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Goodbye Renting

Page 15

by Tracy Lee Harvey


  You blame them for your circumstances and can turn nasty by

  blocking access visits with the kids, taking them to court for

  more money, becoming difficult and abusive when

  communicating, and using the children as an emotional whipping

  tool.

  9. Knee-jerk sale stage - This is also the time when the house is

  more likely to be sold or re-mortgaged. If you’re angry,

  emotioinal and irrational you’re more likely to sell your last

  remaining asset of value (the house), but if you have come to

  your senses and recognised the errors of your ways you’ll try to

  regain some financial control and if possible re-mortgage.

  10. The Dawning stage - Now you’re back to where you started,

  you have a better wardrobe and new furniture but realise

  that those objects haven’t brought you any long-term

  happiness, just a momentary buzz. You can’t work out why

  you did it or where all the money has gone. You reflect on the

  waste and where you went wrong.

  This whole process was about worth, your worth, or lack thereof.

  You need to recognise the signs before you lose the lot - like I did!

  If you are aware of these steps that happen time and time again just

  after a relationship breakdown, you have the insight and knowledge to

  avoid the pitfalls. Surely enough emotional trauma is taken up with a

  relationship breakup without it being the catalyst to your financial

  demise?

  Child support

  How can this help?

  Answer: a lot!

  If you’re like me, or should I say like I was? … I didn’t really fight

  hard to get what I was entitled to for child support. I just didn’t want to

  upset the apple cart with my ex or create any animosity when we had to

  face each other at the children’s visiting changeover times. All I thought

  about was keeping the peace and upsetting the fewest people as possible,

  especially my children. So I went along with what I was told I could get

  as child support and accepted the crumbs thrown my way.

  By the time I had reached rock bottom financially (I must admit

  through much of my own doing), I was receiving a miserly $27 per

  month child support.

  Now, given the fact that over 90% of custodial parents are women

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  and as such are likely to earn much less than men in a working lifetime

  (check out the ABS statistics), and that for as much as 20 years

  (sometimes more now when children are being forced to stay living at

  home due to lack of housing affordability and income), wouldn’t you

  think that the amount of money paid in support would be more

  encompassing than just accepting what the taxable income is?

  Then where does that leave you? You are still responsible for the

  welfare of your children and you and your children will pay the price in

  financial hardship, all for ‘being nice!’

  For the sake of your children’s future you need to stop being nice!

  If you’re involved in a private agreement - great! But please, please,

  don’t short-change your children’s financial future just to keep the

  ‘monkey off your back’. Make sure you’re getting what is fair for the

  upkeep of your children lives based on the true and accurate income of

  your ex. In addition always have the ability to reassess that payment

  each and every year or as your ex’s financial circumstances improve.

  If you are already under a Child Support agreement, make sure you

  stay in touch with what is happening regarding the assessment. Don’t

  just accept the amount if you believe in your heart of hearts that the

  numbers don’t stack up!

  What can I do if I don’t think I’m getting the right amount?

  Answer: Don’t give up! Fight!

  The moral of my story is that you must be objective and driven when

  it comes to pursuing child support. Trying to just keep the peace isn’t

  going to help you or your kids. Child support is more than a prop-up of

  finances, it is a long-term financial commitment that can be taken into

  consideration when you apply for some home loans and can also provide

  the surety of income when and/or if other income go pear-shaped.

  Wake-up call

  My mother is a Justice of the Peace and works voluntarily witnessing

  and signing documents in her local shopping centres. On this particular

  day, Mum and I had made arrangements to go for coffee after her stint of

  witnessing. I sat at her table and waited patiently for her to finish. A

  middle-aged woman walked up and asked for some advice. Now, while a

  Justice of the Peace can witness legal documents, they do not have the

  authority to provide advice as such, so my mother proceeded to explain

  this but said she would provide help wherever she could.

  The woman felt the need to tell my mother about her circumstances

  and it was obvious she was looking for a sympathetic ear. She wanted to

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  know if the real estate agency she rented from had the right to put her

  rent up. She went on to say that she was expecting a new lease and had

  requested it on several occasions but when it had finally arrived the rent

  had gone up another $15 per week. She was a pensioner, living on her

  own and she told us that the raise in rent would leave her with only $60

  per week to live on.

  Her distress was apparent and not knowing who to turn to wasn’t

  helping the situation. As far as the woman was concerned, the real estate

  agent and the owner of the property couldn’t do this to her.

  In actual fact, they could put the rent up. At the end of a lease a

  landlord can raise the rent with an existing tenant.

  As we gained more information we discovered that the woman was in

  fact paying a very low rent as apposed to the market rate. The increase in

  her particular rent may have been for a number of reasons, but given the

  low amount she was already paying the owner may have needed to start

  lifting the rent just to keep in line with the CMA (comparative market

  analysis) but this lady was taking it very personally.

  Unfortunately, we found it difficult to console her but I suggested she

  contact the Residential Tenancies Authority to get information relevant

  to her situation. If nothing else, they would guide her as to what her

  rights were and what action she could take, if any.

  I felt a great deal of sympathy for the lady because her life was

  obviously a financial struggle already and when I walked away it

  occurred to me that there are many, many people in our society who

  experience the same vulnerability every day. Their lives are controlled,

  affected and determined by others. The sense of stability and security

  that comes with your own home is an unknown for many people in this

  position and as a consequence their lives are continually impacted by the

  uncertainty.

  The woman in question was in her twilight years and totally reliant on

  the decisions of others as to whether she got to stay in her premises or

  was forced to look for alternate accommodation. Meanwhile her

  financial circumstances were also constantly under threat when the rent

  can ris
e steadily at the end of each lease, an added expense that places

  substantial stress on an already limited income.

  In addition, the domino effect of this situation can have momentous

  implications if we consider her health and well being. Already fragile,

  her state of mind and physical health might also be at risk.

  While we do not know much else about this lady’s circumstances,

  what we do know is that she was in a stage in many people’s lives when

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  she should have far less stress to deal with. What’s more, the comfort

  and security of home is something that should be a foregone conclusion.

  Shouldn’t it?

  Unfortunately, this is not the case. Like so many people (in particular

  women who had less access to superannuation throughout their lives)

  who have not been educated on the need to prepare for long-term

  financial independence by ensuring self-funded retirement, by investing

  and even buying their own home, the outcome is dubious and

  indeterminate.

  So what does this mean to the rest of us? To me, it highlights the fact

  that without preparation for long-term sustainability we subject

  ourselves to the hands and decisions of others. In addition, the longer we

  leave the groundwork to be put in place, the shorter time we have to fix

  it. It’s very hard to play catch up when your health has deteriorated and

  old age has set in.

  Finally, even if you take some risks and lose at a younger age you

  have the ability to learn from those mistakes, but you have something

  else under your belt that you won’t have later on… time!

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  Story Time

  (The stories I use throughout this book are based on real

  people who have overcome real adversity and I’ve been

  touched by their lives either in my personal life or through

  working closely with them. Many people who wrote to me

  found the examples of inspirational stories in my last book to

  be the best form of encouragement for them.)

  Ode to Gay

  I first met Gay’s husband, Carl5, when I was 19 years old. He worked as a

  mechanic with my then boyfriend and came round for the occasional drink. We

  hadn’t long been in Adelaide, South Australia, after working and travelling our

  way around Oz. During this time we had run out of money (for the umpteenth

  time) so were forced to put down roots for a while ( only I didn’t realise the while

  would last 12 years! ). Anyway, Carl was 25 years old, had two children, and was

  separated from his wife at the time.

  A couple of years later, Carl reconciled with his wife and I was fortunate

  enough to finally get to meet her. Her name was Gay and we immediately hit it

  of .

  Gay was a very intelligent woman, with a quick wit and a mind of her own.

  She had had her first child when she was 16 years of age and then her second

  child a few years later. To do the right thing she and Carl had got married.

  They were both very young and tried hard to create the right home. They

  were on a very limited budget because Carl was only an apprentice and

  5 Not his real name.

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  received a very small wage, so they decided to buy all the items they really

  needed such as a fridge, washing machine, television, lounge suite and so on by

  hire purchase. It meant that they could have all the items they needed by just

  paying them of . Of course, they also needed a car and so what bet er way of

  get ing one now than also paying that of ? So with all the wonderful items that

  made a house a home they would be happy, wouldn’t they?

  Wrong!

  Hire purchase during that time had one of the highest interest charges with

  up to as much as 30% interest at ached and they very quickly realised that they

  couldn’t keep up with the repayments and pay for rent, petrol, food, medical and

  clothing.

  One by one the items were repossessed but they had accumulated extra

  debt through not being able to even meet the interest rate payments.

  The bailiffs were called in and anything else they had of value was also taken

  until eventually Carl became bankrupt and this left Gay liable for the $30,000

  owed. Now, in those days, bankruptcy meant you couldn’t ever apply again for

  credit or a loan (including a housing loan) for seven years. In essence you had

  been blacklisted so you couldn’t even apply for a store card.

  Fortunately Gay had a community financial counsellor advocate for her

  regarding the residual debt after the bank repossessed their house and ended

  up making an agreement to pay a mere $300, over a few weeks to satisfy the

  debt. Which she did and maintained her credit rating too.

  However, the added stress and heartache left its toll on the young family and

  eventually Gay and Carl split up.

  Gay had nowhere else to go so she applied through the emergency

  community housing for a Trust Home (government assisted housing). She had

  to start quite literally from scratch for everything she needed, right down to the

  dustpan and broom. Makeshift beds were constructed for her and the children

  and all other furnishings were donated or borrowed.

  Gay made do with what she had and start to set le. The children had grown

  up a little more by now and were now becoming more independent and required

  less at ention (the eldest was about to start high school). So Gay took a part-

  time job assisting women in crisis. Her work involved women who had been

  raped so the work was quite intense, but she had found some worth helping

  others and decided to start a course in community services.

  Until Carl came to pick up the children for one of his visitations and asked

  Gay if they might try again? Within a few weeks she started to feel quite ill

  physically. To her shock she discovered she was pregnant again! It wasn’t long

  before the relationship soured and they both realised that the reunion wasn’t

  going to work.

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  Carl left for the final time.

  Gay continued with her studies and part-time employment while working

  around the demand of parenting three children single-handedly and managing

  on a very tight budget. By this time I was also living as a single parent with two

  children so we were drawn to each other for friendship and consolation.

  I still recall the many ways Gay had found to compensate for things she was

  unable to af ord and the meticulous ways she divided up and worked out the

  cost of each meal for each night, never straying from that budget. She knew

  where to get the cheapest fruit and veggies, and waited until the last minute on a

  Saturday before picking up the meat. This was usually the time when

  supermarkets heavily reduced the price to comply with expiration dates.

  Gay continued to budget, save and study. It was while she was studying

  social science at university that she met a new bloke and together they decided

  to buy a place of their own. By now, her period of bankruptcy had expired and

  she knew she could borrow for a loan. However, this time she knew that the only

  way she could get ahead was to get a ‘good’ loan, one that would further her

  financial future and that meant a home l
oan. So with her new partner she

  purchased a modest two-bedroom house on a large allotment of land.

  Unfortunately, her relationship didn’t last but Gay had come this far and

  wasn’t about to give it all up. By this time she had secured regular employment

  in the social work field and with her diligence in saving was able to refinance and

  pay her ex-partner out. It meant some financial struggle again, but at least she

  kept her home.

  I visited Gay on numerous occasions over the years and what truly amazed

  me was how sparse the furnishings were, without any of the usual homely

  knickknacks. She told me she was content because for the first time in her life

  she had some control, a place that gave her children some security and a sense

  of knowing (without any scary surprises).

  Years passed and while my life was spiralling out of control Gay was gaining

  a positive financial future. Gay continued to drive a second-hand not so

  aesthetically appealing vehicle and budgeted just as hard until within a few years

  she had paid of the house completely.

  In the meantime, the market had moved toward a boom climate and her

  house was now worth in excess of three times what she had paid.

  I recently caught up with her while I was on the investment hunt in Adelaide

  and I marvelled at the achievement she had made, given where she had come

  from. She had just celebrated her 50th birthday and was in the process of

  subdividing her block to build two more properties. This was to be a new home

  for her to enjoy and the other two properties were for investments. She now only

  works two to three days per week (by choice), drives a new car, takes regular

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  holidays overseas to the United Kingdom and Europe and has the pleasure of

  spending time with her children and grandchildren while she is still young

  enough to enjoy it.

  The timeframe from purchase to fully owned home was a mere ten years on

  a SINGLE income.

  SOMETIMES A LEARNING CURVE CAN BE A REAL BLESSING.

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  Why being a good tenant can

  help you into your own home

  Good tenants

  Be a great tenant and get rewarded

  There are two main reasons I feel the need to talk about good tenants:

  1. If you’re a good tenant, you are one who is diligent with the

 

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