ducklite
<font color=teal>Take the Poly, it's fabulous!<br>
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2000
- Messages
- 33,487
Miss Jasmine said:I just wanted to clarify that generators WERE NOT included in the tax free items.
As some others have so elequently stated on other threads today:
1) if you can't afford the household costs of your home, then may be you can't afford your home.
2) If you know winter is coming and there could be some problems, you better prepare yourself and not expect the government to bail you out. You have had fair warning.
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Really I feel for those who are going to have to deal with these heating costs this year.
I'm the one who stated that if you can't afford the cost of maintaining your home, then you can't afford to live there. I feel the same principal applies here. If you are a homeowner, you've got assets to draw on to heat your home, even if it means borrowing against your home's value as a last resort. We are not talking about people living in poverty. People knew this was coming, and had ample time to lock in a rate with an oil company or get on a budget plan with the gas company. And what about that rainy day savings account? Or your vacation fund? Or your Friday night babysitter and date night money?
I just have a hard time believing that the majority of people will find themselves getting their heat turned off with no other options. Yes, people will have to make sacrifices, but life isn't always what we wish it could be.
In some cases, people have been struggling along in homes they can't afford to be in to begin with, and probably should have sold and moved on long ago. Yes, winter heating costs might be the straw the breaks the camels back, but if it wasn't that it would eventually be something else, so what's the difference?
And NO WAY the government should be bailing out all but the most severe cases.
Anne


& we went out for the evening. the shower pipes froze but didn't burst.
they will be left looking authentic, but have new dampers installed any day now