Archive for the ‘Coastal Senior’ Category
Do I Need A Lawyer To Qualify For Medicaid? – Coastal Senior, December 2009
Coastal Senior is a monthly periodical covering the South Carolina and Georgia low country. Bob Mason is its legal columnist.
For many people, Medicaid may be the only financing option for nursing home level of care. Medicare has limited benefits. Most people do not own long term care insurance. And for most, private paying $6,000 a month is not an option.
Qualifying for Medicaid is another matter. It can be difficult . . . or it can be easy. Here is the easy answer along with some free legal advice. Fix up the house, buy a new car and simply spend the rest down on the spouse’s nursing home care. When everything has been spent down, go apply for Medicaid.
Is that the smartest approach? No. But the advice was “free”! Also, the nursing home and the Medicaid people in Atlanta will love you.
The better way just may be a bit more difficult. While every case is different, many strategies can save a tremendous amount of money, not to mention aggravation and worry.
The answers do not come easily. As the United States Supreme Court observed in the Schweiker v. Gray Panthers case, the “Byzantine construction” of the Social Security Act (of which Medicaid is a part) makes the rules and regulations “almost unintelligible to the uninitiated”.
You’ll need a guide with the knowledge and experienced to shepherd you through the process.
In addition to a thorough understanding of the nuances of the Medicaid rules, many of the successful strategies require an advanced understanding of trust law, taxation, real property law and the interconnections among Medicaid and other programs (VA benefits, for example).
Is it necessary to hire an attorney to complete a Medicaid application? No, not if the “easy” answer mentioned above will suffice.
Will people advise that it is not necessary to hire an attorney? You bet! Occasionally it is someone with a local Department of Family and Children’s Service office. More often it is a nursing home.
The problem with that sort of advice is both parties have a vested interest in keeping someone on “private pay” as long as possible. It is not in their interest to move someone to Medicaid.
Further, many, if not most, nursing home business office staff who offer to complete (sometimes they’ll insist on completing) a Medicaid application do not have more than a basic understanding of the complex rules and advantageous strategies available.
Also, neither has the knowledge, skills and ability, much less a law license, required to draft trusts, devise appropriate estate plans and stand by to advocate for you (in court if necessary) should the need arise.
Finally, if a lawyer is “the way to go” keep in mind that lawyers, like doctors, are not all the same. A great attorney in one area of the law may not have any idea of what to do with Medicaid rules that are “unintelligible to the uninitiated”. Ask for references, ask how many similar cases have been handled, ask for credentials and certifications and satisfy yourself they know what they’re talking about and are ready to get on your side.
Will Medicaid Take My Home? – Coastal Senior, November 2009
Coastal Senior is a monthly periodical covering the South Carolina and Georgia low country. Bob Mason is its legal columnist.
“Will the nursing home take my home?” is the question elder law attorneys constantly field.
The answer: “Maybe, maybe not, but probably not right away.”
What these people are worried about is something called “estate recovery”. In Georgia it is taking on some life and promises litigation. The current Big Question is whether the state can recover on a Medicaid lien on a life estate or other “nonprobate” property.
Estate recovery is a procedure Congress ordered in which Medicaid attempts to recover all or a portion of the benefits paid with respect to an individual from that individual’s assets upon his or her death.
Congress Offered Some Choices
Congress allowed states the option of recovering against probate assets only or against all assets. Probate assets are those assets that pass through a person’s estate and under the terms of a will (if there is one). Nonprobate assets are assets that pass pursuant to terms independent of an estate (for example, life insurance policies that name beneficiaries other than estate, joint tenancy with rights of survivorship bank accounts, or life estates in real property).
What The General Assembly Chose
The General Assembly enacted a statute to allow the Department of Community Health (DCH) to “make claim against the estate of a Medicaid recipient”.
Most elder law attorneys believe the General Assembly opted to confine estate recovery to the probate estate. First, from the clear words of the statute, it chose not to expand the definition of “estate” beyond the traditional probate estate. The way one “makes a claim against an estate” is before a probate court, and a probate court will only have jurisdiction against a probate estate.
Second, the General Assembly did nothing to address the technical manner in which non-probate assets could become part of a probate estate. For example, to make what is left of a life estate after the life estate holder has died a probate asset would require a number of amendments to ancient Georgia real property law. Under Georgia law, once a life estate holder has died, the property is free of the deceased life estate holder’s creditor claims. It is gone.
What DCH Chose
DCH elected to use the harsher method and to attempt estate recovery against all assets – ignoring (many believe) the wishes of the General Assembly.
However, Congress gave the states a choice. The General Assembly spoke. The law is well settled in Georgia that administrative agencies (like DCH) must remain within the boundaries set by their master (the General Assembly).
The law also provides exceptions to estate recovery when hardship can be proven. For example, if the deceased is survived by a spouse or a minor or disabled child.
Advance planning is wise if nursing home financing is of any concern. Avoiding or mitigating the effects of estate recovery makes advance planning particularly critical.
Finally, you should always seek assistance from qualified counsel if facing estate recovery. Estate recovery is tricky business. Make sure your attorney understands it or associates someone who does.
Beware Of Joint Accounts – Coastal Senior, October 2009
Coastal Senior is a monthly periodical covering the South Carolina and Georgia low country. Bob Mason is its legal columnist.
Many people make big mistakes titling bank and investment accounts. Often advisors and bankers are the source of the advice to “put your child’s name on the account”. However, the results of jointly holding an account with another can be surprising and unpleasant.
The advice has likely been given with the best of intentions – which does not make it correct. The reason is usually convenience. An older person may feel better knowing that a trusted son or daughter has immediate access to an account “in case something happens”.
A better way to provide emergency access to financial holdings for a trusted person exists. Read on. First, here is why a “joint account” may not be the proper approach:
- Mom has likely made daughter a co-owner of the account. Daughter now owns the account as much as Mom. Could be bad. What if daughter is sued? What if daughter gets into a messy divorce? Or the IRS takes a keen interest in her affairs?
- If Mom dies Sis’s two brothers may be out of luck. Happens all the time. Mom wanted the kids to share equally, but Sis suddenly recalls Mom wanted her to have the accounts since she “was the one who always helped Mom”. Since Sis was a co-owner and likely had “survivorship” rights, she owns the account now – and there is nothing an attorney can do about it.
- Yech.
What is the best approach? A properly drafted power of attorney.
A “power of attorney” has nothing to do with appointing lawyers. The word “attorney” has its roots in an old French Norman word for “legal substitute”. A “power of attorney” is simply a document signed by someone called the “principal” (that is, YOU) appointing an “attorney-in-fact” or “agent” to manage some or all of the principal’s financial and business affairs.
The terms of the power of attorney control what the agent may, or may not, do. If the document covers a broad spectrum of duties, then it is a “general” power of attorney. An Agent can be given very broad powers, and if that makes the Principal nervous the instrument can require the Agent to secure some other person’s permission.
It used to be that a power of attorney would lapse when the Principal became incapacitated. That did not do any good if what was intended was to cover the situations when the principal did become incapacitated. The law stepped in and provided that a power of attorney could be “durable” (or be valid after the incapacity of the principal). Most powers of attorney now are “durable”.
Here’s the point: Don’t put the kids on the accounts as a joint owner. Instead, execute a power of attorney that grants the sorts of powers to the kids you are comfortable with to take over business affairs when, and if, they need to. In the meantime, keep the accounts in your name.
Downside: Some fees to a lawyer. Upside: Avoid a train wreck.