Search Smart Spending:

A cache of cash

Posted Oct 12 2007, 10:27 AM by Donna Freedman
Rating:

Hidden in my apartment is a slowly growing collection of small bills. I’ve been setting aside ones and fives toward the goal of having cash on hand for emergencies.

Some Smart Spending message board readers do this, too. Whether they call it pin money, bail money, “gittin’ out of town” money or just a collection of presidential quarters, having a little ready cash makes them feel, well, ready.

The U.S. government wants us to be ready. One of the Department of Homeland Security’s Web sites, www.ready.gov, recommends keeping some folding green on hand, right alongside the food, water and bucket toilet.

After all, some emergencies mean power failures -- bye-bye, ATMs.

The ‘redneck emergency fund’

The government site doesn’t say how much money. My magic number is $100. Readers have their own ideas.

  • "It’s all about peace of mind, so everybody will have their own total,” wrote a reader posting as “Been...There...Done...That.” Been There’s own fund is based on the cost of the most expensive potential cab ride,  a tank of gas and a couple days’ worth of food, plus a little bit extra.
  • "Mittenkitten” keeps $500 on hand “for just in case...of what, I am not certain.” Baby-sitter fees occasionally are siphoned off.
  • Hurricane-country resident “6432” keeps a few thousand dollars. During the last evacuation, the money allowed this poster to fill six gas cans and pay for food and hotel rooms.
  • "Ferretfan” recently quit smoking and has been squirreling away the $21 a week that used to go for coffin nails. However, this money is earmarked for a new mattress and box springs, “which I need desperately.” (A new spin on the old phrase “mattress money.”)
  • A reader named “Go Postal” stashes $20 bills at home and in the vehicle. “I can give it to someone in need, call a tow truck or just stop and pick up a pizza on the way home,” Go Postal wrote. “Just like having it available; it’s my redneck Emergency Fund.”

Make a burglar's day

There’s nothing a thief likes more than a big roll of bills: profitable and portable!

Readers discussed various hiding places, from “under the spare sheets” to “in the tampon box.” Coming up with a foolproof hiding place is tough because practiced thieves know how to search.

Another drawback is that the cigar box or coffee can doesn’t pay interest. One reader, “ManyaP,” recently realized how big her fund had gotten and took most of it off to the bank.

But “Molly2311,” another hurricane veteran, withdraws $500 every summer and puts it back in November after severe-weather danger has passed. “I figure I’m losing about $10 in interest,” she wrote, “but it’s worth it.”

Better to have it and not need it....

I live in Seattle, which is expecting another decent-sized earthquake some day. King County has been promoting the “Three Days, Three Ways” emergency-preparedness campaign on the radio. Maybe that’s why I’ve been accumulating small bills.

It wouldn’t necessarily be an earthquake that forced me to use the cash. Severe weather (a 2006 windstorm knocked out power to some neighborhoods for more than a week), a flu epidemic or, yes, a terrorist incident -- these could make things a little uncertain for a while.

What’s more likely is that some night during finals week I will realize that there's a complete lack of chocolate ice cream to help along the study process. If so, I can grab a fiver and fill that particular need. “Be prepared” is not just the Boy Scouts’ motto.

Comments

 

Places like my home town have been promoting this for years. The Borough even publishes a nifty brochure with great suggestions as to what to keep handy. But then again, here in the Last Frontier, we not only expect severe weather and natural disasters, we embrace them.

Ed in Kodiak Alaska

I like cash, but prefer to spend the cash of others.  Sometimes I get it by ethical means, like by working or selling items that belong to me. Sometimes it comes by other means.  Try this, go around a large group of people like at the office, church, or somewhere else you have casual folks you know, ask to borrow $1.00 from each of them, just to get something from the snack machine, never pay back the dollar, most people will forget and never ask for it back. Depending on where you employ this technique it will get you from $5.00 to $50.00 bucks.  Enjoy your new found wealth!

Southern has it right - Saving is for suckers - the government will bail you out of any bad decisions then rebuild your house.

Most posters seem to have a good grasp of what to do in the event of an emergency. Thanks for the tips and suggestions. I would caution anyone taking southern lady's post seriously. Living thru several hurricanes in Central FL in 04, there certainly weren't any $2,000.00 debit cards handed out here. Or even $2.00! There was no gas or food to buy at any price, and if you couldn't manage your own family it was tough luck.

I bought one of those sort and roll coin machines and every night my pocket change gets rolled by that machine and gets locked away in a wall safe saved about 100 bucks real quick.  No more leaving my pennies at the convevience store counter

I keep bout a hundred bucks cash, couple of gas cans filled at all times, and a bunch of ammo handy.

We live in Southern California and were here for the 1994 Northridge earthquake and because my father instilled in my mother to always have cash several hundered dollars in the house we were able to purchase at the time what we needed (we had indivdual backpacks with the essentials of course) but paper towels for the mess, soda which my mom cant do with out, and food for the cat with a healthy appetite, she however took her meals under the bed for several days. The only thing all the cash we had couldn't purchase was gas for the families two cars that were on empty. After my mom beat into my head for years afterward the cars always have at least a half tank and I too keep my own stash of green for the emergencies and my emergencies, I feel better knowing that its there. Everyone always remembers that if we have no power we have no atm's but we also need to remember there won't be any gas pumps either.

Hey, stashing bills is great but I find they are easy to spend when I find I'm low on cash.  So I throw all my change in a big jar at the end of every day...I'm less likely to dip into this money and it adds up suprisingly fast.  When the jar fills up or I find I need the cash, I run it to the bank and turn it into REAL money.  Last time I cashed it in it was over $500.  You'd have to plan ahead to keep it cashed in...but it's an easy way to save up for a rainy day.

We have a fire and water proof lock box.  In it we keep extra copies of everyones medical histories.  This information is most important if the family memeber can't speak for themselves.  And in times of stress important things such as allergies can be forgotten and be dangerous.  So anything that would be hard to replace in time of emergencies are kept there in one place and all family membersknow about its where-abouts.

What a wonderful article.  Now we need one to give people an education about what a well prepared house has for an emergency.  When I was younger we lived in the country and you were always prepared for power outages, etc.  Now people don't even think about those things.  I work in Emergency Services and every one expects to be taken care of.  I am amazed at the things that people think fire, EMS, and police dept. personnel should do for them.  

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):