Letters
Listeners weigh in on our recent coverage of childcare options, mileage reimbursement math, homeowners turned landlords, credit cards, and holiday party alternatives.
Mailbox (istockphoto)
More on Commentaries
TEXT OF LETTERS SEGMENT
Tess Vigeland: And with some of your questions answered it's time for your letters and comments about the show.
A few weeks ago we aired a report about families that are making financial decisions about childcare. Keep working so you can pay for help or stay home; it's a longstanding dilemma that still pushes buttons. Comments flooded our website, some of them quite off-putting to listeners like Christina Wolf of Peterborough, New Hampshire.
Christina Wolf: I am surprised and dismayed at the vitriol launched at working parents. The stay-at-home mom concept arose only in the Victorian era. Even then many of those women hired others to raise their children. Don't believe me? Just watch Mary Poppins!
Yes, and Ms. Poppins would also tell you that even in the hurly-burly of the Internet, a spoonful of sugar helps your point go down.
A few weeks ago in our Getting Personal segment, a listener wanted to know if there was any way to predict the 2009 IRS mileage reimbursement rate. We did a little math and said based on what happened when gas prices rose this year, the rate might go down about 4 percent from 58 cents a mile. We said that would be an eight cent drop. Remedial math -- and you -- reminded us that 4 percent of 58 is about two cents, not eight. Moot prediction anyway because the IRS says the new rate is 55 cents a mile.
Last month we aired a story about homeowners taking in roommates in order to avoid foreclosure. That brought back some memories for Nancy Huebner of San Diego, California.
Nancy Haekler: I had to smile at this story. I bought a house 10 years ago with my fiancee. The fiancee thing didn't work, but I wanted to keep the house. Roommates to the rescue!
Last week we focused on rescuing yourself from all those changes to your credit card. The industry is hiking interest rates and cutting credit limits. Many of you voiced frustration that closing cards, which you would think would make you a more responsible borrower, can actually hurt your credit score.
Jack Black of White Plains, New York, used our website to comment that "Credit card companies are nothing but legalized loan sharks."
Don Keller of Fort Collins, Colorado, heard me joke that maybe all of us should just tear up our cards. Then I sheepishly admitted that would be quite difficult, at least for me. Mr. Keller admonishes that, to the contrary, it was "the most sensible and appropriate advice in the entire segment."
And finally, Michael Rulison of Raleigh, North Carolina, heard our interview about the record low numbers of office holiday parties this year. Our own Marketplace get-together is a festive potluck at our managing editor's home this very weekend. Mr. Rulison offered another suggestion for a low-cost group activity.
Michael Rulison: The give back would be some form of community service, for example Habitat for Humanity, soup kitchens, Meals on Wheels, anything like that.
Great suggestions.






Comments
Comment | Refresh
From River City, CA, 12/12/2008
12/12/08
Realize warnings over lengthy centuries have been delivered regarding the certainty of a time for a global accounting of what some have termed "stewardship" [but now on a planetary scale].
It appears however that some who have been 'in charge' at varied levels of societal affairs have been "weighed in the balances and found wanting" and are therefore likely to be duly displaced, removed or otherwise surmounted by ideally better things.
The arrival of such periods in history have been recurrent and certain. The pages of his history are rife with such accounts. What's needed now are clarification of what's next. What deserves perpetuating, what need be displaced? What better awaits to fill the gap?
Perpetuating what has run its course can only result in frustration and disappointment and the incurring of needless debts. Seldom have the public had a better opportunity to -in cooperative manner- get beyond the oppression and subjugation of the past! But mature decision making is no less required now than has been ever required foir ;long term success. Listening to those voices then is still essential and therefore we can be grateful for programs like Marketplace!
Thanks to you all and may coming months find you all there uncovering, clarifying and as ever necessary defining the real issues of the times!
Post a Comment: Please be civil, brief and relevant.
Email addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. All comments are moderated. Marketplace reserves the right to edit any comments on this site and to read them on the air if they are extra-interesting. Please read the Comment Guidelines before posting.
You must be 13 or over to submit information to American Public Media. The information entered into this form will not be used to send unsolicited email and will not be sold to a third party. For more information see Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.