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Today's Featured Elder Care Expert is California Attorney Heather R. Chubb

Question:  My father had a Revocable Trust made several months ago. My concern is that my father now has very limited liquid assets & is in need of 24/7 care. He has partial interest in a home (which the joint owners refuse to sell) and lives in his condo with my sister.  He has been paying for elder care 8 hours a day, 7 days a week, which he really cannot afford. He has not yet spent down to $2,000 in liquid assets, but he will be down to that level very soon. The problem I have is that I am going to apply for VA Pension on my father’s behalf, & I was told 2 things that concern me. 1) He cannot have more than $40,000 in assets. 2) The VA does not recognize unsecured loans, which he has. Would you please provide some advice?

Answer:  Your situation presents an excellent example of the importance of planning before the need for care arises.  You do not indicate how old your father is or what type of illness or care he needs or his income.  I do see that he needs 24/7 care but is only paying for 8 hours per day.  I presume that since he is living with your sister she is providing some of the additional care.  If his goal is to stay with your sister as long as possible the VA pension will be a great resource for achieving this.  If he needs more care than can be provided at home for a reasonable cost then you may want to look at the available Medi-Cal benefits.  Depending on which County your father lives in (or can move to) and his income, he may qualify for Medi-Cal’s Assisted Living Waiver program (this program has an income cap) or for In-Home Operations (this program uses the same qualifiers as the Skilled Nursing facility program and there is no income cap).  Once your father qualifies for Medi-Cal the VA benefit will drop to $90/month, which he will get to keep in addition to the $35/month personal allowance provided by Medi-Cal. 

Regarding the net worth qualification for the VA pension, you are correct that the VA does not allow unsecured debts to reduce net worth.  You are also correct that the VA will exclude from net worth the portion owned by a joint owner.  Unlike Medi-Cal (Medicaid) the VA does not have a bright line rule for the amount of assets the veteran may keep and still qualify for pension.  The VA instead looks at net worth in terms of life expectancy.

You indicate your father created a revocable trust several months ago.  If he still has mental capacity several options are available to him.  He could create an irrevocable trust now and transfer his assets to it to reduce net worth.  He would need to be extremely careful how the transfers took place so that eligibility for Medi-Cal would not be jeopardized.  In addition, he would need to work with an attorney who will help him evaluate and understand all the planning and tax issues such transfers can create, and one who is well versed in both VA pension and Medi-Cal law.  While the VA does not penalize transfers or have a look back period, if he needs 24/7 care later on in a nursing home Medi-Cal will be an important tool for him. 

Outright transfers of the house and condo to his children could also be done.  There would be no VA penalties, but there will be adverse tax implications in the form of loss of basis (which creates additional capital gains tax upon sale), and Med-Cal transfer penalties if not completed the correct way.  In addition, if the recipient was sued, got divorced or passes away the assets will be lost to dad and completely out of his control.

If the condo is considered your father’s primary residence, then it is an exempt asset for both VA and Medi-Cal purposes.  He could transfer the condo to your sister (provided he has the requisite mental capacity) without suffering any Medi-Cal penalties, but that transfer will not work for VA purposes.  Under the VA rules the transfer of a primary residence to a relative already living in it will not reduce net worth.  While the condo would remain exempt during your father’s lifetime, upon his passing, if he received Medi-Cal, the State would seek reimbursement for the payment of his care from his share of the condo. 

Because the house is not your father’s primary residence it would not be exempt and could be an unavailable asset (valued at the assessed value not fair market value) due to the joint owners’ refusal to sell, but would remain subject to transfer penalties if given/transferred out of his name.

For any transfer to be valid your father must have the requisite mental capacity.  If your father does not have the requisite mental capacity, then transferring assets will not be a viable option unless he has a financial durable power of attorney that contains appropriate expanded gifting powers and public benefit planning.

The only other option, if your father no longer has mental capacity, would be for him to add someone to his bank account to turn it into a multi-owner account and reduce net worth.  This option will work only if the bank account is not already owned by his revocable trust.  While this will likely allow him to qualify for VA pension, Medi-Cal reimbursement will remain an unresolved issue.

With proper advice and counsel while he was of sound mind he could have arranged his affairs to enable easy qualification for both VA pension and Medi-Cal.  Use of an irrevocable trust would provide a means to qualify for benefits and hold the assets in a manner that would reduce capital gains, preserve the step up in basis and protect the assets from being taken away from beneficiaries due to unforeseen lawsuits, divorce or untimely death.

I hope that this information is helpful and wish you the best of luck in helping your father obtain the help he needs.

Heather R. Chubb, Attorney at Law
The Chubb Law Firm
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, California chapter

 

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters: "Why is it important for me to have a Power of Attorney?"

Answer:  We all can expect to age and none of us are immune to health crises that may leave us incapable of properly handling personal financial matters. You want to make certain that someone you have complete trust in (known as your agent) will manage your affairs if you are unable to do so. The Power of Attorney (POA)  is a way to do this. 
 

A POA is an extremely powerful document that your agent can use for a variety of Medicaid, estate and long term care planning needs, both foreseen and unforeseen.  Once you choose your agent – someone you have full, total and complete trust in – your POA authorizes that agent to act on your behalf to perform such functions as drawing checks on your bank accounts for specific purposes, append signatures to routine correspondence, act as a signatory to real estate closings and buy and sell financial securities. 

  

After your possible incapacity, your agent will be empowered to sign your name and is obligated to act in your best financial interest at all times and in accordance with your wishes.

 

Paul T. Czepiga, Esq., CELA
Czepiga Daly Dillman, LLC
Newington, Vernon, Wethersfield, CT
860-597-7995
www.CtSeniorLaw.com
Charter Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, Connecticut chapter
 

Today's Q&A on ElderCareMatters.com discusses our role in linking families across America to competent elder care experts

Every day, more and more families from across America are relying on ElderCareMatters.com to help them find competent "Elder Care Experts" who are located near them and who can help them with a wide range of elder care matters, such as legal services, financial planning, home care, senior housing, adult day care, geriatric care management, money management, insurance services, aging in place services, etc. 

Below are just a few of the many emails that ElderCareMatters.com receives daily from families across America requesting help with their elder care matters:

  • I am looking for help for my 77 year sister who lives in Louisiana and has been abandoned by her children.  Can you help me? 
  • I need to locate someone to provide home care for my wife.  We live in New Jersey.  Can you help us? 
  • We need to find senior transportation services in the Miami area.  Can you help us? 
  • My mother has been injured in an Assisted Living Home in Arizona and we need an attorney with whom to discuss this legal matter.  Can you help us? 
  • Can you help me locate elder care experts in the Jacksonville, Florida area?

If you are a competent, caring professional who helps families plan for and/or deal with elder care matters, then you should definitely become a professional member of the national Elder Care Matters Alliance and you should be listed on ElderCareMatters.com – America's #1 source for Elder Care Experts, Information & Answers about Elder Care Matters.  Professional membership is just $15/month.

To request an Application for Membership to the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, send us an email at:  info@ElderCareMatters.com

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO, ElderCare Matters, LLC
ElderCareMatters.com

Today's Q&A on ElderCareMatters.com is about gifting and VA planning for Aid & Attendance

Question:  Would you please provide me with some information re: gifting as it relates to VA planning for Aid & Attendance.  It is my understanding that there are no penalties involved for gifting assets in order to reduce resources to approved levels.  Mom’s income is less than the medical expenses that she will pay in the assisted living facility, but her assets are a bit too high.

Answer:  At this time, gifting does not create penalties (or periods of ineligibility) for the purposes of VA pension benefits.  That being said, gifting for VA purposes may create penalties (periods of ineligibility) for the purposes of future applications for Medi-Cal for skilled nursing facilities.  Any time you do gifts for VA purposes, you should be structuring a plan that ensures that you will not be creating periods of ineligibility for future Medi-Cal applications.  Often a stroke, hip fracture, heart attack, or some other unexpected medical hospitalization and subsequent discharge to a skilled nursing facility will create a need for Medi-Cal benefits within the look-back period (currently 30 months after the gift was made, or 60 months in the case of gifts to irrevocable trusts, and 60 months for all gifts in the future when the Deficit Reduction Act is implemented with filing of final regulations with the Secretary of the State of CA).  If you have not structured the gifts to create either no period of ineligibility or very minimal period of ineligibility, then you will have shot yourself in the Medi-Cal foot when you do your VA pension gifts.  Because the gifting rules for Medi-Cal are complicated, see an experienced California attorney who knows the current rules about gifting.  Be sure to ask the attorney if they are experienced in the laws governing gifting under Medi-Cal and if they can structure a gifting program that will not create a period of ineligibility, or that will greatly minimize any gifting period of ineligibility.  Also, if you are thinking of gifting real estate, the rules are even more complicated for purposes of VA pension or Medi-Cal, and you will need an attorney with experience in both areas of law.  Any time you gift an asset that has appreciated in value since purchase, there will be tax issues to evaluation, discuss, and account for—income tax issues, capital gains step-up issues, 121 exclusions, property tax reassessment issues, so do not try to do this on your own.  Lastly, when someone needs VA pension now, it is not unlikely that they will need Medi-Cal within a matter of months or a few years, so always consider that VA gifts may create Medi-Cal penalties if not structured properly.   The area of gifts for VA and Medi-Cal is not a do-it-yourself proposition.  Get good legal advice and guidance. 

Dallas Leigh Atkins, Esq.
Law Offices of Dallas Atkins
Santa Barbara, CA  93101
805-687-8782
www.AtkinsElderCareLaw.com
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, California chapter

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "I am an Elder Care Professional with 15 years experience in helping families with their elder care matters. Should I be listed on ElderCareMatters.com?"

Answer:  If you are a professional who helps families plan for or deal with ANY of their elder care matters, then you owe it to yourself to be listed on America's #1 online source for "Elder Care Experts"….

ElderCareMatters.com

ElderCareMatters.com is where you will find more than 2,000 competent, caring elder care experts located across America, including:

  • Elder Law Attorneys
  • Estate Planning Advisors
  • Financial Planners
  • Investment Advisors
  • Geriatric Care Managers
  • Insurance Professionals
  • Life Care Planners
  • Professional Organizers
  • Reverse Mortgage Lenders
  • Senior Move Managers
  • Senior Real Estate Professionals
  •  Tax Advisors
  • Aging in Place Professionals
  • Daily Money Managers
  • And other elder care experts with long and successful careers working with seniors and their families

This is also where you will find some of America's best:

  • Assisted Living Communities
  • Alzheimer's / Memory Care Communities
  • Continuing Care Retirement Communities
  • Home Care Agencies

Together, we provide families across America with:

  • Unparalleled professional expertise
  • Up-to-date elder care information & answers to your elder care questions
  • Competent, caring assistance with a wide range of elder care services

So if you are a competent, caring elder care professional who helps families with ANY of their elder care matters, then request today an Application for Membership in the national ElderCare Matters Alliance and get listed on ElderCareMatters.com - America's #1 source for "Elder Care Experts" plus information and answers about a wide range of elder care matters.

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO
ElderCare Matters, LLC
ElderCareMatters.com

 

 

 

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "Would you please provide me with a list of all the 87 different elder care services that the members of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance provide on ElderCareMatters.com?"

Answer:  It is my pleasure to provide you with the following list of the 87 different elder care services that are currently provided by the members of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance on ElderCareMatters.com:

  1. Accounting Services
  2. Adult Day Care
  3. Advance Medical Directives
  4. Aging in Place Services
  5. Alzheimer's / Memory Care Communities
  6. Annuities
  7. Arbitration
  8. Asset Protection Planning
  9. Assisted Living Communities
  10. Assisted Living Referral Services
  11. Bankruptcy
  12. Bill Paying
  13. Budgeting
  14. Caregiving Education
  15. Companion Care
  16. Conservatorship
  17. Consumer Law
  18. Continuing Care Retirement Communities
  19. Cremation Services
  20. Crisis Intervention
  21. Daily Money Management
  22. Dementia Care
  23. Disability Income Insurance
  24. Disability Planning
  25. Elder Abuse Litigation Services
  26. Elder Law
  27. ElderCare Planning
  28. Estate Administration
  29. Estate Liquidation
  30. Estate Planning
  31. Family Law
  32. Financial Planning
  33. Funeral Services
  34. Geriatric Care Management
  35. Guardianship
  36. Health Insurance
  37. Hoarding Clean Up and Coaching Services
  38. Home Care
  39. Home Downsizing Services
  40. Home Health Care
  41. Home Modifications
  42. Hospice Care
  43. Independent Living Communities
  44. Investment Services
  45. Life Care Planning
  46. Life Insurance
  47. Litigation
  48. Long Term Care Insurance
  49. Long Term Care Planning
  50. Medicaid Planning
  51. Medical Services
  52. Medical Alert Systems
  53. Medical Claims Processing
  54. Medical Equipment & Supplies
  55. Medical Malpractice Litigation
  56. Medicare Consulting
  57. Medicare Supplemental Insurance
  58. Medication Management Services
  59. Moving Services
  60. Nursing Homes
  61. Personal Finance
  62. Powers of Attorney
  63. Probate
  64. Professional Organizing
  65. Public / Non-Profit Resources
  66. Real Estate Services
  67. Rehabilitation Services
  68. Residential Psychiatric Care
  69. Respite Care
  70. Retirement Planning
  71. Reverse Mortgages
  72. Securities Arbitration & Litigation Services
  73. Senior Housing
  74. Senior Move Management
  75. Senior Move Planning
  76. Senior Relocation Services
  77. Social Security Disability Services
  78. Special Needs Planning
  79. Tax Law
  80. Tax Planning
  81. Tax Preparation
  82. Transportation Services
  83. Trustee / Fiduciary Services
  84. Trusts
  85. VA Benefits
  86. Wills
  87. Wound Care

The goal of ElderCareMatters.com is to provide families across America with the help they need to plan for and deal with their elder care matters.  Let us know if there are other elder care services that you would like to have us list on ElderCareMatters.com – America's #1 source for Elder Care Experts plus information & answers about a wide range of elder care matters.

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO, ElderCare Matters, LLC
ElderCareMatters.com
1-877-379-4500

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "Is there a certain number of Elder Care Experts that will be accepted into the national Elder Care Matters Alliance? Specifically, will the Alliance have a maximum number of experts in each service category for each state chapter?"

Answer:  Our commitment at ElderCare Matters is to provide families across America with elder care resources (Experts, Information & Answers) to help them plan for and deal with their elder care matters.  To this end, we have no set # of experts that we will showcase on ElderCareMatters.com but rather we are inviting ALL competent, caring elder care professionals across America to become a part of this phenonmenal elder care resource.

ElderCare Matters is where you will find 1,579 Elder Care Experts near YOU (and this # is growing daily) who have years of experience in helping families with elder care matters, including:

  • Elder Law Attorneys
  • Estate Planning Advisors
  • Financial & Investment Advisors
  • Geriatric Care Managers
  • Insurance Professionals
  • Reverse Mortgage Lenders
  • Senior Move Managers
  • Tax Advisors
  • Daily Money Managers
  • Other elder experts with long and successful careers working with seniors and their families

This is also where you will find some of America's best:

  • Assisted Living Communities
  • Alzheimer's / Memory Care Communities
  • Continuing Care Retirement Communities
  • Home Care Agencies

So if you help families plan for and/or deal with elder care matters and you are a competent, caring elder care professional, then you should be listed on ElderCareMatters.com – America's #1 source for Elder Care Experts plus information and answers about a wide range of elder care matters.

To request an Application for Membership to the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, send an email directly to: info@ElderCareMatters.com

Phillip G. Sanders, MBA, MSHA, CPA
Founder & CEO of ElderCare Matters
ElderCareMatters.com
1-877-379-4500

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "My parents are both in their 80s and living in Illinois. We are considering moving them into an assisted living arrangement that requires a deposit, which would be returned (on a pro-rated basis) should they move or die. Does this deposit qualify for the homestead exemption under Medicaid eligibility?”

Answer:  Whether or not your parents’ deposit qualifies as an exempt asset under Medicaid depends on whether the contract is a lease agreement or a contract to purchase a unit.  At many assisted living residences the contract is a lease agreement, not ownership, and will not qualify.  In Massachusetts, home ownership is required to qualify for the exemption for your home.  The home ownership exemption, however, is not valid if he is not able to return home.  As a result, many clients who own homes will protect them and their life-savings with an asset protection trust.  That way the deposit at an assisted living residence can be funded with home sale proceeds or other savings and continue to be protected in the trust even if they get sick in a nursing home and are no longer able to satisfy the requirement of “intending to return home.”  As a result of the asset protection trust there is more flexibility and greater protection for life savings, without the otherwise required ability to return home.

To find  competent, caring elder care professionals across America who are located near You and can help you with your elder care matters, go to: www.ElderCareMatters.com - A FREE online resource to find elder care experts plus elder care information & answers to your elder care questions.

Dennis B. Sullivan, Esq., LLM, CPA
Estate Planning & Asset Protection Law Center of Dennis Sullivan & Assoc.
Wellesley, Massachusetts  02482
781-237-2815
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, Massachusetts chapter 

This Week's Featured Elder Care Expert on ElderCareMatters.com is Dennis B. Sullivan, Esq., CPA, LLM

Dennis B. Sullivan, Esq., CPA, LLM
888 Worcester Street, Suite 260
Wellesley, Massachusetts  02482
781-237-2815
www.EstatePlanandAssetProtection.com
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, Massachusetts chapter

This week's Featured Elder Care Expert is Dennis B. Sullivan, Esq., CPA, LLM, Member of the Massachusetts chapter of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance (a network of  1,500+ elder care experts across America). 

Mr. Sullivan has over 25 years of experience helping individuals and families with tax, estate, and asset protection planning. 

Every day this week (M-F), Attorney Sullivan will answer one of your questions about his areas of expertise (Tax, Estate Planning, Asset Protection Planning), and this selected question along with Mr. Sullivan's answer will be posted on the Featured Elder Care Question of the Day section of ElderCareMatters.com.

So if you would like to ask Mr. Sullivan a question about your elder care matter, just send a short email (a few sentences only please) to: questions@ElderCareMatters. com.  

And remember to bookmark ElderCareMatters.com and check back often to see if your question is our Featured Elder Care Question of the Day.

Question of the Day on ElderCareMatters.com: "My brother has a severe handicap due to a birth defect. He has been receiving disability benefits through social security, as well as some state aid. When my parents die, if my brother inherits from my parent’s estate, will he be denied benefits due to the inheritance?"

Answer:  In most cases I have recommended that the parents set up a living trust using "handicapped" language for the disabled child. This provides the disabled child supplemental care without loss of federal or state benefits and provides a better lifestyle. In addition, other children that are not disabled or handicapped can inherit their shares in a normal manner. There is no need to "disinherit" the disabled or handicapped individual. 

In some cases a "Medicaid payback" trust may be used where the disability is the result of an injury or an accident and there is a sizeable insurance settlement that might reduce or eliminate Medicaid benefits. The theory is that the settlement dollars will be invested and the "payback" to Medicaid upon the death of the beneficiary will still leave a significant amount for the beneficiary's heirs, siblings or others.

To find competent elder care professionals who are located near You and can help you with this type of elder care matter, go to: www.ElderCareMatters.com - A FREE online resource to find elder care experts plus elder care information & answers to your elder care questions.

William "Bill" Brown, Attorney at Law
2999 E. Dublin-Granville Road
Suite 217
Columbus, Ohio  43231-4030
614-890-9099
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, Ohio chapter

This week's Featured Elder Care Expert on ElderCareMatters.com is William "Bill" Brown, Attorney at Law

William "Bill" Brown, Attorney at Law
2999 E. Dublin-Granville Road
Suite 217
Columbus, Ohio  43231
614-890-9099
Member of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance, Ohio chapter

This week's Featured Elder Care Expert is William "Bill" Brown, Attorney at Law, Member of the Ohio chapter of the national ElderCare Matters Alliance (a network of  almost 1,500 elder care experts).  Attorney Brown has practiced in the areas of probate, elder law, trusts and estate planning for over 50 years, and is the author of "Trusts" and "Estate Planning a Practical Guide".

Every day this week (M-F), Mr. Brown will answer one of your questions about his areas of expertise , and this selected question along with Mr. Brown's answer will be posted on the Featured Elder Care Question of the Day section of ElderCareMatters.com.

So if you would like to ask Attorney Brown a question about one of your elder care matters, just send a short email (a few sentences only please) to: questions@ElderCareMatters. com.  

And remember to bookmark ElderCareMatters.com and check back often to see if your question is our Featured Elder Care Question of the Day.