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Alexander vs. Fedex Willis vs. Fedex
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<blockquote data-quote="bacha29" data-source="post: 3340881" data-attributes="member: 58386"><p>As far as an IRA is concerned class action settlements are not considered "qualified income" and cannot be applied toward an IRA. As far as an HSA a person on Medicare can no longer contribute. I went on Medicare last November 2017 and likewise you have to have a healthcare plan with a high deductible. My Medicare Advantage Plan has a $700 deductible which isn't high enough to meet the "high deductible" definition. Then again given that my monthly premium for the plan is just $ 22 a month I'm not complaining. No wife, no kids, no debts and no mortgage. With the single family housing market around here severely depressed I will take whatever money is left over and spend it on some purely upkeep and maintenance related home improvements Thank you for your help and together we'll keep looking at all possible options when it comes to minimizing the taxes on the settlement. </p><p></p><p>I don't know if you could call the business practices XG uses cleverness of sleeze but you can't help but be impressed with the way they do it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bacha29, post: 3340881, member: 58386"] As far as an IRA is concerned class action settlements are not considered "qualified income" and cannot be applied toward an IRA. As far as an HSA a person on Medicare can no longer contribute. I went on Medicare last November 2017 and likewise you have to have a healthcare plan with a high deductible. My Medicare Advantage Plan has a $700 deductible which isn't high enough to meet the "high deductible" definition. Then again given that my monthly premium for the plan is just $ 22 a month I'm not complaining. No wife, no kids, no debts and no mortgage. With the single family housing market around here severely depressed I will take whatever money is left over and spend it on some purely upkeep and maintenance related home improvements Thank you for your help and together we'll keep looking at all possible options when it comes to minimizing the taxes on the settlement. I don't know if you could call the business practices XG uses cleverness of sleeze but you can't help but be impressed with the way they do it. [/QUOTE]
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