|
I live in coastal Alabama, far enough away from the eye of Katrina to have sustained minimal damage. She actually did me a favor by bringing down many of the "hangers" left by Ivan. Hangers are the broken branches still hung up in trees. The ones that a tree service will charge about $50 an hour to remove. It's an ill wind that blows no good.
Ivan was another story. The eastern eye wall passed directly over our house. Downed trees demolished our screened porch, but the rest of the house was relatively intact. In all, we had 19 oaks uprooted. Some of the rootballs pulled up sections of our asphalt driveway.
We live on a bay, so in addition to "our" debris we also had sections of docks, pieces of boathouses, a demolished boat, and various pieces of flotsam to dispose of. FEMA contracts with debris removal companies to pick up the debris from the street right-of way. It is the individual homeowner's responsibility to get debris brought out of the yard to that point.
Bottom line, we had upwards of $12,000 in uninsured (and uninsurable), out of pocket clean up and repair expenses. Plus $1,900 deductible on what our homeowner's insurance did cover.
I applied to FEMA for some relief and got zip. I don't know what the "secret qualifications" mentioned in another post are, but we evidently didn't meet them.
Here's the IRS catch-22: We're retired (since 1999) and have monthly income from Social Security and a small pension. That's not enough to meet our rather modest expenses, so I make up the difference with annual withdrawals from my IRA.
My IRA withdrawals are subject to income tax. IRA withdrawals are shown as "income" on my 1040. Because I needed immediate cash to pay a private contractor to clean up and make repairs, I had to take over twice as much out of my IRA as normal. Thus my "income" more than doubled.
Now...I can write off my uninsured losses as "casualty losses" on my income taxes, but first I must subtract 10% of my adjusted gross income. So now I'm working against myself. The more I have to take out of my IRA to pay for casualty losses, the less I can write off as casualty losses.
Arrrggghhh :argh:
|