They're in Georgia, OMG. They'll freeze to death when it's 56!
A. We've already had nights in the high 20s.
B. We don't have houses or apartment buildings built or renovated with much cold in mind, since dangerous cold is generally only a problem for a few weeks a year, and not even continuously, then (IoW, cold is worse than you'd think, because we don't thoroughly prepare for it, much like how heat waves in the North can get extra nasty). A house that is cheaper to cool is considered better than a house that is cheaper to keep warm. Older houses tend to breathe.
My house is NOT heated, and we make it just fine with electric blankets and insulation here in Portland. (em added)
Georgia? You don't need heating there. Quite a bit warmer than Portland.
Warmer, yes. But, only the newest of houses have sufficient insulation to stay warm, and no meaningful openings. Most houses, w/o heat, will get very near the outdoor temp. In all likelihood, your house in Oregon will perform far superior to her house in GA. Such a comparison is not fair.
I also can't judge someone for having entertainment (I don't support, nor condemn). If you have more outgo than income, selling goods is a short-term solution, and the goods we can see would fetch very little. Meanwhile, except for the XB360, replacement costs will be much higher than what you'd get selling them (both TV and console, for a quick sale, she
might get $300-400, and that assumes she's not renting). If you go by the assumption that you will replace them when able, it's not a good decision to sell them. That will get her, what, one month more...maybe not even that, depending on what kinds of agreements she's made to handle overdue bills. Remember: she's going without whole-house heating being subsidized, not going
without any heat.
Meanwhile, she has a job, apparently, so might be able to gradually get in the black. But, that doesn't help
right now. That said, I've bundled up near a space heater. Not the end of the world. Personally, I'd do that before getting rid of my computer equipment.
I'll give a big thumbs down for the management of the assistance, though: it should absolutely be done based on apparent need of applicants, rather than first-come first-serve, if the funds are so limited. IoW, she would have to wait a week, and then be told no for a better reason.
Stop begging. Sell your TV. Get a better job or A job.
RTFA. She got "A job," and, "a better job," would involve moving, possibly out of the country.
LOL, that TV. Is it like 50"?
I'm the sort of person who would probably sacrifice heating for internet, but I wouldn't complain about it because it would be something I decide to do (and it would be worth it). But I am in California, so I don't really know what cold is.
I would, too. Electric blankets and such are cheap to buy, and cheap to use. Combine with flannel, faux fleece, etc., and then play video games, and drink only hot stuff, to distract from the cold
🙂.
We need to subsidize big screen TV purchases.
Combined with that emoticon, I LOLed. Not her TV, though. The TV of somebody who was ahead of her in the line.
One thing i do not understand, why are the poor people in the USA always so fat ? Are the cheapest foods full of fat and tons of sugar ?
Specific combinations of salt, sugar, and fat, and mostly bad fats. Affluent neighborhoods will generally have better access to fresh foods, most people don't know how to cook, and the cost of fresh vegetables has steadily been rising (fresh meats, too, if you're not willing to move to next lowest quality meat). If you want to eat fresh fruits, it will definitely cost more than crap processed foods. Also, the last generation or two has lost the skills and tools for keeping food, which could offer long-term savings (but now require significant short-term losses). Many things that were kitchen stables decades ago are expensive, and/or hard to find, and/or used as decoration (canners, grain mills, meat grinders, etc.). You know that Jamie Oliver show? It's not much of an exaggeration. On the whole, our food culture is garbage, is literally killing us, and is dragging down the economy in multiple ways.
Friday I got 6 loafs of bread, a buttermilk cake and some hotdog buns for 10 bucks. Not shitty white bread either, whole grain or multi-grain, the good shit.
A loaf of bread with a label saying it contained whole wheat, or bread that actually has no white flour in it? If the latter, on Friday, there would only be two places you could buy it, one being a store most poorer folks don't set foot in, and one having a very limited weekly supply. At neither place could you get more than two loaves for $10. For that matter, the partially-whole-wheat supermarket breads are generally $1.75-3 (white bread $.80-1.20), so $10 still won't get all of that. In this area, it is comically uneconomical to get whole wheat bread by any other means than making it (which is what I do, and it is wonderful).
As I suggested earlier, a second job should not be ruled out, even if its waiting tables. I cannot believe there aren't ANY jobs that she could do to resolve her situation.
http://atlantarecruiter.com/job_browse.php?category_alpha=0
...and have a 90-120 mile commute, likely to take 2.5-3 hours, if she weren't to luck up on an oddball shift, and 1.5-2 hours if she did? :hmm: I think the commute costs alone would make up for any job paying <$20/hr, and then there'd be lack of sleep to deal with.
Atlanta != Macon (based on waiting where she did, I assume she lives in the city)
Wait, you can have a big TV, XBox 360 and whatever else and still be considered poor? I don't have any of those, can I r be poor too?
Nope. It's the other way around. The only people I know who aren't poor, and have such things, either (a) were high on the hog during the housing boom, or (b) lowballed somebody selling one lightly used. Most use 90s or early 00s CRTs, which keep on trucking--just bump the brightness up every year or two.