kidman232 wrote: Now rent where I live is right around $1500, so not cheap, but not crazy high either.
Er, I think that's more than my (after tax) income! My friends who do
rent pay between $400-$500/month for a tiny, kinda run down place
to $700-$800/month for a kinda OK sized one bedroom in good shape.
Even at that I'm glad I have a paid for house. I now have a justification
for being in Winnipeg, many other places "the rent is too damn high"!
$1500 is more than my property taxes for a year! One of these days I
really have to add up my utility bills and figure out how to amortize
the maintenance cost to find my actual "occupancy cost".
knibloe wrote:Any dairy farm around will hire you to milk cows. Generally, they will give you as many hours as you want also.
They don't worry about the 40 hour cap before the overtime laws kick in?
Or are you considered a "contractor" rather than an "employee"?
Also with modern milking machines just how much labour is still needed
to milk a herd each day? I was always under the impression that all but
the largest farms were a 1 or 2 person operation? Not that I'm anywhere
"near" a dairy farm myself. (It's 6 miles just to get to the "edge" of my
city, no telling how far past that is the nearest dairy farm.) Most really
poor people around here live even further from the city edge right in the
center. The farmers are generally surrounded by other farmers intermixed
with upper middle class people who want houses big enough that the
property tax savings of leaving the city makes up for the extra driving cost.