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sábado, 13 de marzo de 2010

Homeless man lives on rewards points

Jobless Californian lost his home to foreclosure. Now he lives in hotels, thanks to rewards from his frequent corporate travel.

Posted by Karen Datko on Thursday, March 11, 2010 3:47 PM

A lingering benefit of his former well-paid and well-traveled corporate life is keeping a roof over the head of Jim Kennedy, who is now jobless, bankruptand foreclosed on. He’s using his rewards from airline loyalty programs and hotel points to move from hotel to hotel.

And Kennedy knows how to work those points, says an amazing story inThe Orange County Register.

This week, Kennedy is at the Holiday Inn Express in San Clemente, where he converted his United Airlines miles. He brought down the 7,000-points-a-night cost to 5,000 by adding $100 for his four-night stay, so it costs him $25 a night.

Big bonus for Kennedy, who budgets $5 a day for food: free breakfast at the hotel (plus a microwave and fridge in the room).

Life used to be pretty great for Kennedy, who worked in IT and finance for a corporation until 19 months ago. He had a condo in lovely Newport Beach. Now its contents, including golf clubs and a 375-bottle wine collection, sit in a self-storage unit. He gets around in a leased BMW. His unemployment checks go to a rented mailbox.

He’s among the multitudes looking for work in California, which, at 12.5% in January, had the fifth-highest rate of unemployment in the U.S. In eight California counties, the jobless rate exceeds 20%. The Register said:

Every day he visits the online job banks and tries to reach out to recruiters, but he finds himself one of several hundred folks who are all going for the same gig, and it’s a difficult slog. He’s taken his story to Twitter in hopes of setting himself apart from all the other job seekers. He writes under a pseudonym, @HomelessThomOC.

It wasn’t supposed to be like this for Kennedy, who is 46. "I should be in major-dollar earning years and I am losing major-dollar earning years, which I will not get back,” he told the Register. “That part is frustrating and a little scary."


Source: Money Central

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