The Complete Guide to Prioritizing Bills During COVID-19

Prioritize your bills

If you are one of the millions of Americans on furlough thanks to the coronavirus, you may be scrambling to cover your bills. Let’s take a look at what Freedom’s financial experts are advising so you can make an informed decision about your finances going forward.

Triage your bills

Freedom recommends putting your most basic needs, including food and shelter, before any other bills now. Make sure you can feed your family before using your limited resources for loan payments or credit card bills. Similarly, your family needs a place to live, so mortgage or rent payments should be next on your list.

Housing costs

In early March, the Federal Housing Finance Agency offered payment forbearance to homeowners affected by COVID-19, allowing them to suspend mortgage payments up to 12 months. These loans account for approximately 66 percent of all home loans in America. They will eventually need to be covered, though conditions for repayment vary by lender.

Speak to your lender about your options before making a decision.

If you’re a renter, be open with your landlord. They may be willing to work with you.

Paying for transportation

Missing an auto loan payment can mean risking repossession of your vehicle. This should put car payments next on your list of financial priorities. If meeting that monthly payment is impossible right now, it’s best to communicate with your lender and come up with a plan that is mutually agreeable to both parties.

Household bills

Utility and service bills should be paid on time each month, but for workers on furlough due to the coronavirus pandemic, these expenses may not even make it to their list of priorities.

Most states have outlawed utility shutoffs for now. Also, many providers are willing to work with their clients. Visit the websites of your providers or reach out to them by phone to see what kind of relief and financial considerations they’re offering consumers.

Unsecured debt

Unsecured debt includes credit cards, personal loans and any other loan that is not tied to a large asset. Struggling Americans can place these loans at the bottom of their list of financial priorities for now. At the same time, borrowers should know that missing out on a monthly loan payment can have a long-term negative impact on a credit score.

Here, too, consumers are advised to communicate with their lenders about their current financial realities. Credit card companies and lenders are often willing to extend payment deadlines, lower the APR on a line of credit or a loan, waive a late fee or occasionally allow consumers to skip a payment without penalty.

Freedom Federal Credit Union is committed to putting our members first, not shareholders, and helping you achieve your financial goals. Learn more at freedomfcu.org or call us 800-440-4120 to see how we can help.

Your Turn: How are you prioritizing your bills during the pandemic? Share your tips with us on Facebook, LinkedIn,Twitter, or Instagram.

 

A Message from President and CEO, Mike MacPherson

May 15, 2020

Dear Members,

There has been a lot of talk recently about “reopening”. I imagine it raises questions for you about our plans at Freedom and I would like to address them; I just don’t have all the answers yet. What I can tell you is, we will not rush things.

Like everything you hear, we too will be taking a phased approach. What that approach will be exactly, or when it will happen, will first be dependent, and in alignment, with the Governor’s Roadmap to Recovery guidance announced on May 13, as well as what we feel is best for our members and employees. There will be numerous other considerations including, but not limited to, staff and member safety, social distancing needs, controlled access, hours of operation, branch configuration, and so on.

We are learning a lot from our experience serving you with the current changes in place at our branches, and how you have embraced those changes. This will help us determine what is necessary and what is in your best interests going forward. We also consider how we can best maintain our culture, our relationships, and our connection to the community in a more “touchless” world.

While we don’t know what the upcoming weeks and months will look like, we know it will be different, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. We know we are not alone in this; every business will need to evolve in some way. We have had, and will continue to have, discussions about next steps and gather information since each location can pose different challenges. Whatever decisions are made will be based on the same strategies we have focused and built our success on – the employee and member experience.

Believe me, I would love to be the modern-day Nostradamus and to tell you every decision regarding reopening, or potential changes, will be perfect from the start. The reality is this is all new and we must ease into any action one step at a time. Most decisions are the result of facts, research, analysis and so on. We will not risk the trust you place in us by guessing or by worrying about what everyone else is doing. We have, and will, make decisions based on what we know and what we believe to be in the best interest of all for the greater good. You deserve that. All we ask in return is your understanding and flexibility as we navigate today’s “conditional normalcy” (whatever the conditions dictate will be what is normal).

For now, when we can safely open lobbies in our branches again, they may look and operate a bit differently. Masks will be required, social distancing should be expected, and appointments may be necessary for the short-term. You may also find that branches may be slightly reconfigured with plexiglass barriers, staff employing necessary physical distancing, signs posted with instructions for conducting business and floor markers indicating where to stand.

Regardless of how things look and what requirements are necessitated, rest assured you are still our priority and that Freedom, at its core, remains unchanged in our purpose, mission and commitment as we forge a new path in service of you and our community.

We will communicate our plans in the coming days and weeks. Until then, I want to thank you for your patience, your support, your resilience, and your trust in Freedom.

Warmest Regards,

CEO Signature

Michael MacPherson
President and Chief Executive Officer
Freedom Federal Credit Union

#HeroNurses

LET’s CELEBRATE our #heronurses, HARFORD COUNTY!

WIN A $50 eGIFT CARD FOR A HARFORD COUNTY NURSE

#HeroNurses ContestLook for our #HeroNurses Photo Contest on our social media pages starting May 6th, 2020 running until Tuesday, May 12, 2020.

 

 

 

 

 

If you are a nurse or know a nurse who lives or works in Harford County…

1. POST a photo of a nurse (could be you!) in the comments on our Facebook or Twitter post
(Or use #HeroNurses and @FreedomFedCU on your public Instagram profile)

2. FOLLOW our social media page

3. SHARE our social media post

We will draw a winner Tuesday, May 12th, at about noon!

Visit us on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram to get started.
*Nurses may live and/or work in Harford County.  Nurses are welcome to enter themselves.