Showing posts with label money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label money. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Banks and Fees

Another article from The Huffington Post today talked about a man in California and his experience with his Wells Fargo checking account.

Mike Iacuessa learned two things from his recent experience with a Wells Fargo checking account. First thing: It's expensive to be poor.

Iacuessa said that in August he overdrew his account with three transactions that together totaled about $28, triggering several $35 overdraft fees and $5 daily charges totaling $205.17. Furious, he walked away from the account. After receiving a few collection letters, he figured Wells Fargo charged it off.

"I refused to pay it," said Iacuessa, who is 45 and lives in San Francisco, Calif. "I was broke. I couldn't anyway."

In October, Iacuessa said, Wells Fargo called him up and made an offer. "One of the managers said, 'If you come back and open a checking account we'll waive those fees.' They're around the corner from my house, so I said OK."

This is where Iaceussa went wrong.


Read the full story here.

I just shake my head about overdraft fees. Yes, the banks have gotten outrageous with them.

However, these days, how hard is it really, to know what is actually in the checking account?

I remember when I was growing up about 100 years ago, my Mom was the one who managed the cash flow in our house. Every month, she sat at the kitchen table with that bank statement, checkbook, tablet and pen, and a stack of canceled checks. Every single month, she labored over the numbers, until it was balanced. To.the.penny!

There were no calculators, debit cards, ATM machines, computers or IVR systems on the bank's phone line. She managed to keep the account balanced, simply by recording every single check written, deposit made and DOING THE MATH.

Honestly, I don't know if my parents ever paid any overdraft fees, or if the banks even charged them back then. Knowing how careful Mom was, I'd be surprised if they ever bounced a check.

I am far from perfect; even further from wealthy, but I somehow manage what little money I have, and do NOT pay fees to the bank IF it can be avoided, and usually it can be avoided.

Like Mom did, I record every single transaction in my checkbook ledger, and DO THE MATH.

Thanks to the technology available these days, I have it so much easier than Mom did. I can and do check my account every few days, online. I take my red pencil, and mark off transactions that have cleared, and grab the calculator to adjust for any that haven't. I even use pencil instead of pen in my checkbook ledger, so if I find a math error, I can erase and correct it.

If more people monitored their accounts properly, the banks would not be making a killing on overdraft fees.

How hard is it, to keep the checkbook balanced, and avoid fees? Come on!

OK, I'll admit I have screwed up a couple times over the years. There was the time I deposited a child support check, and instead of verifying it had cleared, I wrote a check to the kids' school for some field trip or other. Yep--you guessed it--child support check bounced, and in turn, my check to the school bounced. I learned from that experience, and never let that happen again!

I don't like banks, and do whatever I can, to see that I don't pay any fees to the greedy bastards!

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Friday, March 13, 2009

Extra Deposit Slips!

I have a bunch of extra deposit slips for my checking account.

Since the governors of TX, NC, MS and LA are "refusing" their state's stimulus money...

I was thinking, maybe if I sent them deposit slips, maybe I could get just a few thouand of the dollars they don't want?

I am not asking for much....just a few thousand! Not greedy at all, but a little bit of that money sure would help!




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Saturday, February 14, 2009

Bank of the MATTRESS?

Or...Bank of the CEDAR CHEST?

Dig a hole in the back yard?

Which way should I go?

I have been banking at the same bank for over 10 years, and have been happy there. Tonite, with no prior warning, we are told the bank has failed, and our accounts are now transferred to another bank.

According to what I have been reading, my small accounts are safe, the money is still available, debit cards and checks still working. It LOOKS like all that will change, is the name of the bank.

I am nervous and worried, no matter HOW simple it all looks at the FDIC site, and the other info provided by the 'new' bank. Honestly, I feel a very strong urge, to take out all but a couple dollars, and just hide the cash.

Aunt Nellie lived through the Great Depression, and never ever trusted banks after that. I remember she kept cash hidden in various places throughout the house: between pages of her Bible, behind pictures hanging on the walls, underneath carpets....she had a ton of places she kept her money. I know she did have an account at one bank; she used it to cash her pension checks every month.

I know, back in those days, bank accounts were not guaranteed by the FDIC like they are now, but still, I am feeling very nervous.

I understand Aunt Nellie's feeling about banks a little better now.

Never mind that I have way less than the $250,000 limit they cover--I am extremely nervous right now. It is seriously tempting, to just hide cash, rather than keep it in any bank!

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Sunday, December 28, 2008

Avon Rant

Last night, I was watching (listening) to LMN as I surfed the web. Avon's recruiting ad is running, and quite often! That's a GOOD thing, except for the very end of the ad.

They say to "Call your Representative", and maybe some customers actually will call their Rep to help them get started.

However....they also have the toll-free number and a website shown on the screen too. Those leads go to the District Managers, according to zip code; not to the Leadership Representatives.

Every time Corporate runs these TV ads, the DMs get a ton of new leads; many times, more than they can actually get to. And, they aren't "allowed" to pass leads on to Reps. They can actually lose their jobs for that!

My suggestion, as if it actually matters what I think:

Rotate the leads between Leadership Reps and the DMs covering the various zip codes. Wouldn't that be helpful and fair to all?

Of course, Corporate benefits more if a new Rep is signed by a DM. There's a new Rep/customer out there, and they aren't paying any Leadership Bonus money to an existing Leadership Rep!

I need to get more ink, so I can print extra flyers and labels--I need to get some of the folks who the ads "get to", for my Team!