I donate to the VFW and they send me a check one or two times a year for a very low amount. I’m not even sure, maybe like $1.12? I don’t even read the mailer to be honest. I give what I can ($10/mo) and that’s it.
I don’t cash it because I want them to take MY money, not give me $1.12 back. I am not sure what this tactic is, maybe it’s for stamps. I get frustrated that they send me so much mail, and they send me stuff like pens, calendars, a calculator, Christmas CDs, socks, and even oven mitts (I donate all of this stuff to our local senior center.) I think last month they actually sent me a dollar bill (which I of course kept). None of this makes me donate more. Hopefully they are still making money off me.
Anyway, my dad also donates and he cashes his $1.12 check every time. But, he’s a veteran so he’s got a different relationship with the VFW than I do.
Just curious - if you don’t mind.
What is your superstition? That it will bring you luck? Like having it stolen twice?
And why does your wife mind? I can think of any number of things I do that irritate my wife, but can’t imagine her caring whether or not I picked up pennies.
Of course I don’t mind: My very mild superstition is that it will bring luck. As I have been rather fortunate all my life, this holds*. And my wife is of the opinion that one should not pick up things from the street. Except, perhaps, to put them in a bin. Something like: streets are dirty, that coin is soiled and one penny is not worth it.
What about opening a new thread with the things one does to/that irritate your consort? You have made me curious too.
*Like the elefants that are not there, if you know what I mean.
ETA: Having a jar with perhaps 10 Deutsche Mark and another one with perhaps 10 Euro in pennies stolen is not bad luck, it is a burden lifted.
We regularly get checks for small amounts from secondary insurance companies paying the 20% split off a <$10 service. We also send bills to patients for small amounts under $10. Taken together I’d guess these comprise roughly 10% of our gross revenue.
Checks are processed in batches. I will not, however, process a credit card transaction for under $2.
I got a check for thirty-seven cents once. It was my share of a class action lawsuit settlement. I definitely deposited it because, If ten million people got that check and didn’t cash it because of its minuscule size, that company would get away with not paying out $3,700,000.
My former employer use to pay everyone with a “guesstimate” paycheck just before the Christmas break then make up the difference after returning to work a few weeks later. I received checks for 12 cents, 17 cents and 19 cents during this period. We use to have check pool, $5 a person, it all goes to the person with the smallest check. Saw a number of 1 cent checks then.
Except the story made the point that the number of people who deposited the small cheques dropped off as the cheques got smaller. Trump was a stand-out becuase he would deposit cheques for pennies.
Yes, someone else is depositing. But who set the rules?
For something like that? It would be up to the discretion of the accountant. I subscribed to Spy when that article was written and I remember thinking that it was ridiculous then.
When I used to walk around the neighborhood for exercise I used to do this. At the end of one year, I added it all up. It was around $45. I was amazed it was that much. Decent result for so little effort.
In the past I supported a company accounting system. There were reports between each step in the series. If there were any discrepancies reported, I was called in to find and fix them. I hated the tiny discrepancies because they could be anywhere. Million (and, once, billion) dollar discrepancies were usually easy to find.
I’m just zombifying this thread to point out that on my way to work this morning, I found a penny (well, a European one cent coin) and, true to my principles expressed in this thread, I picked it up. It’s astonishing how often I find pennies (or two cent coins, or five cent coins). Once every few weeks, I would say. You’d think it’d be much rarer than that.