On Cathy Moran's website, Bankruptcy Mastery, in a blog entitled "means Test and the Exemption See Saw" she writes:
"Note that current year tax obligations, projected medical or dental treatment, delinquent support, and priority taxes are all expenses that are deductible on the means test. Thus, if you pay those expenses down to consume cash, you reduce the deductions from current monthly income. You may be solving the exemption problem but creating a positive number on B-22."
Does she mean if you don't need to spend down cash, you could take a large expense like postponed dental work, and expense it on your Schedule J? If so, how would you divide it up - over a 12 month period? If you have a quote in hand for $6000 worth of dental work, over a year, that would be $500 a month on your schedule J. Or is this just wishful thinking? Can't find anything to address this specifically on the net.
"Note that current year tax obligations, projected medical or dental treatment, delinquent support, and priority taxes are all expenses that are deductible on the means test. Thus, if you pay those expenses down to consume cash, you reduce the deductions from current monthly income. You may be solving the exemption problem but creating a positive number on B-22."
Does she mean if you don't need to spend down cash, you could take a large expense like postponed dental work, and expense it on your Schedule J? If so, how would you divide it up - over a 12 month period? If you have a quote in hand for $6000 worth of dental work, over a year, that would be $500 a month on your schedule J. Or is this just wishful thinking? Can't find anything to address this specifically on the net.
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