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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, July 21, 2008

THRIFTY CHOICES
Thrift comes naturally for this mom

Photo gallery: Coping with Less

By Dan Nakaso
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Mechanic Bert Uyeunten works on Jan Zane-Chin's car as she waits. Uyeunten helps her save up to 50 percent on repairs.

Photos by AKEMI HIATT | The Honolulu Advertiser

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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LIVING WITH LESS

The Advertiser's series continues on how Islanders are coping with rising costs.

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COST-SAVING TIPS

  • Changing just one 100-watt bulb to an equivalent 26-watt compact fluorescent, based on three hours, use a day, can save 81 kilowatt hours and up to $20 per year per bulb.

  • Two fans, rather than an 8,000 BTU room air conditioner running four hours a day, can save more than 1,150 kilowatt hours and $288 a year.

  • Cutting just two minutes per shower could save up to 1,533 kilowatt hours and $383 per year.

  • A faucet leaking just one hot water drop per second costs 400 kilowatt hours and $100 per year.

  • Switching from hot wash/warm rinse to the cold/cold cycle on a standard, top-loading washing machine for just two loads a week can save 225 kilowatt hours and $56 per year.

  • Letting dishes air dry instead of using heated drying in the average dishwasher saves 110 kilowatt hours and $28 per year.

  • Cutting use of a 150-watt, outdoor flood light from six hours to one hour a night with a motion sensor saves up to 270 kilowatt hours and $68 per year. Switching off a 100-watt light for just one, eight-hour day per week, can save 41 kilowatt hours and more than $10 per year.

    Source: Hawaiian Electric Co., AAA Daily Fuel Gauge Report

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    Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

    Zane-Chin shows pictures of daughter Alyssa Chin, 14, who competes in hula pageants, which can cost up to $700 each.

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    MORE TIPS FROM JAN ZANE-CHIN

  • Don't buy anything you haven't saved up for or can't afford. "It should be a necessity."

  • Break up bulk purchases from places like Costco and repackage them into individual servings, which can often be frozen.

  • Plan car trips to maximize driving and save on gas.

  • "You can do a lot with hamburger."

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    Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

    Mechanic Bert Uyeunten rotates the tires on Jan Zane-Chin's Camry. Zane-Chin turns to Uyeunten regularly for maintenance. "When money's tight, it's especially important to take care of what you have," she says.

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    Jan Zane-Chin and her daughter Alyssa now drink water from the faucet instead of buying bottled water, cut back on Alyssa's hula competitions because of the cost, clip coupons and buy food on sale.

    Zane-Chin, like untold others in Hawai'i, now finds herself squeezing even more out of every dollar she earns as a public school teacher to cover higher costs for everything from milk to electricity, which has jumped from $80 per month to $144 to power her three-bedroom, three-bath home in Kuli'ou'ou.

    So Zane-Chin's leaning even harder on the values she learned growing up in Turkey, Japan, South Korea and South Carolina as the daughter of an Army sergeant first class and a mother who made her own clothes.

    "That's how I was brought up," Zane-Chin said. "It's more common sense. That's how I learned to save money."

    Zane-Chin faces the same rising fuel, food and energy costs as everyone else. But she's also absorbing a new big-ticket expense with Alyssa enrolling as a freshman this fall at Punahou School, where the tuition just went up 6 percent to $16,675.

    Alyssa will probably attend Punahou with the same backpack she's used since the fifth grade.

    "She's not one of these gimme-gimme kids," Zane-Chin said. "She's great. She's like me. We take care of everything we have and it lasts."

    It's those old-school values that Karena Yee believes will help others cope with ever-increasing costs at the same time that Hawai'i's economy is slowing down.

    Yee, a certified public accountant, is also executive director of Hawai'i-based CSI Inc., a fee-for-service, nonprofit organization used as a referral service by the city's senior help line. Yee sees an opportunity in hard times for parents to teach their children cost-saving values.

    "The younger generation needs to really focus and learn about money management," Yee said. "We live in a spending society with an instant-gratification mentality. Their parents — our current generation — has been guilty, as well."

    For everyone struggling with higher prices, Yee has a simple, common-sense approach:

    "There are always, always, always places to cut back," she said. "It just takes discipline. It's never too late to start."

    Zane-Chin has been teaching third grade at Ma'ema'e School in Nu'uanu for the last 19 years and, like a lot of Hawai'i teachers, spends her own money supplying her classroom. So she began shopping for school supplies just as school ended, when $3 binders could be purchased for $1.

    But her biggest savings come from the biggest expenses.

    Zane-Chin turns to friends for referrals for plumbers and roofers, which sometimes results in savings of up to 50 percent.

    "I'm always looking for sales and bargains," she said. "But my greatest resource is word of mouth from friends."

    Eight years ago, she met Bert Uyeunten, an involved parent of one of her students who frequently read to the class.

    Then Zane-Chin learned that Uyeunten owned his own auto repair business in Iwilei — Bowtie Automotive.

    "Oh," she told Uyeunten. "So you're a mechanic."

    Zane-Chin still brings her car to Uyeunten for regular maintenance.

    "When money's tight, it's especially important to take care of what you have," Zane-Chin said.

    As he prepared Zane-Chin's Camry for an oil change and tire rotation recently, Uyeunten said Zane-Chin has the right philosophy for maintaining her 2003 Toyota Camry.

    In the last several weeks, Uyeunten has been getting more and more big repair jobs from customers who tried to scrimp on things like oil changes, which can cause sludge to build up, resulting in major repairs.

    Uyeunten walked across his shop, where a car sat with most of its engine removed. "It'll just cost you more in the long run," he said.

    They are the kind of values that Zane-Chin is teaching her daughter. And Zane-Chin hopes the message has gotten through.

    This year, Alyssa will participate in only one hula competition, which can cost up to $700 for costumes, flowers and other expenses, even if it's on O'ahu.

    For Alyssa's competition this September, Zane-Chin has volunteered as a chaperone, which includes a hotel room at the Ko Olina Resort & Marina.

    And when Alyssa got a cell phone, she offered not to have a text-messaging plan, Zane-Chin said.

    "I told her, 'With the cost of everything, maybe Mom needs to work summer school,' " Zane-Chin said. "She said, 'Mommy, you work so hard during the year. I would rather do without.' "

    Reach Dan Nakaso at dnakaso@honoluluadvertiser.com.