State Treasurer will explain how to better manage
your money, presuming you have any
State Treasurer
Gina Raimondo brings her pre-Gubernatorial candidacy declaration road show to
our area on Tuesday. According to the Narragansett-South
Kingstown Patch,
Raimondo will be at the South Kingstown Senior
Center, 25 St. Dominic Rd., Wakefield from 10-11 a.m. TODAY (August 27).
Charlestown is not on her schedule, so this is the best we can expect.
Charlestown is not on her schedule, so this is the best we can expect.
I’m hoping that
Raimondo will come with plenty of tips for retirees who now face greatly
diminished pension payments as a result of the state’s pension “reform”
cutbacks which she spearheaded.
One of the key elements to dealing with your
finances is to make a good plan that is realistically based on your projected
income and expenses. That’s what many
retirees did as they prepared for their own retirement – they calculated their
incomes based on the pension income they were promised and which many of them
actually paid for, and they made adjustments in their lifestyles, such as
down-sizing their homes.
Raimondo took
those plans and threw them out the window.
She not only cut pension benefits for future retirees and eliminated cost of living adjustments for existing ones, she also shifted the state’s pension funds.
Now, an inordinately high amount of state pension money is managed by Raimondo’s Wall Street bankster friends who are treating us to a double high colonic of lower rates of returns and hugely higher investment management fees.
Raimondo defends this policy by claiming that it provides the retirement fund and its beneficiaries with “stability.”
Now, an inordinately high amount of state pension money is managed by Raimondo’s Wall Street bankster friends who are treating us to a double high colonic of lower rates of returns and hugely higher investment management fees.
Raimondo defends this policy by claiming that it provides the retirement fund and its beneficiaries with “stability.”
Her biggest fans are her hedge fund and Wall Street buddies and far-right conservative organizations who have showered her with praise and awards for stripping retirees of their benefits.
Being the
responsible person that she is, Raimondo is now touring the state to try to
gloss over the damage. I hope she’s come equipped to help people adjust to the
new reality which she created.
According to Raimondo (and I’m not
making this up) "My
office runs a number of programs that are helpful to Rhode Islanders, but they
are only useful if people know about them. The Smart Money Tour is successfully bringing my office into
the community to educate people about ways to find and save money."
So if you attend
this road show, what can you expect? Here are some helpful suggestions for the
Treasurer on ways she can help people cope with her new economic reality.
A “work-life”
after retirement kit would be helpful. Since many retirees find that they need
to go back to work, but have discovered that today’s employers are generally
not interested in hiring workers over the age of 50, retirees need some help.
Wal-Mart can hire only so many minimum wage greeters, so today’s retirees will
need to compete with younger people for fast food and service jobs. For other
jobs, they could use some “make-over” tips on the Treasurer so they can look a
lot younger than they actually are. Raimondo herself did a remarkable makeover,
changing from a pre-election progressive Democrat to a post-election conservative
superstar.
DINO wrinkle cream. I’m thinking she
could hand out her own DINO brand of skin softener and wrinkle remover to help
people make the transformation they’ll need to make to survive.
Google THIS! Retirees could
use a glossary of tech terms they can sprinkle into their conversations with
prospective employers to convey the impression that they more about computers
than just how to turn it on to get and send e-mail. A mock I-Phone – not the
real thing – might be a helpful prop for job-hunting seniors. They can lay it
on the table while they are being interviewed. It’s be nice if the mock device
would buzz every couple of minutes.
Find it, and it's yours. Since part of
the agenda for her tour is to help people “find money,” I’d love it if she gave
away some metal detectors along with maps to some of the best spots to go
looking for valuables. We already have some fortune-hunters combing our coastal
beaches looking for lost coins, jewelry, watches and such, but there’s room for
a few more. She could also hand out maps of various fountains and wells where people
toss coins for good luck. Certainly down on their luck retirees qualify for a
little good luck.
The other main
agenda item for the tour is to help people learn ways to save money. I’m pretty
sure that most retirees have already worked out a strategy for doing that – at
least, they did when they figured on counting on the retirement income they
were promised. With newly diminished income, retirees will certainly be looking
to Ms. Raimondo for tips on how to squeeze more juice out of a rock.
This will be next |
Everything tastes better with a bit of basil. For pet-owners,
the answer is right under their noses. Most of our healthy, happy and often
times chunky doggies and kitties will have to tighten their little belts too by
sharing their food with their humans. Times are tough and everybody has to do
what they can.
Ms. Raimondo
ought to distribute recipes on creative ways to make wholesome and nutritious
meals from cat and dog food. Each variety offers different culinary options –
so many choices including meat chunks in gravy, classic pate, vegetable and
meat blends, endless types and flavors of kibble.
Many of my
suggestions to Treasurer Raimondo involve giving away stuff. I presume that
each giveaway item will be emblazoned with her picture and an imprint something
like, “Gina Raimondo, your next
Governor whether you want her or not.”
She has plenty of money. Aside from her
considerable personal wealth as a former venture capitalist, she has $2,122,642 in
cash in her campaign fund, and she hasn’t even declared yet.
That doesn’t
count all the money her allies and related SuperPACs, such as EngageRI, have
raised. She can afford to hand out tubes of wrinkle remover, mock I-Phones,
metal detectors and cat food recipes out of her campaign’s petty cash.