
I'm a little sad, as I've just checked how much the music lessons cost



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and who says men have to wear them?sejintenej wrote:For men M & S have several ranges with solid and/or multi-coloured and / or striped feet; you can get each male member of the house different socks but with identical colours appearing above the shoe. They come as bulkbuys with each pair different so it is easy to say that Fred has blue and Bob has pink (suits him?) .....SAS wrote:Me too! "Sock matching" is a job dreaded by everyone here. Am hoping my son ends up with size 11 feet so that I stop wearing his by mistake.
Isn't it woked out on your 'assessed' income though? I mean after deductions for mortgage/rent, Council Tax, water rates etc?pinkhebe wrote:It's in the financial contributions part of the web site, if your income is over £17k it's about £680/year
Even when deductions have been made for allowable expenses, £17k is not much for a family to live on nowadays, especially if a substantial chunk of this is already earmarked for school fees. The ready reckoner indicates that from this modest income CH would charge fees of £3800, leaving a family with £1100 a month to pay for food, utilities, transport, clothes... if you're a couple with other children at home this won't go far. I can easily see why Pinkhebe is worried that expenditure of £680 a year on music lessons is going to be an unaffordable luxury.pinkhebe wrote:
It's in the financial contributions part of the web site, if your income is over £17k it's about £680/year
Isn't it woked out on your 'assessed' income though? I mean after deductions for mortgage/rent, Council Tax, water rates etc?