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A cache of cash

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

 

I always keep some cash on hand, but also other barter able items.  Namely silver since it will always hold value, is cheaper than gold, and comes in easily measureable(and marked) weights, 1oz, 5oz, 10oz, etc, and I've also found <1oz pieces as well.  

I have a change / cash jar. I typically keep around $150.00 in it and my wife and I keep a minimum of $200.00 on us at all times. My wife has a stash of non perishable food stored in our travel trailer at all times. This along with the wondrous FEMA $2000.00 debit don't make me feel safe.

However, my fresh rotated ammo and clean firearms do. I keep them nice and protected incase of disaster. This will be the only way to survive with all of the cockroaches disaster seems to bring out into the open. Forget RAID. Get a S&W 500 and plenty of ammo.

One old woman I used to know kept stash cash in an interesting place. One day I had gone to the grocerystore for her and she needed to pay me for the groceries. She reached in the back of her frig and pulled out a KRAFT salad dressing(mayo) jar. I was shocked when inside this jar she stashed hundreds of dollars, mostly $20!

Her son had taken the empty jar , washed it out, and painted it  off-white inside.

Who would think to check in the fridge and in an old mayo jar to such a' wad of lettuce'? Necessaity really is the Mother of Invention..LOL

My husband keeps saying that we should load up on water as we have had a serious drought this year.  I seriously dont think that much about it all, maybe I will.  What kind of emergencies are we preparing for anyway?  Natural of war type?  I think it is the things that we least expect to need will be what gets us. Money will have absolute no value if the economic system collapses.  How can one use a microwave if there is no electricity. The seeds comment I found interesting as it is difficult to find seeds that are not hybrids that cant reproduce.  I collect seeds as well.  I guess we look at short term and long term situations.  I have dogs, I have concerns for them as well.

I was in lower Manhattan on September 11th and on the lower level of a subway platform waiting for a train when the electricity went off a year later.  Here's what I learned: Each person needs to be responsible for themselves and the children or elderly around them.  Emergency services are completly overwhelmed when an actual emergency arrives so if you're not bleeding forget about help (and forget about $2,000 debit cards!)  I carry on my body $200 (will cover a taxi ride a couple of hours away if need be) a small flashlight on my keychain (there are no emergency lights that come on in the subway and the lower level does not get light from the street - so...hundreds of people had to make their way up literally groping in the dark for the walls of the subway and bumping into each other - all without being able to see our hands in front of our faces or where the edge of the platform was) I keep my car tank full as much as possible and never let it go below half full.  In my trunk there are blankets that are water proof on one side, a hand crank radio, bottled water that I replace regularly, a couple of cans of tuna, beans, potatos and veggies, and extra socks and water proof boots and a little bit more cash.  At home we have some water, gas and more ready to eat food (you may not have a microwave working.) My parents who live in a different state have all of our emergency info including banking and investment information and all of our passwords.  Everyone has a backpack that includes extra socks and warm sweaters as well as something to do - cd's, crossword, comic books.  And of course more cash stashed very high.

On the night of September 11th we slept in our Brooklyn apartment (overlooking the river and ground zero) breathing in clouds of toxic fumes.  Of course, the city officials told us all it was 'safe' to breath.  We moved out for one week on September 12th.  Now first responders have begun to die of lung ailments that they developed while working at ground zero.

The next time a tragedy strikes, whether man-made or natural, we will move quickly out of the area, helping neighbors that need it on the way (as so many of our neighbors did during those terrible days) and only move back when we know the danger has passed.  By the way, our cell phones didn't work on September 11th - and our land lines didn't work when the blackout happened.  In both cases I was unable to reach my husband for several hours.  Have a plan to meet somewhere just in case you can't get in touch with each other.  Every hour counts during an emergency.

In response to the comments about not saving because the government hands out money in a disaster situation:  THAT IS WHAT IS WRONG WITH OUR COUNTRY TODAY!  It is not the government's responsibility to take care of everyone during a disaster.  Instead of sitting around complaining, help yourself!!

This hear idea has been around for many years, we used back in the dust bowl days

Never did trust them bankers. pappa always said they were like a pack of wolfs.

I never considered the possibility of a terriorist attack until we were attacked on 9/11 and I was working in SW DC across the river from the Pentagon.  I saw the smoke rising from the fire at the Pentagon and then I knew that no place is safe anymore from the terriorists.  At that time I was not prepared because I was living paycheck to paycheck and planning to keep working the rest of my life.  So no problem,  right?  Wrong!  I'm retired now and still living paycheck to paycheck, but they come only once a month now from Soc. Sec.  The one thing I've learned is that first and foremost you are responsible for yourself.  That awful day, everyone ran from the office and never thought to offer the 65 year old woman a ride away from the area that had been attacked.  

I still do not have a car, but I do have a backpack with essential things like meds., water, snacks, flashlight, batteries, radio, etc.  My problem now is a lack of transportation, but if I have to leave my apt.,  I'll need to go to a shelter anyway I can get there.  

WE LIVE IN THE MOUNTAINS AND ALWAYS HAVE EXTRA FOOD/WATER/GUNS/AMMO AND WE HAVE WOOD STOVE FOR HEAT AND WE LIKE TO CAMP SO WE HAVE ALL THE CAMPING ITEMS...SO WE ARE PREPARED...ALWAYS...ALWAYS KEEP YOUR GUNS...FOR SELF DEFENSE AND FOR HUNTING FOR FOOD IF IT CAME TO THAT..THE RIGHT TO BARE ARMS...HA HA HA HA HA.....JUST USE YOUR COMMON SENSE AND DON'T DEPEND ON THE GOVERNMENT OR ANYBODY ELSE FOR YOUR SELF PRESERVATION.

I  drive 127 miles round trip to work everyday. I have 3 days worth of MRE's in my  desk, and some  bottled water.  Ther is also 2-50's and 1-100  bills in my badge case. Florida is hurricane country. 1 month's worth of non- refrig'd. food and water that is donated at the holidays graces my house. Money, supplies, and protection means peace of mind, and being responsible.  

I worked on the asembly line to get through school. The  experienced workers told me, keep enough food on hand to last  until unemployment starts.(2-weeks)  in case you get laid-off.

It was and is still good advise.

Adults take care of themselves and their families, that's our jobs!

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