The more time I spend on this site the more I realize that BK planning is really a long term thing...with that, here is the timeline I have come up with (our Schedule J which will represent our finances at the end of that timeline will follow):
Present to February 2012 - My wife and I are employed but will likely have to use cards here and there to meet basic expenses (gas, food, heat, etc...)
March 2012 - Stop using/paying cards in preparation for filing, saving for attorney fee, etc...this date is significant because it also puts us at the beginning of the six month lookback period for average gross income. Basically once we have not used or paid on the cards for six months our average will be down low enough to pass the means test.
June 30th, 2012 - My wife receives her last paycheck as she'll be laid off at the end of the school year due to budget cuts. Her position will be eliminated-no chance of rehire, which is basically the story for schools all over our state, so there is little to no chance of her getting a job at another school either. She will begin receiving unemployment July 1st, cutting her salary in half. At this point I will also need to increase the amount of health insurance we carry (from self to family coverage) since my job will be the only source of benefits which will knock my salary down about $200 a month.
October 2012 - File for CH7. At this point we'll have dropped just below the median for our region, so the first of the month will be the earliest we could possibly file.
Schedule J
This has probably been the most confusing part of this whole process, so I'm hoping to get some clarification on what expenses are allowable and reasonable (I know this varies district by district), because I've read conflicting advice here and can't find clear answers on the UST website either. Line by line, here goes...
1. Rent or home mortgage - 2252 This number represents principal and interest, PMI, and property taxes, but not homeowners insurance. For a household in my county, the allowable local housing and utilities standards are $682 for "Non-Mortgage" expenses, and $2014 for "Mortgage/Rent." The breakdown of these is about as clear as mud on the UST site:
Housing and Utilities standards include mortgage or rent, property taxes, interest, insurance, maintenance, repairs, gas, electric, water, heating oil, garbage collection, telephone and cell phone. The tables include five categories for one, two, three, four, and five or more persons in a household.
My initial interpretation of this was that the total number ($2014 + $682 = $2696) is essentially intended to cover lines 1 (a-b) and 2 (a-d), but since our property taxes eat up a large portion of that number ($6800 a year/$566 a month) it leaves little room for other expenses. What I'm trying to say is if I added up all of my expenses for everything mentioned in that paragraph, it would come to $2849. Does this mean I'm exceeding the standard and will come under scrutiny? Will I just need to bring in copies of bills to satisfy the trustee?
2. Utilities: (Electricity/heating fuel, Water/sewer, Telephone, Other)
-Electricity and heating I based off of a 12 month average of bills combined with the prorated cost to fill our 275 gallon oil tank twice: $330
-Water/sewer/garbage is billed quarterly so I averaged it out to monthly: $85
-Telephone I believe is $25 for landline but I need to double check as its part of a bundle.
-"Other" I used for our two cellphones ($120) plus cable and internet ($125) for a total of $245. This is yet another wrinkle because according to the housing and utilities standards cable and internet is not an allowable expense?
3. Home Maintenance - I used a $100 as a round number-again, this is something that is supposedly covered by the housing and utilities standards, but because of high property taxes its hard to fit all of the expenses into that figure.
4. Food - By the time we file my daughter will be a year old, so I used the national average for food for a family of three-$639.
5. Clothing - Again, I used the national average figure, which goes by "apparel and services" which I'm guessing refers to clothing and dry cleaning. The total figure is $209 for a family of three, so again I used that number and simply broke it up using $159 for clothing (which is probably not too far off considering our daughter will be growing like a weed) and $50 for dry cleaning which we don't do too often.
6. Laundry and dry cleaning - We have our own washer and dryer so laundry cost is really split between water/sewer, groceries, and electricity. See above for the explanation about dry cleaning: $50.
7. Medical and dental expenses - Once again used the national average of $60 a person for $180 a month which is probably right since my daughter will be born with a lung condition that will need surgery and followup care and my wife was just diagnosed with Lyme disease, but we will have decent insurance through me.
8. Transportation - We have two cars-the average for the NYC region is $684 for operating costs. I have a long commute and a high mileage truck so that should be right for me. Obviously my wife won't be driving much, but her car is 10 years old and approaching 160K.
9. Recreation, clubs, etc... - I put $50 for a nice round number. We get our news from NPR/the internet, don't belong to any clubs, don't go out much, and use our free libraries and state parks for most recreation.
10. Charitable contributions - $5 a week in the collection basket at church for a total of $20.
11. Insurance - Homeowners: $38 and Auto $220.
12. Taxes - N/A - Included in mortgage payment.
13. Installments - N/A - My truck will be paid off once we file.
14, 15, 16 - N/A.
Grand total of expenses: $5077
Average monthly income (Me working carrying family insurance and my wife on unemployment: $4895
Monthly net income: -$182
I'm guessing that a negative net income should help us in theory, at least when it comes to getting our CH7 successfully discharged, though it doesn't bode well for us post BK. I'm hoping that we can find some way to cut expenses even more, maybe I can find a new job or she can, etc...but in the meantime I'm focused on simply getting out from under the debt that is drowning us anyway. Does it look like we have all of our ducks in a row here? For simplicity's sake I am posting an abbreviated version of this below with just the categories, expenses, and total:
Mortgage (taxes included, insurance not included - 2252
Electric and heat - 330
Water and sewer - 85
Phone - 25
Other (Cable, internet, cell phones) - 245
Home maintenance - 100
Food - 639 (National Average)
Clothing - 159
Laundry and dry cleaning - 50 (Apparel and services National Average is 209)
Medical and dental - 180 (National Average)
Transportation - 684 (NYC Metro Area Average for two vehicles)
Recreation, etc... - 50
Contributions - 20
Insurance (Homeowners, life, health, auto, other) - Homeowners - 38/Auto - 220
Installments - N/A
Alimony - N/A
Support payments - N/A
Business expenses - N/A
Other - N/A
Total: 5077
Income: 4895
Net income: -182
Present to February 2012 - My wife and I are employed but will likely have to use cards here and there to meet basic expenses (gas, food, heat, etc...)
March 2012 - Stop using/paying cards in preparation for filing, saving for attorney fee, etc...this date is significant because it also puts us at the beginning of the six month lookback period for average gross income. Basically once we have not used or paid on the cards for six months our average will be down low enough to pass the means test.
June 30th, 2012 - My wife receives her last paycheck as she'll be laid off at the end of the school year due to budget cuts. Her position will be eliminated-no chance of rehire, which is basically the story for schools all over our state, so there is little to no chance of her getting a job at another school either. She will begin receiving unemployment July 1st, cutting her salary in half. At this point I will also need to increase the amount of health insurance we carry (from self to family coverage) since my job will be the only source of benefits which will knock my salary down about $200 a month.
October 2012 - File for CH7. At this point we'll have dropped just below the median for our region, so the first of the month will be the earliest we could possibly file.
Schedule J
This has probably been the most confusing part of this whole process, so I'm hoping to get some clarification on what expenses are allowable and reasonable (I know this varies district by district), because I've read conflicting advice here and can't find clear answers on the UST website either. Line by line, here goes...
1. Rent or home mortgage - 2252 This number represents principal and interest, PMI, and property taxes, but not homeowners insurance. For a household in my county, the allowable local housing and utilities standards are $682 for "Non-Mortgage" expenses, and $2014 for "Mortgage/Rent." The breakdown of these is about as clear as mud on the UST site:
Housing and Utilities standards include mortgage or rent, property taxes, interest, insurance, maintenance, repairs, gas, electric, water, heating oil, garbage collection, telephone and cell phone. The tables include five categories for one, two, three, four, and five or more persons in a household.
My initial interpretation of this was that the total number ($2014 + $682 = $2696) is essentially intended to cover lines 1 (a-b) and 2 (a-d), but since our property taxes eat up a large portion of that number ($6800 a year/$566 a month) it leaves little room for other expenses. What I'm trying to say is if I added up all of my expenses for everything mentioned in that paragraph, it would come to $2849. Does this mean I'm exceeding the standard and will come under scrutiny? Will I just need to bring in copies of bills to satisfy the trustee?
2. Utilities: (Electricity/heating fuel, Water/sewer, Telephone, Other)
-Electricity and heating I based off of a 12 month average of bills combined with the prorated cost to fill our 275 gallon oil tank twice: $330
-Water/sewer/garbage is billed quarterly so I averaged it out to monthly: $85
-Telephone I believe is $25 for landline but I need to double check as its part of a bundle.
-"Other" I used for our two cellphones ($120) plus cable and internet ($125) for a total of $245. This is yet another wrinkle because according to the housing and utilities standards cable and internet is not an allowable expense?
3. Home Maintenance - I used a $100 as a round number-again, this is something that is supposedly covered by the housing and utilities standards, but because of high property taxes its hard to fit all of the expenses into that figure.
4. Food - By the time we file my daughter will be a year old, so I used the national average for food for a family of three-$639.
5. Clothing - Again, I used the national average figure, which goes by "apparel and services" which I'm guessing refers to clothing and dry cleaning. The total figure is $209 for a family of three, so again I used that number and simply broke it up using $159 for clothing (which is probably not too far off considering our daughter will be growing like a weed) and $50 for dry cleaning which we don't do too often.
6. Laundry and dry cleaning - We have our own washer and dryer so laundry cost is really split between water/sewer, groceries, and electricity. See above for the explanation about dry cleaning: $50.
7. Medical and dental expenses - Once again used the national average of $60 a person for $180 a month which is probably right since my daughter will be born with a lung condition that will need surgery and followup care and my wife was just diagnosed with Lyme disease, but we will have decent insurance through me.
8. Transportation - We have two cars-the average for the NYC region is $684 for operating costs. I have a long commute and a high mileage truck so that should be right for me. Obviously my wife won't be driving much, but her car is 10 years old and approaching 160K.
9. Recreation, clubs, etc... - I put $50 for a nice round number. We get our news from NPR/the internet, don't belong to any clubs, don't go out much, and use our free libraries and state parks for most recreation.
10. Charitable contributions - $5 a week in the collection basket at church for a total of $20.
11. Insurance - Homeowners: $38 and Auto $220.
12. Taxes - N/A - Included in mortgage payment.
13. Installments - N/A - My truck will be paid off once we file.
14, 15, 16 - N/A.
Grand total of expenses: $5077
Average monthly income (Me working carrying family insurance and my wife on unemployment: $4895
Monthly net income: -$182
I'm guessing that a negative net income should help us in theory, at least when it comes to getting our CH7 successfully discharged, though it doesn't bode well for us post BK. I'm hoping that we can find some way to cut expenses even more, maybe I can find a new job or she can, etc...but in the meantime I'm focused on simply getting out from under the debt that is drowning us anyway. Does it look like we have all of our ducks in a row here? For simplicity's sake I am posting an abbreviated version of this below with just the categories, expenses, and total:
Mortgage (taxes included, insurance not included - 2252
Electric and heat - 330
Water and sewer - 85
Phone - 25
Other (Cable, internet, cell phones) - 245
Home maintenance - 100
Food - 639 (National Average)
Clothing - 159
Laundry and dry cleaning - 50 (Apparel and services National Average is 209)
Medical and dental - 180 (National Average)
Transportation - 684 (NYC Metro Area Average for two vehicles)
Recreation, etc... - 50
Contributions - 20
Insurance (Homeowners, life, health, auto, other) - Homeowners - 38/Auto - 220
Installments - N/A
Alimony - N/A
Support payments - N/A
Business expenses - N/A
Other - N/A
Total: 5077
Income: 4895
Net income: -182
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