[PRCo] Re: change to looking for a job

John Swindler j_swindler at hotmail.com
Thu May 3 11:41:40 EDT 2012


 I said that there might be 48 job openings.  I didn't say that each winner would all stop working. As with your retirement pension, the lottery annuity will allow the person to do what they want.  (and there are a lot of similarities between your pension annuity and a lottery annuity) For some, it will be to retire permanently.  For others, it might be to go back to school.  And others, it might be to move to Montana - (which you mentioned as a possibility several times in the past).  And others might switch to the job they always wanted (maybe in social service??) rather than the job they have to do at SEPTA finance.   Some people work 36 years to get a "get out of jail" card - others win a lottery to get a "get out of jail" card. I know of one SEPTA manager who was not in the Lottery pool.  But if he had, would sell his place in South Philly and move to his other home in Cape May. And just because a person quits a job, doesn't mean they quit working.  Just ask Bill Vigrass or Russ Jackson - or Phil Craig.   It can be a choice. CheersJohn     > From: fwschneider at comcast.net
> Subject: [PRCo] Re: change to looking for a job
> Date: Wed, 2 May 2012 20:14:52 -0400
> To: pittsburgh-railways at dementix.org
> 
> Let's see .... $120,000 a year over 30 years.   Not enough money to quit working unless you are already pushing 60.   That would be a fabulous supplement if you already have a pension and can quit.  But quitting at age 20 or 30 or 40?   I guess some would be crazy enough and by the time the realize they shot themselves in the foot, who wants to rehire someone who has been out of the labor force for 15 years or more?   
> Median household income has dropped from about $50,000 to $46,000 in the recession.   The top third is $65,000.  $118,200 is the bottom of the top 10%.   
> 
> Now adjust that $120,000 for inflation over 30 years and you would be left at the end, if you failed to invest a reasonable share as you went along, with $42,850 in spending power in the 30th year.   That's what living on a fixed income means.  (I used 1980-2010 numbers.)  Remember that you bought a large house with proportional taxes and you are trying to maintain a Mercedes Benz and now your top 10% is down to simply average.
> 
> I am actually chuckling under my breath because $120,000 in a place like Los Angeles or San Diego or New York is going to get zip for that kind of money.   Philadelphia isn't actually cheap either.   
> 
> And can you imagine what happens if you hit the lottery and you quit work and your wife says to you, "You what?   Well then I'm quitting too."  Oh, you were working for SEPTA for $50,000 and she had a $50,000 job somewhere and now you have squat except for a mistaken notion that you are rich.  
> 
> No John, I hope there are not 48 jobs at SEPTA.   I hope there are not that many fools floating around.   If there are, then we understand the acronym for SEPTA.  
> 
> 
> 
> On May 2, 2012, at 11:38 AM, John Swindler wrote:
> 
> > 
> >  This strays from the theme of this list, but if anyone is looking for a job, there will be 48 jobs available at SEPTA.     http://www.philly.com/philly/news/homepage/20120427_48_SEPTA_coworkers_to_split__172_7M_Powerball_jackpot.html   		 	   		  
> > 
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