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Jill Russo Foster

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You are here: Home / Archives for Personal Note from Jill

Happy New Year!

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You’ll be facing new choices this year. New purchases, opportunities to invest in new savings plans, whether or not to travel. Maybe you’re thinking of making an addition to your family, retiring, or moving to a new home.

I’ll be there for you. Use this newsletter and my website as a resource when you’re researching the smartest choices for your money.

Visit me at JillRussoFoster.com and put your topic in the search field or email me at jill@jillrussofoster.com

A new look for the newsletter

It will be called “Money Choices” and will be in a phone-friendly format. Here’s the new logo: Watch for it on January 15th.

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Happy Holidays

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We’re grateful for family and friends

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From top to bottom and left to right, this is my nephew Kip and his family from Easter in New York, meeting up with friends in London, and dinner with my cousins Ray and Marge in Hawaii.

Happy Thanksgiving!

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Join Jill Russo Foster for a Special Event

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Take Charge of Your Personal Finances to Ensure Business Success!

Register_Today_Button_SM-300x249Join WBDC for an evening of insight, guidance and networking. Hear from a successful entrepreneur who has lived with salary, commission and self-employed income streams and knows how to live and thrive.

Jill Russo Foster, author of Thrive in Five: Take Charge of Your Finances in 5 Minutes a Day, will share her professional guidance and personal wisdom to help you improve and better understand your finances. Every entrepreneur and those thinking of starting a business can benefit from learning the important steps to take to avoid over spending, improve credit scores and much more. Personal finances are the key to securing funding for any business.

First 10 registrants that attend the event will receive a FREE copy of Ms. Foster’s book at the event.

Waterbury Wednesday, June 3
6:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Naugatuck Valley Community College
Newtown Wednesday, June 10
6:00 PM – 8:00 PM
C.H. Booth Library

Pre-Registration Required/No Charge

For more information contact Jen Hrbek at 203-925-0686 or email jhrbek@ctwbdc.org.

20150603-CT-logoBrought to you through a partnership with the Department of Economic and Community Development

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20150603-SBAFunded in part through a Cooperative Agreement with the U.S. Small Business Administration.
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Read about Jill in the Stamford Advocate

Personal bankruptcies on the rise

With bankruptcies up, Women’s Business Development Council offers help
By Alexander Soule
Published 1:00 am, Sunday, April 19, 2015
StamfordAdvocate.com

2015-StamfordAdv1Maclyne Josselin might catch the eye of any corporate comptroller looking to build a staff, keeping a ledger within arm’s reach in which she tracks income and expenses to the penny.

Josselin’s business these days is managing her own personal finances — and “profits” have been exceeding “losses,” a welcome change from just a few years ago.

Despite an improving jobs market, and slightly higher wages and savings in Fairfield County in the past year, not to mention low oil prices and a surging stock market in the macroeconomy, personal bankruptcies rose 5.8 percent in the region last year to just over 1,500.

The local increase comes in the context of a 12.2 percent drop nationally in people seeking protection from creditors, and underscores a fragile economic recovery that is still causing pain for many, amid slow wage growth and high costs of living in Fairfield County.

While financial crises can strike from any number of directions beyond one’s control –job loss, health problems and family demands, to name a few — Josselin said she edged toward the financial cliff by living paycheck to paycheck on a nonprofit employee’s salary without eyeballing what she was spending, and was unable to save anything.

Josselin, a Stamford resident, said she was able to make the conscious decision to reverse her course, but it was difficult.

“It’s like breathing,” Josselin said, describing the habit she has honed of tracking her expenses daily. “Just getting started was the hardest part.”

With nothing to lose, Josselin began attending a free clinic on personal finance that the Women’s Business Development Council offers at its headquarters in Stamford, as well as at satellite offices in Danbury, Shelton and Hartford.

Jill Russo Foster runs WBDC’s personal financial education and budget coaching programs, and has written multiple books on personal finance, including “Thrive In Five: Take Charge of Your Finances In Five Minutes A Day.” She became an expert on the topic the hard way, saying she accumulated 27 credit cards while in her 20s before the inevitable financial disaster hit, requiring a couple of years to work to fix her credit problems.

Josselin would eventually hammer out a plan that worked to control her spending by tracking every penny — literally — that she pays out. She keeps it all in a binder she has titled “Young, Fabulous and Saving,” deriving it from the Suze Orman book “The Money Set for the Young, Fabulous & Broke.”

From student to tutor

Today, Josselin is one of WBDC’s volunteer budget coaches, having tutored three people to date in a half-dozen, one-on-one sessions spanning three months. It was intimidating at first, she said, with her first client a woman many years her senior.

Foster said about half of the people who go through the program have income putting them below the official federal poverty. Of the remaining half, she said she has counseled spouses with combined income as high as $190,000, who have fallen on hard times due to health issues, divorce or other calamitous life events.

WBDC’s advanced budget coaching sessions for people in financial crisis entail four major tenets. Perhaps surprisingly, the easiest is reducing debt, while the hardest is improving one’s credit score, mainly due to the fact it is hard to move that needle in the six-week span of the program. The other two legs of the stool are increasing one’s income-to-expenses ratio and boosting savings.

Of those who register for WBDC’s budget coaching programs, 85 percent say they have changed their spending habits. Though Foster would like to close that 15 percent gap to zero, it nevertheless is making a difference. With a staff of 16 people, five part-timers and volunteers, WBDC helps as many people as it can.

Since 2005, when Connecticut experienced a surge of bankruptcy filings before Congress stiffened rules on who could qualify, statewide bankruptcies have stayed in rough lockstep with the economy. From just under 4,000 filings in 2006 –likely an abnormally low number due to people filing in advance of the new rules — personal bankruptcies marched steadily upward to peak at nearly 11,250 cases in 2010, before receding each year to 6,750 cases last year.

Behind most of those cases there is an individual or family who has hit rock bottom, unable to make ends meet whether due to a lost job, medical bills, poor planning or bad luck.

Foster said there are common traps many people fall into, including deciding to postpone payment of a bill coming due in order to be accumulate funds to pay it off in full. Better to pay some of it right away and the rest when one is able, she said.

A utopian world

Hand in hand with bankruptcy is home foreclosure, with Corelogic tracking nearly 5,240 foreclosure proceedings in Connecticut for the 12-month period through February.

Both bankruptcy and foreclosure data can be influenced by external factors, according to Mark Stern, a Fairfield attorney who chairs the Bankruptcy Law Committee of the Fairfield County Bar Association. Those factors can include changes in bank policies regarding foreclosures or judicial retirements resulting in a backlog of cases.

Stamford state Superior Court Judge Douglas Mintz told Connecticut legislators in February that in 2012 and 2013 an increasing number of people participated in a foreclosure mediation program mandated in 2008 by the state. He said the program has helped 15,000 Connecticut families stay in their homes — 69 percent of whom signed up for mediation — and requested that the state make the program permanent.

“It would be a wonderful, utopian world where, you know, I would not have to do a foreclosure docket on a Monday morning,” Mintz said. “Even in the good times, people get sick and lose their job.”

WBDC CEO Fran Pastore said her organization had initially intended to end the budget coaching sessions led by Foster once the economy gained steam again, but now intends to keep it in place.

“We can’t even meet the demand of the number of people who want to get into the program,” Pastore said. “The despair is so real and it is very much alive ” a sense of despondency, despair — nowhere to turn.”

Josselin said she was able to turn it around just by taking the first step, and the next, and the next. She is now sharing her experience with others, and Foster suspects more will make the transition from student to tutor on what can be a long, hard road to financial stability — one people from up and down the various walks of life have traversed.

“What I try to tell people is that there is no shame or guilt about what happened in the past,” Foster said. “Just come in and start addressing it.”

Alex.Soule@scni.com; 203-964-2236; www.twitter.com/casoulman

Happy 2015 from Jill Russo Foster

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Do you love to travel? Do you wish you could travel but have trouble justifying the funds? In February, I’ll be starting a 4-week travel class called “Nearly Free Travel:
Lessons Learned from Jill’s European Vacation.” I’ll take you step-by-step through the actions I took to get a European vacation – nearly free!

If one of your New Year’s Resolutions is to travel, then watch here for updates or on Twitter for the hashtag #NearlyFreeTravel.

I have a travel bucket list, and my destinations range from very close to home to halfway around the world. Here’s a photo from a destination close to home, but that’s been on my wish list for a while – The Holiday Lights at Lake Compounce, Connecticut.

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Happy New Year!

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Happy Holidays!

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Happy Thanksgiving from Jill Russo Foster

There’s a song called “I’ve Got Plenty to Be Thankful For” sung by Bing Crosby in the movie Holiday Inn. It fits how I feel this holiday season. Sometimes people overlook gratitude as part of their wealth.  So I want to personally thank all of my clients and readers for their loyal support.  It gives me the opportunity to do what I love.

Thank you.

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We had another something to be thankful for in November. We went to see our good friends and explore Austin and San Antonio, Texas. We took a river boat trip, watched the bats go off into the night, and took the river walk cruise.  I guess we love the water because we even managed to find it in Texas!  Check out our photos.

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A Facebook Group for Your Goals

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Join me for the month of January for Taking Charge of Your Finances.  Many people want to have more in savings, to spend less, to pay down their debt, save for their children’s education, save for retirement, buy a home, and more. This will be your chance to connect with other like minded people, and get your New Year’s resolution off to a solid start.

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We will run the private group through Facebook.  You do need to have a Facebook account to join.  Simply click here -> www.facebook.com/groups/takecharge2014/ then click the Join Group button, and we’ll approve your membership.

You can participate in this group from the privacy of your home, and on your own schedule.  I’ll post questions and assignments for you, give you ideas and resources to use to help you succeed in your goals. In turn, you can share as much as you want about your goals and finances, so you can discuss your challenges and learn from one another. This is a closed group, which means your posts will only be visible to each other, and not to your Facebook friends.

Your first assignment

We’ll start out with you telling us what personal financial goals you want to achieve.  The goals can be short term (something that you want to complete in 2014) or a long term goal that needs your attention in 2014 if it’s going to continue over the years.

We will limit the group size so make sure you sign up today!

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Jill Russo Foster

https://www.jillrussofoster.com/4625/

Happy Thanksgiving (Plus! How to Carve a Turkey!)

We celebrated Thanksgiving with family early this year. Here’s our family photo. We are so thankful for each and every one of them!

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Here’s my Thanksgiving video greeting to you. Be sure to watch through to the end, if you’ve been struggling with carving that big roast turkey every year!

Stay safe and have a happy holiday!

Jill Russo Foster

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