Sunday, June 29, 2008

Taxes, Bonus and the potential demise of a "Close Friend"

In July, My company pays out bonuses. I have been looking at my accounts, and this combined with my unspent welfare(Rebate) check may lead to some good news.

Good News, The First:

I can now afford to run a power branch out to my detached garage. This with be a Do-It-Yourself project for me. I estimate the cost to be around $600, but will be happy if it stays under $1000 including the garage door opener, which is the primary benefit of having power out there. Up here in the winter, which is the best 10 months out of the year, a garage door opener makes life so much easier. no getting out of the car in the -10F weather to open the garage door. Currently my roommate and I only put our cars in the garage if we're expecting a large snowfall. I can't wait to join the masses of people who don't have to scrape their windows.. I can use the 10min a day elsewhere...

Good News, The Second:

The other major benefit is that with the bonus money and my rebate check and my tax return(My first full year in a house, and I wasn't sure how much that would affect my taxes so I just left my withholding and grossly overpaid) which were all "windfalls" or unexpected money this year; I should be able to pay off my student loan. If it is not quite enough to cover the loan, I should at least be able to pay off enough that my regular payments should have it paid off before the crimson creeps up on the forests this autumn.

When the student loan is gone, I plan to start saving for a new car as mine is 11 years old and I have no idea when the car will be unreliable enough that it can no longer serve as my primary transportation. My goal is to pay cash for my next car.

After that, I still need to do the following: Max out my Roth contributions, start saving for non-retirement investments. I am still thinking about Rental properties just for the amazing about of cash flow that can be built for retirement years. It takes time and effort, but I'm OK with that, I like to stay busy.

Are there any other method for providing cash flow? I prefer cash flow to appreciation simply because cash flow can be used to pay bills now or used to buy more investments without the hassle of selling...

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Man fighting unreasonable parking fees from his HOA

Man is booted by Arizona Parking Solutions even though he has a valid parking permit.

While he was initially in the wrong for not displaying his permit, the fact that they booted immediately without any warnings is unreasonable. Then when he called and said that he did have a permit, they still insisted that it was $140 to remove the boot.

This is why I will never buy a home in a development with a HOA if I can avoid it. Monthly fees paid are used to contract with companies who then charge you more money?? Sounds a bit like extortion. To me, that's a bad investment. Pay money to have my life turned miserable. Thank You, but I'd Rather Not.

Is this a good deal for the "Homeowners"?