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Lawrence Delva-Gonzalez and his wife went from being $150,000 in debt to having a net worth of $1.5 million. AdvertisementLawrence Delva-Gonzalez, 41, was $150,000 in debt in 2012, working a job that paid $27,000 a year. A little over a decade later, he and his wife grew their net worth to over $1.5 million. By 2017, the two of them could pay down debt to the point of having a net worth of zero. Their net worth grew to over $450,000 in January 2021, over $650,000 in January 2022, over $800,000 in January 2023, and $1.53 million in August 2024, according to his blog The Neighborhood Finance Guy.
Persons: Lawrence Delva, Gonzalez, , maxed, Delva, Doreen, Finance Guy, hasn't Organizations: Service, FIRE, Florida State University, Marine Corps, Public, Finance Locations: Haiti, Delva, Port, Miami, Black
Doreen and Lawrence Delva-Gonzalez had a zero-dollar net worth in 2017. In 2017, Doreen and Lawrence had a net worth of zero dollars. Four years later, the couple had built a net worth of around $500,000, according to records viewed by Insider. "I think the first step is to use a tool like Personal Capital to pull up your net worth and acknowledge where you are," Lawrence said. "People should work on their soft skills because that's going to position them to interview better, so they can make more money," Lawrence said.
Persons: Doreen, Lawrence Delva, Gonzalez, , Lawrence, They've, Gonzalezes, Read, Roth IRAs, lef, Lawrence's, Lawrence siad Organizations: Service Locations: Upper Marlboro , Maryland, Haiti, Marlboro , Maryland, Tallahassee , Florida
Nov 16 (Reuters) - The Dominican Republic is stepping up deportations of Haitians and is creating a police unit focused on foreigners, fueling tensions between the two Caribbean nations whose relations have for decades been marred by migration disputes. "Prime Minister Ariel Henry is very concerned about the mass deportations that are taking place in the Dominican Republic," said Jean-Junior Joseph, a spokesperson for the prime minister's office, in a statement on Wednesday. U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk on Nov. 10 called on the Dominican Republic to halt deportations of Haitians, citing violence and systematic human rights violations in their home country. Abinader in comments broadcast by Dominican media described Turk's comments as "unacceptable and irresponsible," saying that the Dominican Republic did not have resources to help more Haitians and adding that authorities would boost deportations. Jean Bonheur Delva, head of the National Migration Office, told local media on Tuesday the figure was around 50,000 in the last three months.
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