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re: Shareholders' meeting 2014 - celeb watch, music, Chinese/Brit shenanigans

Posted on 6/6/14 at 3:22 pm to
Posted by Person of interest
The Hill
Member since Jan 2014
1786 posts
Posted on 6/6/14 at 3:22 pm to
quote:

It is. A single person can survive


Barely, but add a child to the equation and it's not close.

living wage calculator
Posted by DaleDenton
Member since Jun 2010
42394 posts
Posted on 6/6/14 at 3:43 pm to
quote:

Barely, but add a child to the equation and it's not close.


Then don't have children when you work as a cashier at Wal-Mart or you are flipping burgers.

Condoms are not that expensive either, you work at wal-mart you can use your employee discount on them and save even more...
Posted by Hawgeye
tFlagship Brothel
Member since Jun 2009
31102 posts
Posted on 6/6/14 at 3:56 pm to
Did you add child support in there as well?

Look, I know things are tough, but the back bone of this country IMO is the entrepreneur and small business owners like myself. Some of us do well, some of us don't. It's a risk taken by starting your own thing.

What I do know, is that if minimum wage is raised, you can kiss half of us goodbye and then you can sit back and watch unemployment numbers sky rocket.

So what's more important? $7.25-$10 an hour, or $0 an hour and being on unemployment for the single mother?

During the summer I am slow. At one store for instance, I work two employees 25 hours each. So, 50 hours. I pay $8 an hour to these two. So I'm out $400 a week in wages, then figure about 10-15 each for workers comp. Now, if that we're $15 an hour I'm out $750 without figuring in workers comp. then you figure in all costs....

One week at $15 an hour employees

Labor: $750
Rent: $500
Electric: $100
Utilities: $150
Supplies: $65
Office Supplies: $35
Fuel: $125

Total: $1,725

And that's not even my break even point for that store. I've still not figured in bank fees, credit card processing fees, terminal lease fees, etc. so basically, with the raised wage my break even point would be roughly $2,200-$2,500 a week.

That's not leaving me much money for my pocket, especially during the summer.

Right now at one store, I've got roughly $95,000 in expenses each year. If wages were raised, that number shoots up $30,000 per year.
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