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Dave Ramsey Tells Former IT Worker Making Chick-fil-A Wages to 'Get Your Butt in Gear' After Vehicle Disasters Drain Emergency Fund

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
A couple who paid off consumer debt and moved hit a rough patch when both vehicles failed, leaving them with $300 in savings. Now working at Chick-fil-A with a combined $45,000 income, the former IT contractor received pointed advice from Dave Ramsey about income, not debt.

Sometimes a streak of bad luck lands you exactly where you don't expect to be. For Justin, that meant going from self-employed IT contractor to working the counter at Chick-fil-A, with exactly $300 in the bank.

Here's how it happened: Justin and his wife had recently celebrated paying off their consumer debt before relocating. Shortly after the move, their second vehicle was totaled. The insurance payout went toward buying a cheap replacement vehicle, which promptly died too. Their remaining vehicle now needs repairs, and nearly all of their emergency fund got eaten up by transportation costs.

Justin called into "The Ramsey Show" to explain the situation. One working vehicle, almost no cash reserves, and a combined household income of roughly $45,000 annually between him and his wife.

Focus on Income, Not More Debt

Dave Ramsey didn't mince words. "Get your butt in gear," the personal finance host told Justin, emphasizing that the solution wasn't borrowing more money but dramatically increasing their income.

"I want to let them go — you're broke," Ramsey said about postponing minor vehicle repairs while cash was this tight. "When you escalate those little things to make them big things, you're adding to your drama."

The message was clear: yes, the situation is difficult, but it's manageable without taking on debt. Ramsey advised the couple to stick with one vehicle temporarily and work multiple jobs if that's what it takes to rebuild their cash position.

He also touched on the relationship side of financial pressure. "We can rebuild communication and we can rebuild trust," Ramsey said, stressing that both partners need complete visibility into the household finances during tough times like these.

Why Chick-fil-A, and Why It Can't Last

"We're both working at a Chick-fil-A currently because they were willing to work with us on the scheduling," Justin explained. Coordinated shifts meant they could share the one working vehicle between them.

Before the pandemic, Justin worked as a self-employed IT subcontractor doing on-site work that involved substantial travel. He's been working to rebuild that business while catching up on certifications.

Co-host Jade Warshaw pointed out what the numbers were screaming: two adults working full time for a combined $45,000 isn't a bad luck problem, it's an income problem. Ramsey agreed and pushed Justin to leverage his technical background immediately to increase earnings and rebuild savings.

Ramsey challenged the notion that certifications were the main barrier. Justin already possesses skills "90% of the public doesn't know how to do," he said, and should be taking on side IT work right now, even if client payments take longer to materialize. Working at Chick-fil-A should be a temporary bridge, not the destination.

The underlying point: when you're broke, the path forward isn't about managing poverty more efficiently. It's about earning your way out.

Dave Ramsey Tells Former IT Worker Making Chick-fil-A Wages to 'Get Your Butt in Gear' After Vehicle Disasters Drain Emergency Fund

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
A couple who paid off consumer debt and moved hit a rough patch when both vehicles failed, leaving them with $300 in savings. Now working at Chick-fil-A with a combined $45,000 income, the former IT contractor received pointed advice from Dave Ramsey about income, not debt.

Sometimes a streak of bad luck lands you exactly where you don't expect to be. For Justin, that meant going from self-employed IT contractor to working the counter at Chick-fil-A, with exactly $300 in the bank.

Here's how it happened: Justin and his wife had recently celebrated paying off their consumer debt before relocating. Shortly after the move, their second vehicle was totaled. The insurance payout went toward buying a cheap replacement vehicle, which promptly died too. Their remaining vehicle now needs repairs, and nearly all of their emergency fund got eaten up by transportation costs.

Justin called into "The Ramsey Show" to explain the situation. One working vehicle, almost no cash reserves, and a combined household income of roughly $45,000 annually between him and his wife.

Focus on Income, Not More Debt

Dave Ramsey didn't mince words. "Get your butt in gear," the personal finance host told Justin, emphasizing that the solution wasn't borrowing more money but dramatically increasing their income.

"I want to let them go — you're broke," Ramsey said about postponing minor vehicle repairs while cash was this tight. "When you escalate those little things to make them big things, you're adding to your drama."

The message was clear: yes, the situation is difficult, but it's manageable without taking on debt. Ramsey advised the couple to stick with one vehicle temporarily and work multiple jobs if that's what it takes to rebuild their cash position.

He also touched on the relationship side of financial pressure. "We can rebuild communication and we can rebuild trust," Ramsey said, stressing that both partners need complete visibility into the household finances during tough times like these.

Why Chick-fil-A, and Why It Can't Last

"We're both working at a Chick-fil-A currently because they were willing to work with us on the scheduling," Justin explained. Coordinated shifts meant they could share the one working vehicle between them.

Before the pandemic, Justin worked as a self-employed IT subcontractor doing on-site work that involved substantial travel. He's been working to rebuild that business while catching up on certifications.

Co-host Jade Warshaw pointed out what the numbers were screaming: two adults working full time for a combined $45,000 isn't a bad luck problem, it's an income problem. Ramsey agreed and pushed Justin to leverage his technical background immediately to increase earnings and rebuild savings.

Ramsey challenged the notion that certifications were the main barrier. Justin already possesses skills "90% of the public doesn't know how to do," he said, and should be taking on side IT work right now, even if client payments take longer to materialize. Working at Chick-fil-A should be a temporary bridge, not the destination.

The underlying point: when you're broke, the path forward isn't about managing poverty more efficiently. It's about earning your way out.