Saturday, October 28, 2006

How long does it take to pay for Christmas?

Christmas is a wonderful time of the year. And as my wife reminded me this weekend, it's time to start buying gifts. As always, we put a little back each month so gift buying time isn't a stain on the family budget.

I came across a great article in my Sound Mind Investing newsletter relating to Christmas buying. It tell you how many days you have to work in a year to pay for all those great gifts. It assumes a 7 hr work day, who works 7 hours?

How many days on the job will it take.

Assuming $10 earned per hour and $1,000 spent on Christmas = 24 days

Assuming $12 earned per hour and $1,000 spent on Christmas = 20 days

So if you haven't saved for gifts yet, what can you do to minimize the damage and keep your budget on track? Here are a few gift ideas that could be worth more to the gift getter than anything you could purchase.

  1. A gift of service. Make up a coupon book (running errands, house work, shopping)
  2. Make a gift. Are you good at something? Photography, candle making, cook a great meal for them
  3. Gift of time together. Take a relative out for coffee. When was the last time you just sat and talked with an aunt or uncle?

Non stress time together at Christmas is a true gift to friends and loved ones. It's worth much more than anything money could buy.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Big news in the church world and taxes

In August, Congress inacted the massive Pension Protection Act of 2006. The provisions of this act take effect immediately.

The biggest impact of this act and church's is this

If you have people in your church who are age 70 1/2 or older who have an IRA(s), they can make TAX-FREE distributions of up to $100,000 from a traditional IRA or Roth IRA to a tax-exempt church or charity. This provision is effective through 2007.

In a nut shell, the church wins and the donor wins but there is only a two year window so don't let 2006 go by without getting this information into the hands of your church body who reached age 70 1/2.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Unreal shopping experience

Yesterday, my wife did some cloths shopping at the mall. (mall's that's another blog for another time.) Because of how we allocate our paychecks, we tell every dollar where to go, and we had a specific amount budgeted for cloths this pay.

When my wife checked out at the register, she used the balance of what we had allocated for cloths and put that amount on our debit card and she paid for the balance in cash from her biweekly commission. (Again another blog topic at another time.) The sales clerk must have thought my wife was trying to hide the purchase from me. The clerk suggested three ways my wife could keep me from knowing what she purchased. (I'm not making his up.)

1. Put her new purchase on under her current cloths so when my wife comes in the house, I wouldn't see her purchase.
2. Put the cloths in the trunk of the car and wait for me to leave then bring the cloths in the house.
3. Dispose of the department store bag before she got home and maybe I wouldn't notice.

I find it unbelievable that one someone would suggest things like this and two that people would even think like this. Another reason why we must tell our money where to go or it will leave on its own. Thanks Dave Ramsey!

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Recharge your Batteries. . .

As we coming to the end of the construction phase of our new church, situations, questions, and decisions are moving at light speed. I know this is just a season and much like fall, the next season is just around the corner.

In all of this, I exercise to stay energized. Exercise clears my mind. My sweat of choice is riding my bike. I'm less than 50 miles away from my yearly goal of 1,500 miles. I should have that in my next ride or maybe two rides. Walking my dogs is a daily activity. I'm really surprised how just walking helps keep my weight stable.

I also love listening to podcasts on my mp3 player. This is one of the greatest inventions of my lifetime. I recently purchased a FM transmitter for my mp3 player for use in my car. Now I'm legal. (I'll say no more on this.)

So what do you do to recharge your batteries? I hope whatever it is you do it on a regular basis. It will help you to focus on the big picture and not get gobbled up by the details of everyday life.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Budget Time!

Well, it's that time of year. Budgeting Season. As I'm closing the quarter, ok trying to close the quarter, I'm also looking ahead to 2007. Next year is bringing with it some unique challenges in our budget process. As we move into our new facility what impact will this have on our budgets? Truth is, it's very hard to tell.

Conventional wisdom says, our people numbers will go up and our giving will go down. This is playing a key factor in my projections for 2007. As a starting point for our budgets, I'm working off the assumption of a 30% increase in attendance and a (15%) decrease in offerings. I believe this is a "typical" trend based on my conversations with other church's and church consultants who I've spoken with on this topic.

I've looked back to our construction costs to estimate our electric and natural gas for the coming year. Since we will still own our current facility, I have to budget utility costs for this building also.

One very exciting thing for me is that our Worship & Creative Arts Ministry has already submitted to me their 2007 budget. I should give them a prize. Since I didn't budget for a prize a big thank you here on my blog is all they get.

If you are interested in seeing the budget sheets I give our various ministries to use, send me a email and I'll forward you a copy.

Have a great budgeting season!

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Kudos to Church Staffing

If you have been following my blog for a while you know we are getting ever so closer to moving into our new church. (Yea God!) As such, we currently have three staff positions open and posted on our web site www.sugarcreekfmc.org

We decided to test the waters at www.churchstaffing.com and post our Service programmer position. Kudos to Churchstaffing! In one day, I received 11 resumes via email. That to me is very impressive as this position is what I would call "specialized". The really cool think is that none of these applicants would have found us without our listing.

Now if someone would apply for one of our open staff positions based on my blog, well then that would be unbelievable. (Anyone from Indiana wanting to move to Ohio?)