Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned

   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #521  
Two bit...oaktree...stepp: I like what you're saying!
In 1976 I was making $3.50/hr after college as an electronic technician. The shop foreman who had been with company many years was making $3.75. He and wife (home maker) lived in a nice brick ranch on couple acres. I started my business shortly after with wife working with me with $145 I had saved.
My grandfather was a physician (D.O., surgeon) I was with him when he passed (heart attack, 1985, he was 86 almost 87 going to work!). He was still charging $5/office visit (five dollars), he never made over $15K/year yet he had a Cessna, Motorhomes, etc., traveled many countries...but he invested money.
So young people not wanting $30/hr, whining, FOOEY!
 
   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #522  
Was in Hoquiam Washington the other week and a large sign at the mill saying forget the commute and work here offering up to $37.50

Be hardpressed to offer less than $55 hourly for SF Bay Area RN...

We have a hiring freeze as do many providers but RN with experience can and do work anywhere...

Area minimum wage is often $15...

Everywhere in 4 states I saw help wanted signs... California, Oregon, Nevada and Washington...
Close. Average RN pay in San Francisco is $50.72/hour. Since the pandemic, that is probably a little higher.


I'm still astonished that anyone, anywhere in the US, would expect an electrician to work for $30/hour.
 
   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #524  
Pay for blue collar workers in a lot of places in the SE is definitely lower than the NE and West Coast but I would have to say our cost of living is a lot less.
 
   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #525  
Two bit...oaktree...stepp: I like what you're saying!
In 1976 I was making $3.50/hr after college as an electronic technician. The shop foreman who had been with company many years was making $3.75. He and wife (home maker) lived in a nice brick ranch on couple acres. I started my business shortly after with wife working with me with $145 I had saved.
My grandfather was a physician (D.O., surgeon) I was with him when he passed (heart attack, 1985, he was 86 almost 87 going to work!). He was still charging $5/office visit (five dollars), he never made over $15K/year yet he had a Cessna, Motorhomes, etc., traveled many countries...but he invested money.
So young people not wanting $30/hr, whining, FOOEY!
In 1976 I was making $13.87/hour as a carpenter foreman on a bridge project. In today's dollars, that's $66.55/hour. I bought 5 acres of view property for $9995 and built my first house cash out of pocket in my spare time. I stick framed the whole thing out of used concrete form lumber that I got at the end of projects for hauling it off.

Twelve years of Reagan and Bush pretty much wrecked it for the working man, so in 1990 I quit being productive and went to work in an office instead. White collar pays 3x as much for 1/3 the work.
 
   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #526  
Close. Average RN pay in San Francisco is $50.72/hour. Since the pandemic, that is probably a little higher.


I'm still astonished that anyone, anywhere in the US, would expect an electrician to work for $30/hour.
I have union electrician friends in the NE; making right at $100/ hour. Now you happy? :p
 
   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #527  
In 1976 I was making $13.87/hour as a carpenter foreman on a bridge project. In today's dollars, that's $66.55/hour. I bought 5 acres of view property for $9995 and built my first house cash out of pocket in my spare time. I stick framed the whole thing out of used concrete form lumber that I got at the end of projects for hauling it off.

Twelve years of Reagan and Bush pretty much wrecked it for the working man, so in 1990 I quit being productive and went to work in an office instead. White collar pays 3x as much for 1/3 the work.
"Twelve years of Reagan and Bush pretty much wrecked it for the working man"
?!?!?!?
That I don't get...at all. (Jimmy Carter, that I understand)...but enough politics!
But getting back to Electrician vs. Electronic Technician the education level is similar, from HS diploma+trade school to Associate degree, pay is similar (national average $20.66-$25.35 depending on the source.
However, as I said 1976 making $3.50...shop foreman $3.75 equals $16.80 & $18/hr. today.
AND mortgages at about 1.8% today. In 1980 buying my place mortgage was 14%!!!!!
I paid 30 year mortgage off in 3 years...then no more debt for anything, cash for new cars, etc.
 
   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #528  
Close. Average RN pay in San Francisco is $50.72/hour. Since the pandemic, that is probably a little higher.


I'm still astonished that anyone, anywhere in the US, would expect an electrician to work for $30/hour.
Many doing better at home with enhanced benefits... at least the answer I often heard...

SF Bay Area Kaiser is the benchmark because of benefits in addition to wages...

Average RN wage at my facility is 54.51

remember that RN includes new grads and those working in board and care, etc.

Mom showed me her 1982 paystub as Charge RN... $300 week salary which always more than 40 hour week.
 
Last edited:
   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #529  
Most importantly, no one expects anyone to work for an amount. The basic law of supply and demand dictates wages. The exception would be when government interferes and tries to set wages.

Mom was an RN, but only worked off and on. They thought it was better for her to stay home with us. Dad was enlisted USAF. They would have been better off financially if she worked and he stayed home, but they landed OK. Daughter just graduated with her BSN in May and is making a lot better money with fewer schedule issues than her grandmother. Mom's last job had the nurses flipping back and forth between nights and days....often in the same week. Supposedly that made it fair. What it really did was drive some out of the hospital and others out of the profession.

The pandemic solution to unemployment was to pay 600 over what someone would normally make. When you are unemployed you don't spend as much, especially in a pandemic. All the extra 600 did was keep people from taking jobs. I would like to have seen the money focused on those who really needed it rather than a blanket solution.
 
   / Retirement Planning - Lessons Learned #530  
The purpose of the extra payments was to enable low wage workers to stay home and avoid Covid, school their kids who were not in class due to Covid, and take care of family members who had Covid. Not taking jobs (and thus reducing the spread of Covid) was the point.

Setting up a means testing system for this would have taken months, created a new burecracy, and kept a lot of folks who needed them from getting the benefits.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2005 LUFKIN 48X102 SPREAD AXLE FLATBED (A50854)
2005 LUFKIN 48X102...
GORMAN RUPP 4 TRANSFER PUMP (A50854)
GORMAN RUPP 4...
2019 FORD F450 TOW TRUCK (A51222)
2019 FORD F450 TOW...
2019 Komatsu PC490LC Hydraulic Excavator (A49461)
2019 Komatsu...
John Deere Gator XUV835M 4x4 Utility Cart (A48082)
John Deere Gator...
2021 Snake River 14K Dump Trailer (A49461)
2021 Snake River...
 
Top