03-26-2020 09:43 PM
I tried to look up whether we can get a stipend from the stimulus package. What I read seemed to be saying we need to file for unemployment. Is there something else we should be doing, do you know? Do we have to reach the point of no sales to be eligible?
03-31-2020 04:04 PM
@namele365 wrote:"BTW this threshold of $75k means a totally different thing if you live in LA or NYC vs living in GA. "
Of course. People pay to live in those places for the perks. For those making more than 75K in those perky places, seems to me $1200 bucks isn't going to make a world of difference anyway.
If you're in certain industries (tech, medical research for instance) that's where the jobs are.
03-31-2020 04:12 PM
the way I understand it, since you are self-employed it will be based on taxes paid this year and next , unless you all paid taxes on your earnings, because they are basing self employed on wages paid taxes paid and social security paid,
03-31-2020 04:21 PM
just so you all know, YOU, probably will not get stimulus,, for these reasons, you have to had paid taxes, wages and social security and self employed will get 6.2 percent back of loss, and will get in 2021, for self employed.
03-31-2020 04:29 PM
Yes,
Sole Prioptiators may file for unemployment just file your 2019 returns before filing so no delay or confusion.
Regardless of what UE you are eligible for you will receive the $600.00 weekly stim. for 14 weeks on top of whatever you qualify for.
For covid-19 UE is extended to Sole Prioptiators and gig workers
03-31-2020 04:32 PM
03-31-2020 04:34 PM
03-31-2020 04:54 PM
@the*dog*ate*my*tablecloth wrote:The cheapest I’ve seen a house here in my town is $500k and it was in bad shape. People who don’t live in the coastal metro areas have no idea what living here is like. Food is more expensive along with everything else.
Fortunately the salaries compensate. For instance $75k is an engineering starting salary. The point is that someone can be just as poor on $75k in areas of the country than they can be on $30-40k elsewhere.
Wait... 40k is poor? whoahhhhhh
So what does that make 19k or less a year?
03-31-2020 05:03 PM
Workers would need to file for unemployment, for businesses to aide they would need to keep all employees on the payroll. The assistance for businesses sounds like several banking institutions would give a 6 month loan. I imagine they might not see individuals welling for them self on eBay as a candidate for assistance unless you are a larger company with a good amount of employees working fulltime.
03-31-2020 05:48 PM
@jackieb9455 wrote:Yes,
Sole Prioptiators may file for unemployment just file your 2019 returns before filing so no delay or confusion.
Regardless of what UE you are eligible for you will receive the $600.00 weekly stim. for 14 weeks on top of whatever you qualify for.
For covid-19 UE is extended to Sole Prioptiators and gig workers
Because of my own situation, I've searched to try and find more details on this, and wasn't able to find anything definite or even close. I thought they were still working it. Can you link me to where you read about this?
04-03-2020 01:01 PM
04-04-2020 03:35 PM
04-04-2020 06:46 PM - edited 04-04-2020 06:46 PM
@kittykat.949 wrote:
19k makes you HOMELESS---GOOD LUCK
That depends on where you live. In flyover country, 19K will get you through if you are really careful and have modest expectations. I've been living on less than that for the past few years, only because I'm a fulltime caregiver and am limited in the ways I can make a living while still caring for a parent in her 80s. Our household doesn't have a car. We don't have cable. Our phones are the cheapie prepaids. I buy our clothes at the thrift store for $3 max. We don't have credit cards. We do without the things many families take for granted. Life isn't the greatest, but we get by.
04-12-2020 04:52 PM
ditto...we live on less than 18,000 a year. We have a $200 house payment and very low taxes.
04-12-2020 04:58 PM
@home2thesea wrote:
@kittykat.949 wrote:
19k makes you HOMELESS---GOOD LUCKThat depends on where you live. In flyover country, 19K will get you through if you are really careful and have modest expectations. I've been living on less than that for the past few years, only because I'm a fulltime caregiver and am limited in the ways I can make a living while still caring for a parent in her 80s. Our household doesn't have a car. We don't have cable. Our phones are the cheapie prepaids. I buy our clothes at the thrift store for $3 max. We don't have credit cards. We do without the things many families take for granted. Life isn't the greatest, but we get by.
I kinda live that way by choice. I just don't have a lot of material desires. Bless you for caring for your elder parent!
04-12-2020 10:51 PM
At 40k we were living "high on the hog" compared to the 19k years.
I raised 5 kids on 19k or there abouts... some years we got all the way back up to 30k (they got good Christmases that year). It can be done depending on where you live and HOW you live.
19k -25k is what most of my family makes a year and while they will never travel to Paris on a whim... they aren't starving or homeless yet. They are food service, grocery store clerks, waitresses, Wal-mart stockers, convenient store clerks, ect.