โMar-03-2017 02:51 AM
โMar-05-2017 08:52 AM
drsteve wrote:User fees are never enough to pay all the expenses of a state park. The taxpayers pickup the majority of the expenses/costs.
Not in Michigan. The state doesn't spend a penny of general fund money on the parks, in spite of the fact that the parks generate plenty of economic activity that benefits everyone. That's why so much needed maintenance on facilities goes undone, nevermind updates and improvements.
โMar-05-2017 08:38 AM
User fees are never enough to pay all the expenses of a state park. The taxpayers pickup the majority of the expenses/costs.
โMar-05-2017 06:57 AM
bucky wrote:It probably is a huge amount of money, and the fees are therefore equally huge. Your zero interest credit card still costs the merchant (in this case the state) two or three percent when they process that deposit. Doesn't matter if you pay it off that month or default and never pay the bill.
Some of you are missing my point. I don't mind them having my money up front. I'm just saying that the collective amount from ALL of us is a huge number.
I pay my bills every month, so all my cards are zero interest.
As to how a business runs I'm pretty well versed.
Thanks for sharing your input, that's what makes America great. We can agree to disagree. I'm done.
โMar-05-2017 02:48 AM
โMar-04-2017 05:57 PM
โMar-04-2017 03:32 PM
Matt_Colie wrote:At my parks, deposits do pretty much sit in a drawer. That money is not mine, it is not yet "earned". For every dollar of deposit money, I have an offsetting liability, that reservation that has basically pre-paid the deposit amount. I do not actually earn that deposit money until the site is used and the deposit is applied to the guest's stay. Using deposits to create cash flow is just robbing Peter to pay Paul.
I have read though this thread and while we rarely use crampgrounds, if you understand how businesses work, you will appreciate all the more what the "paid in advance" does for the typically cash strapped parks system in any state or any private crampground for that matter.
Things always need something. If you don't have it or can't grow it, you need to buy it.....
If you need to buy it, you need money. If you don't have money, you have to borrow money and that costs money.
So, when you pay a reservation fee, that money does not sit in a drawer waiting. It will be used to defray the costs of acquiring needed materials and services without incurring additional cost.
In short, paying a reservation in advance actually saves us all money on the site rental side. My only problem is that our travel these days is so irregular that predicting where we will be is just not possible.
Matt
โMar-04-2017 03:01 PM
โMar-04-2017 01:22 PM
โMar-04-2017 08:21 AM
โMar-04-2017 07:44 AM
โMar-04-2017 07:29 AM
โMar-04-2017 06:46 AM
โMar-04-2017 06:20 AM
bucky wrote:Why would a government entity get a lower rate on credit card fees? The are not a high volume user. No government agency runs more credit card transactions than Walmart, or Amazon, or probably even the local convenience store. You MAY have one or two transactions with the state via credit card each year, you probably use your card 100 times at the local grocery store in that same period.
I'm not fussing, just stating that that is a huge amount of money upfront that could be invested and should be. After the first year it's all gravy. We used to invest money from the business over the weekend and made bank on it. I'm sure their Comptroller knows how to maximize assets.
I'm also pretty sure that credit card fees are drastically reduced for state and local governments. As is electricity etc.
All of that being said if it had been up to me when we retired I'd have been your neighbor in FL, but you can't separate a Mama from her cubs.
โMar-04-2017 05:48 AM