paycheck to paycheck as a Fed you are doing something very wrong.
-Fed who saved for (lots of) rainy days and doesn't need assistance
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed that it doesn’t have to be this difficult. Give the President his money Madame Speaker, and we can all move on with life!
LOL! Yes give the crybaby what he wants!
Anonymous wrote:After this is over, I am switching all of our banking to Navy Federal, plus curtailing spending until we have a robust emergency fund. I am never going to feel this kind of panic again. NEVER.
In the past week I have:
- Sold my grandmother's silver on eBay
- Considered selling my engagement and wedding rings
- Collected scrap metal and plan to take it to the scrap yard
- Strongly considered whether I would be worth more dead to my family, and Googled whether FEGLI covers suicide and operates down a shutdown (yes after two years, and yes). I would never do it because I have no relatives to take care of my kids, but the thought was alarming.
Politicians have NO IDEA the kind of stress this put on working families. NONE. I wish they would stop with the brinksmanship and alarmist rhetoric.
Anonymous wrote:Since this is the Money and Finances forum, thought I would share these figures from the latest issue of Kiplinger's re Gen X (who likely comprise most of us feds on here worried about the shutdown):
70% have less than 6 months' emergency savings
26% have more than $10,000 in credit card debt
26% have 401k loans averaging $11,000
I have to imagine that Millennial feds have even less in savings and more in debt.
So for those on here screaming at feds for being worried about missing a paycheck, realize that you are a minority. Don't confuse being fortunate with being normal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agreed that it doesn’t have to be this difficult. Give the President his money Madame Speaker, and we can all move on with life!
LOL! Yes give the crybaby what he wants!
Anonymous wrote:Agreed that it doesn’t have to be this difficult. Give the President his money Madame Speaker, and we can all move on with life!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of us who have been through previous shutdowns know that this one feels different. Previous ones were an annoyance, but I did not have the complete sense of panic I have with this one -- I trusted that someone was willing to be a grown up and act in the interest of the country. I don't have that faith here. I really think this has the potential to go sideways.
Panic? Why? Do you think the govt never reopens?