The blog reports information of interest to seniors, their families, and caregivers. Recurrent themes are asset and decision-making protection, and aging-in-place planning.
Friday, December 17, 2010
PainSAFE™ to aid in Pain Management and Care
Saturday, December 11, 2010
For the Family Caregiver, the Perfect Holiday is a State of Mind
Thursday, December 2, 2010
PBS's "Frontline" Confronts End-of-Life Planning
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Business Succession Planning Neglected
Health concerns, however, can compel succession earlier than expected. A business owner's incapacity, incompetency, or disability may render the owner incapable of transitioning a business to a successor. But, death is unquestionably the most severe of the reasons compelling succession of a business. Given the risk that a poorly planned succession might rob the business owner's heirs of a substantial inheritance, and risk otherwise guaranteed inheritance by burdening an estate and heirs with debts and obligations, one would assume that most business owners consider carefully succession of their business.
Many, however, aren't thinking about it at all.
Monday, June 21, 2010
Young Adults to Have Expanded Health Insurance Access
An Ohio law that allows unmarried children or stepchildren up to age twenty-eight (28) to remain or be added to their parent’s insurance coverage becomes effective July 1, 2010. As a result of the new law, parents should evaluate the opportunity and the cost of this new coverage. The Director of the Ohio Department of Insurance, Mary Jo Hudson, wrote in a release that [a]n estimated 20,000 additional young adults, who are more likely than any other age group to be uninsured, will now be eligible for coverage." The statement continued: “These changes, combined with our work to implement the recently passed federal reforms, are granting more Ohioans access to coverage and decreasing the number of uninsured Ohioans." The state reform will work in tandem with the federal law dependent age change that becomes effective September 23, 2010. Previously, only dependents up to age 19, or up to 23 years old if they were still in school, were eligible to receive coverage under their parents’ policies. |
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Ohio Pet Trusts
In Ohio, Pet Trusts (sometimes called Pet Care Trusts) are a relatively new legal tool used to provide for the care and maintenance of a companion animal should its owner die or become disabled. The primary purpose of a Pet Care Trust is to ensure that your beloved pet is cared for and protected as you would wish.
Millions of Americans consider their dogs, cats, exotic birds, and other pets more than just animals, and certainly much more than just personal property. Pets are often trusted friends and companions. Pets provide emotional support, comfort, security, happiness, joy, satisfaction, and purpose. The close connections between pet owners and their pets often causes owners to desire protection, care, and consideration of the needs of their animal companions in the event they are unable to provide that care.
The law generally views pets as personal property, despite the fact that many individuals with companion animals view them quite differently than other possessions. In fact, many people consider their pets as family members or children. A 2005 study found that seventy-three percent of dog owners and sixty-five percent of cat owners “consider their companion animals to be akin to a child or other close family member.”
Although many pet owners assume that a member of their family will take care of their pets after they die, the family members often do not want responsibility for the pet. The harsh reality is that a significant number of the four to six million animals euthanized in the United States every year are pets left without care when their owners die. Others end up in shelters and rescue charities. Some universities with veterinary schools have responded to this issue by “offering perpetual pet care programs that promise student care, including all necessary medical needs, for pets when the owner becomes disabled or dies.” However, to avail oneself of the program an owner must make some type of donation to an “appropriate school-associated foundation.”
Pet Trusts have, as a result, become quite popular. One author wrote, "[t]he pet trust has earned wide acceptance despite its unique non-human and noncharitable nature and has been adopted relatively quickly compared to other novel types of trusts."
A Pet Trust can be crafted as a stand-alone trust or as part of a another trust that you create. Pet Trusts require someone to fund them called a Grantor or Settlor. A Pet Trust will typically set aside enough money or property to care for a pet(s) during the lifetime of the pet. The Grantor selects a trustee to manage the money for the benefit of the pet, and a caretaker to manage the pet's care. The trustee should be someone trusted, who is financially responsible and cares about the pet. The caretaker should be someone who knows and loves the pet, who can provide a comfortable home and who is willing to accept the responsibility for the pet's welfare. While the same individual can act as both trustee and caretaker, it sometimes advisable to use separate individuals to ensure proper care for a pet.
A Pet Trust will often specify instructions regarding care of the pet. The most commonly included details are:
- identification of the pet;
- food and diet instructions;
- grooming instructions;
- Veterinary care instructions;
- compensation for the caregiver and trustee;
- how the caregiver must document expenses;
- how the trustee is to monitor the caregiver’s services;
- whether and how the trust will cover liabilities should the pet bite or injure someone or damage property;
- final burial or cremation instructions.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Noteworthy Changes to Coverdell Accounts Demand Consideration
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Avoiding Sham Trusts and Trust Scams: Part I - Sham Trusts
What is a Sham Trust?
Avoiding Sham Trusts and Trust Scams - Part II - Trust Scams
Most Do Not Have Advanced Directives
"Schiavo's life and death captivated the country and fueled conversations about the necessity of the documents, known as advance directives or living wills. Even though millions witnessed a worse-case scenario, there's no indication it had a lasting impact on getting more people to make their wishes known."
"The gap is so big," Paul Malley, president of Aging With Dignity, is quoted as saying. Aging With Dignity advocates advance directives and saw an increase in interest during the Schiavo case. "Even a significant impact from the Schiavo case doesn't put a dent in the need that's out there."
Underwriting Ceases on National Flood Insurance
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FROM THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE
Monday, March 29, 2010
CONSUMER ADVISORY:
National Flood Insurance Program Not Issuing New Policies
Monday, March 29, 2010
National Healthcare Decisions Day is April 16
Annuity Tax Remains in Health Care Reform
Despite protests from insurance groups, the health care reconciliation act will add a new tax on annuity income to pay for Medicare once the bill becomes law.
Wednesday, March 24, 2010
Ohio Increases Annuity Guaranty Coverage
Planners' Corner- Health Care Reform and LTCI
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Beware Fake Health Care Plans In Wake of Reform
Fraudulent plans continue to grow in size and scope. "There's no end in sight," said James Quiggle, communications director for the Coalition Against Insurance Fraud. A common scam involves plans that promise full health care coverage but deliver worthless policies or lesser products designed to look like comprehensive coverage, said Quiggle, who has studied the issue for years. Consumers may purchase "limited benefit" plans or medical discount cards that often present themselves as providing full insurance coverage -- until the bills come, he said. Such fraudulent plans surged in the early 2000s, Quiggle said. When confronted, companies sometimes claimed they were not subject to state insurance regulation...Regulators knocked many of them out of business in the mid-2000s, he said, but the combined effects of recession, sustained joblessness and increasing numbers of uninsured provided a target-rich environment for their return. The number of people victimized are in the tens of thousands, he said.
States Attack Community Spouse Income Planning
Nonetheless, states have waged an aggressive battle in the courts to prevent families from converting assets to income, but have, to date, been largely unsuccessful. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals, for example, recently held that since the annuity payment is payable to the community spouse, it is income and should not be included in the eligibility calculations, regardless of whether it can be sold on the secondary market. Weatherbee v. Richman, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 24939 (2009). See also, Vieth v. Ohio Dep't of Job and Family Servs., 2009 Ohio 3748 (Ohio Ct. App., Franklin County, July 30, 2009) (where community spouse purchased $140,000 annuity, court granted Medicaid benefits to the institutional spouse). But see, N.M. v. DMAHS, 405 N.J. Super. 353 (2009) (annuity is countable for Medicaid purposes if it can be sold in the secondary market).
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
End-of-Life Care Not to Blame for Increased Costs
"Today Show" Tells Story of Divorce Resulting from Long Term Care
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Value of Annuities Behind Fed Efforts to Boost Retirement Savings
Thursday, March 4, 2010
Planner's Corner- Beware of Ghostwritten Articles
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
Avoiding Census Fraud
- If a U.S. Census worker knocks on your door, they will have a badge, a handheld device, a Census Bureau canvas bag, and a confidentiality notice. Ask to see their identification and their badge before answering their questions. However, you should never invite anyone you don't know into your home.
Saturday, February 13, 2010
CitiMortgage Program to Aid Borrowers Avoid Foreclosure Costs
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Doctors Avoid End-of-life Counseling with Patients
The study, published online, by Nancy L. Keating, MD, MPH, of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, and colleagues, surveyed 4,188 physicians about how they would talk to a hypothetical cancer patient with four to six months to live. A majority of respondents (65%) said they would discuss prognosis, but only a minority said they would discuss do-not-resuscitate status (44%), hospice (26%) or preferred site of death (21%) at that time. Rather, they would wait until symptoms were present or until there were no more treatments to offer. An abstract and the full text of the study are available here.
Current guidelines, from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, a not-for-profit alliance of 21 of the world's leading cancer centers, say that such conversations should be initiated whenever a patient has been given less than a year to live, if not at diagnosis. The survey suggests that these guidelines are not being observed in practice.
The survey did not ask physicians to explain their answers, but the researchers offered several possibilities.
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Alzheimer's: Type 3 Diabetes?
Some experts are now calling Alzheimer's, "Type 3 diabetes" or diabetes of the brain. Here are a few links between the two diseases:
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Beware Direct Transfer Designations (TOD's/POD's)
Benefits of Direct Transfer Designations
Direct transfer designations, such as POD's and TOD's have several benefits. The most important benefits are that they are cheap and easy. Most institutions will permit you to make such designations as a service, for no additional fee. They are simple to create, and there is no need for an attorney or other professional. Most of these designations are made by account owners without legal or professional advice or counsel. Particularly because of their simplicity, they are very popular.
The second benefit is that the payment or transfer is more or less immediate and direct. Where there is a need to make cash or other liquid assets immediately available to a child or grandchild for some purpose, a TOD or POD appear attractive at first glance. Beneficiary transfers, however, typically require claim forms, and documentation in support of the claim. In reality, the process may take more time and effort than succession of ownership (such as through a living trust or joint tenancy with right of survivorship). Nonetheless, it is the assumption that funds are available immediately that often causes folks to choose direct transfer designations.
Monday, February 1, 2010
New AOA Website Offers Legal Help
AoA’s five national non-profit partners are: the National Senior Citizens Law Center, the National Consumer Law Center, The Center for Social Gerontology, The Center for Elder Rights Advocacy, and the American Bar Association Commission on Law and Aging.
Yes, You Can Follow Michael Jackson's Estate!
Even if you are not interested, the fact that you can follow the developments in probate court is instructive; it speaks volumes to the level of privacy one can expect in probate cases. It also serves to illustrate what can be accomplished with trust planning. You will note that Michael Jackson's estate plan included a revocable trust. Although the probate court will involve numerous issues, such as guardianship of the children, if Michael Jackson;s trust was completely funded, identification and valuation of assets, and court overseen administration of them, would be limited.
How to View the Court Docket for Michael Jackson's Estate:
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Things to Remember at Tax Time
- Gifts. Did you give away any money this year? The gift tax can be very confusing. If you gave away more than $13,000 in 2009, you will have to file a Form 709, the gift tax return. This does not necessarily mean you will owe taxes on the money, however, and most folks making gifts will owe no tax. Click here for more information.
- Medical Expenses. Many types of medical expenses are tax deductible, from hospital stays to hearing aids. To claim the deduction, your medical expenses have to be more than 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income. This includes all out-of-pocket costs for prescriptions (including deductibles and co-pays) and Medicare Part B and Part C and Part D premiums. (Medicare Part B premiums are usually deducted out of your Social Security benefits, so be sure to check your 1099 for the amount.) You can only deduct medical expenses you paid during the year, regardless of when the services were provided, and medical expenses are not deductible if they are reimbursable by insurance. Click here for more information.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Carryover Basis Complicates Planning / Settlement
The good news is, that for most smaller estates, the practical effect of the change is non-existent. Moderate and larger estates, however, will now find additional taxes, and complications.
A stepped up basis means that the recipient of an inherited asset gets to increase the income tax basis of the asset to its date of death fair market value, which in turn is the basis used for calculating capital gains taxes when the inherited asset is sold. But not so now - instead for deaths occurring in 2010 an heir will receive the decedent's original basis in the inherited asset, which can be adjusted by the executor or personal representative using the new modified carryover basis rules. The personal representative call allocate additional basis to the property received by the beneficiary, in order to reduce the capital gain.
In 2009 and years prior, for example, if a beneficiary inherited a house that cost the decedent $500,000 but
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
No Estate Tax in 2010 - Good and Bad News
Under the provisions of a Bush-era tax-cut bill enacted in 2001, the value of estates exempt from the tax has increased over the past eight years while the tax rate on estates has been reduced, so that in 2009 only an individual estate worth $3.5 million or more is taxed, at a rate of 45 percent. For the year 2010, according to the 2001 law, the estate tax disappears entirely, only to be restored in 2011 at a rate of 55 percent on estates of $1 million or more.
For persons with larger estates, their estate plans will need to reviewed and reconciled with the lack of
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Strange Suit Against Michael Jackson's Estate
According to TMZ, "Claire McMillan says she's a 'homeschool expert' who did 'a thorough analysis' of Jackson's complete extended family, to determine ... well, it's not clear why she was doing it. Whatever ... she concluded that Katherine Jackson is doing 'a poor job outside of the home, related to - grooming, age, and psyc (sic) appropriate activities, same-sex, academic & soc interactions w/ non-extended family children .... ' oh, what's the use? It makes no sense."
TMZ reports that McMillan claims she also inquired as to whether Dr. Arnold Klein would be interested in obtaining guardianship of the children with McMillan and her husband. McMillan claims that her time is worth $1,000 an hour, and she wants $2,002,000 for her efforts. Wow!
Howard Weitzman, lawyer for the Michael Jackson estate, reportedly told TMZ that, "[t]o the best of our knowledge, Ms. McMillan never did anything for the estate and the estate owes her nothing." TMZ goes so far as to characterize the suit as a "Crazy Creditor's Claim." No clarification if TMZ is saying the claim is crazy, the creditor is crazy, or both.
You can read more here.
Michael Jackson's Estate Sued Over Memorial
Ohio, too, has a statute which permits taxpayer suits in certain cases.
While the memorial cost the city millions, it also reportedly earned $4 million for the city’s hotels, restaurants
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Laddering Fixed Annuities for Cash Accumulation
The Wharton academic study revealed that:
Income annuities can provide secure income for one's entire lifetime for 25-40% less money than it would cost an individual to provide a similar level of secure lifetime income through traditional means, thanks to an insurer's ability to spread risk across large numbers of people;
Consumers are not annuitizing enough of their portfolios even though income annuities are low-cost, available from creditworthy insurers, and provide guaranteed payments for life. Equities, fixed income and other investment products like mutual funds carry the risk of outliving one's nest egg;
By covering at least basic living expenses with income annuities, consumers have much greater flexibility in other areas of a retirement plan, including the ability to take more investment risk with the remaining portfolio; and- Recent innovations in income annuities, such as annual inflation adjustments, legacy benefits and access to capital in emergencies, have helped elevate the products to a desirable asset class in retirement.
Caregiving Complicated By Late-In-Life Marriages
Mrs. Staffler calls her step-daughters to inform them that her husband, their father, has been admitted to the hospital following a massive stroke. As they gather in the hospital, it quickly becomes clear that the eldest daughter has been selected to give Mrs. Staffler some chilling and unexpected news. "You are not making decisions for our father; as his daughters, we will decide what needs to be done for him."
Feeling betrayed and offended, Mrs. Staffler rushes home to retrieve the health care power of attorney which appoints her as attorney-in-fact to make health care decisions. Armed with what she trusts is a clear statement of her authority, she returns to the hospital to find that the step-daughter has an attorney, and a caseworker from adult protective services awaiting her. In the ensuing battle, the stepdaughter is appointed guardian for her father by the probate court, and Mrs. Staffler is forced to hire an attorney to prevent the court from appointing a guardian for her.
Although she is successful in maintaining her freedom and independence, her legal expenses exceed fifteen thousand dollars. Moreover, although Mrs. Staffler assumed that she would have access to her husband's estate to care for her in the event of her husband's death, it is now apparent that the step daughters want their to inherit from their father's estate immediatelyupon his death.
Friday, January 1, 2010
Trust Scammers Refuse to Pay Penalty; Hurl Insults at Court
Jeffrey and Stanley Norman, owners of two companies that were fined $6.4 million Oct. 14 for having non-lawyers perform legal functions as part of an alleged trust-mill scam targeting the elderly, now owe more than $7 million with penalties for non-payment. The Normans unsuccessfully tried to get the Supreme Court to rehear the case, but "[w]hen that failed, Jeffrey Norman lashed out at the court, accusing justices of a 'disgusting abuse of power.'"
Reportedly, Norman has said he would not pay the fine, calling it unfair, and he has put his southern California home on the market for $4.9 million. Even if the state does collect the money, the proceeds won't go directly to victims of the alleged scam. The funds, under court rules, go toward the cost of investigating allegations of unauthorized practice of law, continuing legal education and other purposes.
The Normans were principals in the American Family Prepaid Legal Corporation scheme that resulted in The Ohio Supreme Court instituting a civil penalty in excess of six million dollars. I wrote about the Court's action last November (2009), under the blog entitled "Court Imposes $6.3 Million Civil Penalty on "Trust Mill" Companies and Owners."
BIOGRAPHY
Monty received his Juris Doctorate from Washington University School of Law in St. Louis, Missouri, where he served on the Washington University Law Quarterly, Washington University's most prestigious law review. Monty has been admitted to practice in Ohio, Illinois and Missouri, and currently practices in Ohio and Missouri. He is a member of several local and state bar associations.
Monty graduated from Tallmadge High School in Summit County, Ohio. He received his B.A. in political science from Eastern Illinois University, where he attended on a full academic scholarship. Monty was an intercollegiate debater, and received numerous individual and team awards, including placing second at "Novice Nationals," a national tournament for freshmen debaters, and qualifying three times for the National Debate Tournament. While at Eastern Illinois, Monty was an award winner in the annual social sciences writing competition, and received a coveted appointment to the Student Legal Services Board after serving as a student legal intern.
Monty is a member of the National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys, Inc. (NAELA). He is also a member of the National Family Caregivers Association, and the National Care Planning Council.
You can learn more about Attorney Donohew, his practice, background, credentials and education at the Estate Planning Information Center, http://www.donohew.com/. You can follow his blog at http://estateplanningcenter.blogspot.com/.