Cities Cut Back.

Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

You might think when city officials need to cut personnel costs, they start by letting public employees go.  But according to a new article from The Huffington Post, “firing people isn’t the first thing they look to do: it’s the third.” Ranking the reduction methods, HuffPost evaluates the eight top ways that city officials are dealing with budgetary woes—according to the National League of Cities—including:

(8) Reduce Pension Benefits
A full 18% of cities facing increasingly thin budgets cut back on pension benefits to shore up spending costs in 2011.

(7) Revise Union Contracts
Another 18% trimmed union agreements as a way to cut salaries and reduce previously bargained-for benefits.…

Senior Citizen Filing for Bankruptcy

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

More than 1.4 million Americans filed for bankruptcy in 2009; surprisingly, a large number of filers were over the age of 65. Senior citizens were traditionally less likely to file bankruptcy for a number of reasons. Until recently, for example, senior citizens held less credit card debt than younger people. They have less time to repair their credit rating after a bankruptcy as well, and may feel that the perceived harmful effects of bankruptcy will haunt them forever. Considering that many myths about bankruptcy are deep-rooted, older Americans may be more likely to hold strong feelings associating bankruptcy with shame and failure.…