When times are tough and money is tight, preparing for retirement can easily be pushed into the “someday” category, as we focus on present needs and expenses. Saves Week 2022 is focusing on specific savings goals each day: Pay off those high interest credit cards and put the money you used to put toward payments into the savings account instead! Start teaching your children about the importance of saving – you can start with a family change jar for the online movie rental and dinner delivery. Make saving automatic with a direct deposit from your paycheck – you won’t spend what you don’t see! Put that tax return or tax credit in your savings account for an emergency fund instead of spending it! ![]() Need help thinking of quick savings tips? Putting aside even $20 every pay day can add up over time and help prepare a household for unexpected expenses.” “But it’s so important to plan for the future – whether putting a family member through school, having money for emergencies or planning for retirement. “We know it’s tough to set money aside in savings, especially for many Washington residents who were either heavily impacted by the pandemic with layoffs or reduced hours and all those still living paycheck to paycheck,” DFI Director Charlie Clark said. The campaign’s motto “Start Small, Think Big” reminds participants saving can start with something as simple as establishing a household change jar to be put toward a family goal. This year’s theme is “Building Resilience.” After two years of living through a pandemic, where higher income residents experienced an increase in savings and many lower income residents saw the wealth gap widen, building financial resilience is more important than ever for many Washington residents. The national savings awareness program was started by America Saves and the American Savings Education Council in 2007 as way to positively promote strong savings habits and to remind individuals to assess their own savings status – and encourage saving more with the savings pledge. OLYMPIA– The Washington State Department of Financial Institutions (DFI) recognizes America Saves Week as an opportunity to join partners from throughout the country to promote consumer focus on savings. 21-25 focuses on saving for emergencies, expenditures and retirement PH 36, WEEK ENCOURAGES PARTICIPANTS TO ‘BUILD RESILIENCE’ WITH SAVINGS Roque's husband Michael Andrew Dixon, who is another Brandon police officer, said his wife became consumed with fear after her photos were shared, but confirmed neither he or his wife asked Peters to stop sharing the images.Lyn Peters, DFI Director of Communications Roque testified Monday while she was applying to become a police officer, she was told to withdraw her application after the force was given the nude images Peters discovered. She testified she told Lewis that "I have information regarding the potential and current police officers and it does include images of people in various stages of undress." ![]() She testified when she confronted Friesen he told her he didn't want to live anymore and said "'I'm just going to eat my gun.' At one point he told me he was lying on the floor with his gun in his mouth just to attempt to gain control of the conversation."Īfter she found the photos, she sent them to herself and called Brandon Deputy Chief Wayne Balcaen. Randy Lewis, the then-deputy chief of operations, then came to her home and collected them. Peters testified that she became suspicious of her boyfriend after he cheated on her in 2012, and she discovered he had been saving numbers of women in his phone under aliases like his mom or sister. ![]() Brittany Roque testified intimate images she sent to a Brandon police officer she was having an affair with on Snapchat and over text were meant to be private and not shared.
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