![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Steve has recently laid off his part 135 pilot, his mechanic, and his
two flight instructors, all his planes are up for sale and I suspect he is 99 & 44/100% of the way to GONE - to Arizona probably.... He says her new taxes are the last straw... Along the way, he has lost 20 pounds from having to do everything himself now... That's awful. My sister lives near Lansing, MI, and she regales me with tales of that state's fiscal woes nearly every week. She's a retired school teacher who is worried because their pension fund has been raided by the state in order to fund...who knows what. Technically, her income is now vapor-based. (Of course, we could debate the merits of a system that allowed her to retire -- with full benefits -- at age 55, but perhaps we shouldn't?) It sure sounds like the Michigan Gummint is having a hard time learning to live within its (somewhat diminished) means. I suppose that means that their GA airports will be on the chopping block soon. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Honeck wrote:
Steve has recently laid off his part 135 pilot, his mechanic, and his two flight instructors, all his planes are up for sale and I suspect he is 99 & 44/100% of the way to GONE - to Arizona probably.... He says her new taxes are the last straw... Along the way, he has lost 20 pounds from having to do everything himself now... That's awful. My sister lives near Lansing, MI, and she regales me with tales of that state's fiscal woes nearly every week. She's a retired school teacher who is worried because their pension fund has been raided by the state in order to fund...who knows what. Technically, her income is now vapor-based. (Of course, we could debate the merits of a system that allowed her to retire -- with full benefits -- at age 55, but perhaps we shouldn't?) Jay, go spend a week in a classroom and then say teachers shouldn't be able to retire with 30 years at full pension. The average life expectancy of a teacher is 5 years in the classroom. Margy (now in museum education and NOT in the classroom) It sure sounds like the Michigan Gummint is having a hard time learning to live within its (somewhat diminished) means. I suppose that means that their GA airports will be on the chopping block soon. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay, go spend a week in a classroom and then say teachers shouldn't be
able to retire with 30 years at full pension. The average life expectancy of a teacher is 5 years in the classroom. Why should we pay any young person to sit around doing nothing? Nowadays, 55 is YOUNG -- VERY young -- and there is simply no way to make paying every 55 year old to sit around doing nothing work, mathematically. Unless you've found some new actuarial tool that I've never seen. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ummm... what if we save enough to pay OURSELVES?
At 59? Dave (60 days away, and "nothing " is not the plan) ![]() On 22 Feb 2007 17:23:13 -0800, "Jay Honeck" wrote: Jay, go spend a week in a classroom and then say teachers shouldn't be able to retire with 30 years at full pension. The average life expectancy of a teacher is 5 years in the classroom. Why should we pay any young person to sit around doing nothing? Nowadays, 55 is YOUNG -- VERY young -- and there is simply no way to make paying every 55 year old to sit around doing nothing work, mathematically. Unless you've found some new actuarial tool that I've never seen. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 23 Feb 2007 23:07:45 -0400, Dave
wrote: Ummm... what if we save enough to pay OURSELVES? At 59? Dave (60 days away, and "nothing " is not the plan) ![]() On 22 Feb 2007 17:23:13 -0800, "Jay Honeck" wrote: Jay, go spend a week in a classroom and then say teachers shouldn't be able to retire with 30 years at full pension. The average life expectancy of a teacher is 5 years in the classroom. Why should we pay any young person to sit around doing nothing? Nowadays, 55 is YOUNG -- VERY young -- and there is simply no way to make paying every 55 year old to sit around doing nothing work, mathematically. Unless you've found some new actuarial tool that I've never seen. Keem them young people working to support us retired ones. BTW, had I not gone back to college I'd have had enough time in to take full returement at just over 52 working in the chemical industry. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
BTW, had I
not gone back to college I'd have had enough time in to take full returement at just over 52 working in the chemical industry. I doubt those types of retirement plans will be around much longer. (Well, except for our ruling class, of course.) Medically, there is no justification for them, and actuarily, they can't be sustained. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 26 Feb 2007 08:48:37 -0800, "Jay Honeck"
wrote: BTW, had I not gone back to college I'd have had enough time in to take full returement at just over 52 working in the chemical industry. I doubt those types of retirement plans will be around much longer. (Well, except for our ruling class, of course.) Why not? They work. The plans are growing. Both the employee and company pay. For the CAP the company has a base 3% of your salary that goes in and then they match 50/50 for a few more %. of what you put in. You can put up to 15% of your salary into the account if you wish. On top of that is the standard retirement plan. The money for both plans is held by an investment firm and the company has no claim to any of it. Medically, there is no justification for them, and actuarily, they can't be sustained. Again, why not? I had over 35 years in and had earned that company plenty. Unlike many companies that kept their own retirement accounts they were smart enough to put the retirement plan in the hands of a company that does that for a business. That meant the temptation to use that money to cover expenses, or a short fall *temporarily* was not an option. IOW they could not rob the employees retirement fund as so many companies have done. Even though the company has fewer employees now than when I retired the regular retirement plan is still growing with earnings and their contributions combined. Our accounts are investment based. I retired 10 years ago and my account is worth more now (even after today's little correction and the _dot_com_crash) than when I retired. Prior to the dot com crash my cap was earning more than I was and I was putting every cent into it they'd let me. Michigan's financial woes are kinda like the dot com boom and bust, but with blind reliance on the automotive industry instead of a particular stock market segment. The industry has been blindly following the path to building what people say they want, not what they buy. Not too long ago the US industry was selling more trucks than cars and those trucks are not noted for economy. Take the so called "flex fuel" vehicle. The industry gets mileage credits for them as they "could" be called green even though few of them will ever run on anything but gas. They aren't even designed to use E85 for extended periods. Their fuel systems are not designed to withstand the abuse of E85 over prolonged periods. That leaves us with them still making gas guzzlers that end up sitting on the lot when gas prices are thought to be high. We haven't yet seen high gas prices in the US, but we most likely will. We certainly will if the average driver doesn't change their ways of driving. Now those automotive employees represent a sizeable voting force. They don't appear to want change and they probably have considerably more political clout that the automotive companies themselves. Where else can you get laid off for a while at full pay? OTOH they are making some concessions now. We had "planned obsolescence" which was great for the industry when they had no competition. I had a 61 or 62 Mustang that rusted out about 6 months after I purchased it new. of course the company stood behind it. They'd pay half of the body shop work if I used a Ford body shop. I got it done for less than that at the local body shop that did better work. In 1980 I ended up with one that didn't have the belly pan welded in. They had to strip the interior and redo the whole thing, but at least I didn't have to pay that time. Up through the 70's US cars had an average life span that was pretty short. If it had more than 50,000 miles you were getting concerned. If it had much more than 60,000 it was almost worthless. Sure there were some outstanding exceptions, but those were few. That approach gave foreign manufacturers a foot in the door and it didn't take them long to surpass the US made cars in quality. The Japanese went from "Junk" to high quality at low cost in just a few years. Now they are having a similar problem with Korea who is having the same problem with China. Now days it's difficult to call a car US, Japanese, or what ever. Assembled in USA would be more accurate The foreign manufacturers (Particularly Japanese) build cars here, they make some parts here and we use their parts (made here or there) in our "US" made cars. Michigan has been unable to wean itself from the auto industry and with the inertia of that industry and its employees, it's probably going to get far worse before it gets better. OTOH we do have the *possibility* of agriculture and alternative energy sources/fuels, but only time will tell. If they think Michigan and the auto industry are in bad shape now, wait until gas goes above $3.50 a gallon and stays there. I doubt it's all that far off and increasing oil production capacity is one of the worst things they can do. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Oh Crap.. shoudda read on, I am not a teacher.
Sorry.. Dave On 22 Feb 2007 17:23:13 -0800, "Jay Honeck" wrote: Jay, go spend a week in a classroom and then say teachers shouldn't be able to retire with 30 years at full pension. The average life expectancy of a teacher is 5 years in the classroom. Why should we pay any young person to sit around doing nothing? Nowadays, 55 is YOUNG -- VERY young -- and there is simply no way to make paying every 55 year old to sit around doing nothing work, mathematically. Unless you've found some new actuarial tool that I've never seen. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Margy Natalie wrote:
Jay Honeck wrote: Steve has recently laid off his part 135 pilot, his mechanic, and his two flight instructors, all his planes are up for sale and I suspect he is 99 & 44/100% of the way to GONE - to Arizona probably.... He says her new taxes are the last straw... Along the way, he has lost 20 pounds from having to do everything himself now... That's awful. My sister lives near Lansing, MI, and she regales me with tales of that state's fiscal woes nearly every week. She's a retired school teacher who is worried because their pension fund has been raided by the state in order to fund...who knows what. Technically, her income is now vapor-based. (Of course, we could debate the merits of a system that allowed her to retire -- with full benefits -- at age 55, but perhaps we shouldn't?) Jay, go spend a week in a classroom and then say teachers shouldn't be able to retire with 30 years at full pension. The average life expectancy of a teacher is 5 years in the classroom. That is a different problem and is the one that should be addressed, not providing early retirement for teachers. Matt |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
That is a different problem and is the one that should be addressed, not
providing early retirement for teachers. So, what are you saying, Matt? That an actuarial system should be devised that allows every 55 year old to be able to retire with full pension? Or only teachers? IMHO, the former is impossible, while the latter is unfair and silly. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Out of annual.... | A Lieberman | Owning | 7 | October 31st 05 02:47 AM |
After Annual ... | [email protected] | Piloting | 22 | August 18th 05 05:24 AM |
My Annual | Charles Talleyrand | Owning | 34 | July 28th 05 01:17 PM |
Off I go to help with my first annual on my C-150 | NW_PILOT | Owning | 22 | October 26th 04 11:39 PM |
In for Annual | Jim Weir | Piloting | 0 | August 5th 04 07:06 PM |