Posts Tagged ‘financial ed’

Show Me the Money Day on Jan 29th in Lansing

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011
Show Me The Money Day image

Partnering with the Asset Independence Coalition, CEDAM will host Show Me the Money Day in Lansing on Saturday, January 29th, 2011 from 10AM – 4PM at the Capital Area District Library Downtown. See the event flier (PDF).

The event will offer participants free tax preparation for those generating an income of $49,000 and less, resources from various local financial institutions and nonprofits at a vendor cafe, and financial empowerment classes running all day.

The class schedule is as follows:

10:30 -10:45 Welcome (Eric Schertzing, Ingham County Treasurer; Amy Kraus, City of Lansing Treasurer)
11:00 -11:30 Do You Have What It Takes to be an Entrepreneur? (Peggy Vaughn-Payne, NorthWest Initiative)
11:45 -12:15 Foreclosure Prevention (Denise Keiser, Center for Financial Health)
12:30 – 1:00 Get Smart About Credit (Jamecia Gordon, Flagstar Bank)
1:15 -1:45 How to Cut Your Grocery Bill (Amber Paxton, Asset Independence Coalition)
2:00 -2:30 Unique Opportunities to Save (Amber Paxton, Asset Independence Coalition; Megan Kursik, CEDAM)

Prize drawings will be held throughout the day for $50 U.S. Savings Bonds, gas cards, and more! The event is designed to connect Lansing area residents with opportunities to save and build wealth and is being held in conjunction with National EITC Awareness Day. For more information, please contact Amber Paxton at 517-256-1466 or Megan Kursik at 517-485-3588×1942.

A list of January and February financial events throughout Michigan may be found online at the bottom of the www.michiganeic.org/taxpayers page.

Here is a quick announcement from WLNS News about Show Me the Money Day:

Saving Can Be Fun? Really??

Monday, January 10th, 2011

Prize-linked Savings as an Approach to Financial Security 

We live in a world full of opportunities for entertainment. Music, movies, games, cars, restaurants, resorts; the list goes on and on. Especially this time of year, we are bombarded with media images and mass marketing campaigns promoting all things ‘necessary’ for an exciting, happy, luxurious life. Seemingly almost by the minute, our entertainment options get bigger, flashier, newer and as we are told, ever more advanced. And of course, we continue to shell out money to buy the latest and greatest forms of entertainment. Really, who wants an iPhone 4 when you can have a 4s?? Siri is totally worth it.

In the asset building and financial empowerment world, we often cringe at the thought of how much encouragement and pressure Americans face every day to spend their money. Even worse, we hate to hear examples of individuals’ fiscal irresponsibility. How does a person who might not make rent blow their tax refund on a 40” flat screen TV?

No matter how you slice it, entertainment is irresistible. And realistically, how many people want to live a life where you only experience the ‘necessities’ and the rest of your income goes to the bank? Middle and upper income earners make purchases every day on material luxuries and exciting or relaxing experiences. Is the right to spend money on fun just something low income people must give up in order to follow a perfect budget because they don’t have much excess income?

I think we all deserve some entertainment in our lives. And as the saying goes, “If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em.” If people will part with their hard-earned money (and lots of it) to buy entertainment, then perhaps entertainment can incite people to put that same money toward more financially secure purposes. Is it possible to make good financial behaviors and choices – like saving – fun and exciting? Could saving be a form of entertainment?

The Doorways to Dreams Fund, the Michigan Credit Union League and individual credit unions across the state of Michigan have answered both questions with a resounding, “YES!”

These entities put their heads together to develop and launch the Save to Win savings product, available at participating Michigan credit unions since 2008. Save to Win is a one year Certificate of Deposit (CD) that offers savers chances to win $100,000, and other smaller cash prizes, every time they save $25. The account successfully weds entertainment with savings. Account holders get to experience the excitement of the opportunity to win large amounts of cash, while at the same time accumulating savings for future expenses, emergency needs, or even to be used as a stepping stone to longer term savings vehicles or purchase of an asset.

What’s more, Save to Win is fair and exciting for people of all income levels. The product is inclusive – it requires a minimum initial deposit of only $25 – and includes provisions that prevent people with more money from skewing the chance to win – savers are limited to 10 raffle entries per month. Through analysis of savings data from the product’s initial years, Save to Win has proven to reach and result in real savings accumulation by low-income earners, the un- and under-banked and other population groups often disconnected from the formal financial services sector. Save to Win provides a chance to save that is appealing to people whose needs and preferences are not often taken into great consideration in the design of formal financial products.

Save to Win shows that it is possible to experience an element of fun while saving. With a little innovative thinking, financial products can be designed to provide savers entertainment, while at the same time increasing their financial stability. Prize-linked savings models are a win-win for fun and financial security!

-Megan

Member News Roundup ~ December

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

[This post is part of the monthly CEDAM Member News Roundup series.  If you have news to share/an event to promote, send it our way or leave a message in the comments section at the bottom of this post.]

Gifts at Community Housing Network

Gifts at Community Housing Network (photo by CHN)

CEDAM members wrapped last year up with generosity and are now looking to start 2011 with new visions and services.

Community Housing Network ran a very successful Adopt-A-Family program. Thanks to everyone who participated, 427 individuals and families received holiday gifts. Read more and find a link to photos from the event here.

Volunteers at FOCUS: Hope in Detroit assembled boxes of food and delivered them to 700 metro area senior citizens on December 11th.

Neighborhoods Inc. of Battle Creek (NIBC) announced it will be holding free financial fitness classes throughout 2011. All classes will be held in Battle Creek at the NIBC office; topics include developing and living on a budget, reducing debt, building and rebuilding credit, creating savings, and how to save for and qualify to purchase a house. More information and available dates are in this news announcement.

Food deliveries from Focus: Hope

Food deliveries from Focus: Hope (photo by Focus: Hope)

The South Oakland Shelter system based in Royal Oak is trying the ‘housing first’ (also known as rapid re-housing) approach to help homeless people. By addressing housing needs first and then offering services like job training, the average stay at the shelter has dropped from 4 months to 28 days. This article in the Detroit Free Press explains more about housing first in Michigan.

The Michigan Environmental Council (MEC) released a sweeping new Michigan 50 Year Vision, including the areas of water, energy, transportation, sustainable communities, great cities, and agriculture & natural resources. MEC is looking for public input on the vision. Go here to read the vision, see comments, and make your own remarks.

Resources for Tax Preparation

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

For most tax filers, filing a return is a mere click away!  That’s because individuals and families can file simple tax returns online at I-CAN E-File (www.icanefile.org), a website that allows you to fill out and submit a tax return all via the internet.  As long as you have access to a computer and a secure internet connection, you can use I-CAN E-File to do your taxes by yourself without the cost of using a paid preparer.

Free tax preparation is also available to low-income earners at Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) sites, where IRS-certified tax preparers help filers to complete their returns.  To see if you qualify for assistance at a VITA site and to view a complete listing of VITA sites in Michigan, visit http://www.michiganeic.org/freetaxprep.

The Michigan Credit Union League provides a good resource to tax filers looking to file returns on their own with its Just File It! We’ll Help. Free State and Federal Tax Preparation Provided by Credit Unions, a web-based program that allows families and individuals to file for state and federal tax credits that often go overlooked.  Access the program at http://www.justfileithere.org/index.php.

Through resources like I-CAN E-File and VITA sites, most tax filers can save by not having to go to a paid preparer.

To get tax refunds faster, filers should sign up for direct deposit of their refunds.  The IRS will deposit tax refunds into a filer’s bank account and filers can divide their funds into multiple checking or savings accounts.  Filers can also purchase U.S. Savings Bonds with all or a portion of their refund.  The fast turn-around of IRS refunds (especially through direct deposit) makes the use of Refund Anticipation Loans (RALs) largely unnecessary.  (The turn-around for direct deposit refunds is 8-12 days).  Waiting a short period for a refund instead of using a RAL saves filers because of the exorbitant fees and interest rates associated with RALs.   To find out more about direct deposit for tax refunds, visit http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=105957,00.html.

Tax season can be cheaper and easier for people filing simple returns through the useful resources available to help people file for free.  Please contact Megan Kursik at the Michigan Asset Building Policy Project at kursik@cedam.info if you have questions about how to make use of these tax preparation resources.

For Personal Finance, Knowing is Half the Battle

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

[This post is from Ross H. Yednock, Director of the Asset Building Policy Project.]

Last month I went to southern Illinois to visit my grandmother on the family farm.  It is a place I have been going to my entire life and I truly enjoy how it feels worlds removed from the life I live in the city of Lansing.  This particular trip, I spent a lot of time driving my grandmother to and from the homestead into some of the neighboring small towns.  While much has stayed the same in Olney and Fairfield over the years, I noticed on this visit that some of the old small shops I used to remember have been replaced by check cashers and payday lenders.

Sometimes convenience has a high price tag.

Sometimes convenience has a high price tag.

I only saw a few in each little town, a small number in comparison to Lansing or Detroit, but on a per capita basis I’m pretty sure that the 8,600 people of Olney and 5,400 of Fairfield have the same access to these high cost outlets as do us big city dwellers.  This shouldn’t really come as a surprise, considering payday lenders grew faster than Starbucks over the last 15 years, but it is a troubling sign that consumption-based services are more prolific than savings.

As I mentioned, I’ve been going to the farm since I was a kid and as a result, I have many fond childhood memories.  I learned a lot about finances and savings from my grandfather who, during retirement, accepted an uncompensated position as president of the Mt. Erie State Bank.  On this particular visit, as I drove by the signs soliciting “CASH NOW – NO CREDIT CHECKS,” another childhood memory came to me: “Knowing is half the battle,” the catch phrase at the end of every G.I. Joe episode.

When it comes to personal finance and making sound decisions that enable you to build assets, knowing is half the battle.

Knowing the fees, charges and interest of a credit card, savings account, or checking account allows you to make the right decisions and save money toward retirement, college, or future emergencies.

Knowing that debit cards are directly linked to a checking or savings account, different from “pre-paid” debit cards which can cost $10, $20 or even $30 a month in fees, allows you to be a more savvy consumer and saver.

Knowing alternatives to using a check casher or payday lender allows you to save upwards of $500 or $1000 a year.

And knowing that you can get your credit report and Chexsystem report for free, from sites that do not advertise using catchy commercials or come with monthly and unnecessary “credit monitoring” fees, allows you take an active approach to your whole financial picture.

In coming blog posts, I will provide you with more tips and links to good information on personal finance and savings.  In the meantime, remember, when it comes to becoming financially self-sufficient and secure, knowing is half the battle.

-rhy

Every year, you are entitled to a free copy of your credit report from all three major credit reporting agencies.  Get this free report.

Every year, you are entitled to a free copy of your report from ChexSystems, the company that financial institutions use to monitor consumers’ banking histories.  Get this free report.

If you have questions or would like further information, please contact Asset Building Policy Project Director Ross H. Yednock.