 |
Elder Law Today Podcast
|
|
Are you a senior citizen? Or perhaps you have a parent, relative, close friend or neighbor who is one. If so, then you won?t want to miss this important and informative podcast. Learn about elder law, a relatively new area of law, that encompasses the legal issues that acutely affect seniors and their families. Yale Hauptman, an elder law attorney, discusses the various problems and issues of aging in America today and interviews guests from other elder care fields.
Short URL for this Podcast |
 | |
|
|
Details
|
More Shows
|
Family Business
|
| Date Added |
09-Mar-2008 |
Hits: |
129 |
Rating: |
0.00 |
Votes: |
0 |
|
|
 |
Elder Law Today Podcast Episodes - | Elder Law Today Podcast Show #18 Continuing Care Retirement Communities | Continuing
care retirement communities can be a great option for many people.
I can move into one community that can meet all my needs, from independent
housing to assisted living to nursing home care as I need it.
In
Show 18 of his monthly elder law podcast, Yale Hauptman, a practicing
elder law attorney, provides an overview of CCRCs, the pros and cons.
So often, he sees people enter into these financial arrangements without
closely examining the 40+ page contract that typically the resident
must sign. The contracts often require a large upfront financial
commitment. What will the CCRC agreement cover? What wonāt
it cover? What happens if you run out of money? What if
the facility runs out of money? If
you are considering a CCRC for yourself or a loved one youāll definitely
want to tune in first.
Click here to listen
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast Show #18 Continuing Care Retirement Communities | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Podcast Show #17 Why Do I Need a Will | The law allows every
person to distribute property according to their wishes by a written
instrument known as a Last Will. However, many people never execute
one and miss that opportunity, the consequences of which can be
devastating to loved ones.
In Show 17 of his
monthly elder law podcast, Yale Hauptman, a practicing elder law
attorney, discusses what can go wrong without a will. Each state has
a set of laws that predetermines how assets will pass where there is
no will, known as intestacy. That may not, however, be what you
want. For example, assets may be left outright to heirs who
shouldnāt or canāt handle the money or may end up in the
wrong peopleās hands.
Yale
also discusses the difficult issues involved in second marriages
where each spouse has different heirs who they wish to leave their
estate. Without proper planning that wonāt happen. Ownership
of real estate in another state can also present a problem without
planning. The bottom line is that without a carefully drawn plan
your intentions and desire may not be carried out.
Tune in to learn what
you need to do to safeguard yourself and your loved ones.
Click here to listen
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback
| Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Podcast Show #17 Why Do I Need a Will | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast Show #15 - YouĆ¢ve Spent Down all Your Money and Still CanĆ¢t Get Medicaid Ć¢ How Could This Happen? | Youāve spent
down the remaining assets on Momās care and have no more money
left. You apply for Medicaid but are told, āSorry, Momās
not eligible for another 8 months.ā How could this happen?
What can you do to avoid this horrific outcome?
In Show 15 of his
monthly Elder Law Today Podcast, practicing elder law attorney, Yale
Hauptman, explains why spending down assets may not be as simple as
you think. Medicaid rules are complex and it is easy to get tripped
up. Well meaning citizens can unwittingly cause themselves to lose
these essential benefits by creating transfers that are subject to a
Medicaid transfer penalty.
Learn the danger of
paying home health aides cash and why that could result in long
penalty periods. Discover why gifts made 4+ years before Medicaid is
applied for can come back to haunt you. More importantly, learn how
you can avoid these Medicaid traps and how to correct the mistakes
youāve already made. If you wait till you apply itās too
late.
This episode is for
anyone who cannot afford the cost of long term care indefinitely and
may need to apply for government benefits at some time in the future.
Important information that youāll want to listen to carefully.
Click to listen
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast Show #15 - Youâve Spent Down all Your Money and Still Canât Get Medicaid â How Could This Happen? | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podast Show #14 Married Couple - Crisis Long Term Care Planning | So after listening to
Show 13 youāre thinking, we should have taken action
immediately after Dadās diagnosis but didnāt so now what
do we do? In the 14th installment of his audio podcast,
Yale Hauptman discusses just that scenario, crisis planning.
Although the picture is more complicated all hope is not lost.
Yale discusses some of the options still available to families, but
timing is a key.Yale explains how the
home as an exempt asset under Medicaid rules can be used to help the
healthy spouse preserve more than the maximum otherwise allowable
under Medicaid rules. That could include buying a bigger house or
making improvements on a current home. Learn why a reverse mortgage
now is replacing a home equity loan or line of credit as the only
option in crisis planning for many families. Yale also discusses
ways to pay down debt that benefits the healthy spouse and other ways
to help preserve hard earned money for the community spouse, who just
wonāt be left with much under current Medicaid rules without
creative planning.
Be sure to tune in for
a concise 10 minute discussion of Medicaid crisis planning that will
give you an overview of what still is possible, even if you have
failed to early action, but time is running out.
Click here to listen
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podast Show #14 Married Couple - Crisis Long Term Care Planning | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast Show #13 Married Couple - Early Action Long Term Care Planning | In the first show of
Season 2 of his Elder Law Today Podcast, by listener request, Yale
Hauptman has modified the format and shortened the length of his
audio podcast. In a concise 10 minutes, Yale presents a common
scenario that many families today are faced with. Dad has just
recently been diagnosed with early stages of Alzheimerās
Disease (you can substitute any other long term care illness because
the issues remain the same). What lies next for Mom and Dad? What
should the family be doing and when?
Yale runs through the
planning strategies that ought to be employed to insure the best care
possible for Dad, preferably at home rather than in a nursing home,
and also to protect Mom so that all their hard earned savings are not
spent on Dadās long term care, leaving Mom with very little to
live on.
Yale provides an
overview of the long term care system, the benefit of setting aside
assets in trust and the various government benefits, including VA and
Medicaid, that may be able to play a role in Mom and Dadās
journey through the long term care system. Learn why it is so
important to take these steps as soon as possible and why inaction
can be so costly.
Episode 13 is a canāt
miss listen for families who are unsure what to do and where to
start.
Click here to listen
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast Show #13 Married Couple - Early Action Long Term Care Planning | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast Show #12 The Talk - How to Communicate with your Parents about Aging and Long Term Care | In show number 12 Yale
Hauptman, a practicing elder law attorney sits down with Barbara
Salvador of Nannymama.com and Barbara Friesner of Agewiseliving.com,
a generational coach and author of āThe Ultimate Caregiverās
Guideā to discuss how to have āthe talkā with
aging parents.Generational
differences and lack of communication pose some real challenges to
children who are trying to help care for their parents. So many
families never discuss long term care and finances until a crisis
hits and thatās just too late. If you find yourself in the
situation of not knowing what plans your parents have in place, what
their wishes are with respect to long term care, or where all their
important legal documents are ā and you have no idea how to
start the conversation - this is a must listen.
As with any
interpersonal relationship, communication is paramount. How we say
things is as important as the content itself. Yale and his guests
discuss the best way to break the ice and the dos and donāts of
approaching a very difficult topic in a way that is sensitive to the
fears and concerns of aging family members, intending to bring
families together, instead of pulling them apart.
This 12th
show contains valuable information that every family will find
helpful in dealing with some of the most challenging issues we all
face today.
Click here to listen
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast Show #12 The Talk - How to Communicate with your Parents about Aging and Long Term Care | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast Show #11 The Current Economic Crisis. What Does it Mean for Medicaid and Long Term Care | Much has happened in
both the economic and political arenas since the last show, including
the steep drop in the stock markets and the election of President
Obama and changing of power in Congress from Republican to Democrat.
In show number 11 of his podcast, Elder Law Today, practicing elder
law attorney, Yale Hauptman discusses how this all will affect the
average American who needs long term care.
Some of these changes
have already begun to occur. Yale explains how rising unemployment,
the government bailout of failing financial companies and the drop in
stock markets and thereby, peopleās savings, have all combined
to create a āperfect stormā of conditions that will cause
State Medicaid offices to delay and deny a greater number of Medicaid
applications for long term care.
He discusses some of
the scenarios in his office where this is already happening. Take
the case of the daughter who took cash out for Mom over the years but
didnāt keep good records as to how it was spent or the son who
paid for Mom and Dadās care at home out of his own funds when
they had none left and now wants to be reimbursed from the sale of
their home when they enter a nursing home. In both cases Medicaid
has scrutinized these transactions and delayed approval.
We are now almost 3
years removed from the last round of changes to the Medicaid laws
instituted under the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA). Learn why this law
will have even more impact on the ability to qualify for government
benefits as we go forward.
This 11th
show is one you canāt afford to miss, with information and
ideas that you need to act on now to be sure to protect yourself and
your loved ones going forward. Be sure to tune in.
Click here to listen
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast Show #11 The Current Economic Crisis. What Does it Mean for Medicaid and Long Term Care | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Show #10 The Ins and Outs of FDIC Insurance | In show number 10 of
his podcast, Elder Law Today, practicing elder law attorney, Yale
Hauptman interviews Anthony Aiello, a compliance officer at Commerce
TD Bank on the hot topic of FDIC insurance. For many Americans, the
collapse of financial giants such as Lehman Brothers, AIG, Merrill
Lynch and Wachovia reminds them of other troubled economic times.
Many seniors grew up during the Great Depression of the 1930ās
and remember the Savings and Loan scandal of the late 1970ās
and early 1980ās. The FDIC insurance program was instituted in
the 1933 to protect depositors who lost money when their banks went
under. Many Americans are now concerned once again about whether
their assets are protected.
Yale and Anthony
discuss the basics of how this insurance coverage works. Learn about
the ways to stretch the amount of insurance coverage well beyond the
$100,000 limit which most people assume, erroneously, is the maximum.
There are different categories of accounts, which are treated
separately for insurance purposes. For example, coverage for IRA and
other retirement accounts is now $250,000 per person.
In his āIn the
Newsā segment, Yale discusses a recent government inquiry into
accusations that a company which owns assisted living facilities in
20 states is kicking out residents once they have run out of money
and apply for Medicaid. He also discusses a recent court case which
highlights the pitfalls of having a joint owner on a bank account
who then applies for Medicaid. In that New Jersey case, the judge
sided with the applicant but learn why the fight may not yet be over.
Finally, Yale talks about a new federal law effective October 1,
2008, intended to protect Americans from abusive practices in the
sale of reverse mortgages to seniors.
This 10th
show is timely and informative in light of the current turbulent
economic times. Be sure to tune in.
Click here to listen to the show
Visit the FDIC website for more information.
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback
| Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Show #10 The Ins and Outs of FDIC Insurance | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast Show #9 Planning Needs of Elderly Parent with Disabled Adult Child | In show number 9 of his
podcast, Elder Law Today, practicing elder law attorney, Yale
Hauptman welcomes as his guest Lauren J. Siegel, a registered nurse
and certified life care planner. Lauren explains how she is
typically brought into lawsuits brought by parents of disabled minor
children and asked to devise a plan of care covering the various
needs that the child may have over his/her life.
Yale and Lauren then
discuss how this same planning is just as important to elderly
parents of adult disabled children. Parents must address care issues
for those children after they pass away and how to fund it. Yale
points out that any assets intended to fund that care must be
properly set aside while the parent is healthy or risk being spent
down entirely for the parentās long term care needs, leaving
nothing for the childās needs. Lauren offers some suggestions
for parents to consider.
Yale also introduces a
new āIn the Newsā segment. He discusses a recent
Pennsylvania court case that highlights the need to be specific in a
power of attorney as to what gifting powers are given to an agent.
He also discusses a recent Connecticut case in which a child was held
responsible financially to pay momās nursing bill when he
failed to immediately provide all information and documents necessary
to complete her application for Medicaid benefits. Yale also updates
listeners on a bill introduced in Congress to extend the federal
estate exemption amount to $3,500,000 for 2010 and beyond and
highlights the continuing trend by employers to provide services to
their employees who are caring for elderly parents and loved ones.
This 9th
show is packed with important information that anyone who is elderly
or caring for, or concerned about, an elderly loved one, wonāt
want to miss.
Click to listen to the show
Visit Lauren's LJS Healthcare website
To subscribe to our podcasts click here
Please send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast Show #9 Planning Needs of Elderly Parent with Disabled Adult Child | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast Show #8 Medicaid Horror Stories | In
show number 8 of his podcast, Elder Law Today, practicing elder law
attorney, Yale Hauptman, discusses some real life case studies to
illustrate how the Medicaid laws can trip people up and cause much
stress and financial loss for the unprepared and unwary.
Yale first discusses
the case of the granddaughter caring for her grandmother full time,
with Grandmom providing the funds to support both of them. Things go
wrong when Grandmomās condition deteriorates to the point where
nursing home care is necessary and the money has run out. Learn the
mistakes that this family made and why it has become much harder to
fix them under the new Medicaid laws.
Next, Yale discusses a
call he received from a son in Mississippi who took in his parents to
his own home, moving them from New Jersey. The parents transferred
their home to Son, who then put it up for sale. The plan fell apart
when Dad took ill and needed nursing home care much sooner than
anticipated. He applied for Medicaid and was denied because of the
home transfer. The Medicaid caseworker told the family they would
need to transfer the home back and spend down the sale proceeds
before Dad could then qualify. Learn why their course of action was
the wrong one for more than one reason and what they could do fix it
and immediately qualify Dad and preserve the funds for Mom.
Yale then discusses
the call he received from the frantic daughter who was sued by the
nursing home when, after 8 years, Mom lost her Medicaid eligibility.
The nursing home sought $80,000, the private pay cost of care for
Mom. Why did it happen and what do you need to do to prevent it from
happening to your family? Tune in.
The final case study
concerns a couple who was unprepared when suddenly Husband took ill,
needing nursing home care. They were told that he would qualify for
Medicaid but that some amount of money would have to be spent down
first. Unfortunately, Wife did not fully understand the urgency and
did not spend down to the necessary levels for 6 months. The nursing
home presented them with a bill for $70,000, the private pay amount
for that period of time, for which Medicaid will not cover. Yale
talks about why this outcome didnāt have to happen and what
could have been done to avoid it.
Yale also takes time
to answer some more listener emails. Learn what to do when a bank
resists honoring a power of attorney that is presented to it. This
8th installment is sure to answer many of the questions
you have about common elder law issues.
Click here to listen to the show
To subscribe to our podcasts click herePlease send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast Show #8 Medicaid Horror Stories | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Podcast Show #7 Seniors and their Home | In
the seventh installment of his podcast, Elder Law Today, Yale
Hauptman focuses on seniors and their home.
Sometimes the senior
canāt stay at home any longer. Yale discusses with Dan
Yanofski, the owner of Elite Realtors of New Jersey, some of the
challenges he faces in helping seniors sell their homes. Dan shares
his opinions on how to make a home more marketable when it is a bit
outdated and the two talk about when is the best time to sell.
For others, staying at
home is still a viable option, but some assistance in needed. Yale
sits down with Murray Goldsmith, of Spectrum Home Services, whose
company, among other services, provides assistance to senior
homeowners in making their home a safer place to live. Murray and
Yale go from room to room as Murray explains how, in some cases,
relatively small modifications can make it easier and safer for a
senior to navigate through his/her home and help minimize the risk of
a life changing accident.
Yale also takes time
to answer listener emails on such topics as whether a power of
attorney can be too old, the advantages and disadvantages of making a
child a co-owner on a parentās bank account and whether
Medicaid or the nursing home can take your home away from you.
Another information packed show that you wonāt want to miss.
Click here to listen the show
Elite Realtors of New Jersey 973-994-9009
Spectrum Home Services 973-251-2543
To subscribe to our podcasts click herePlease send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Podcast Show #7 Seniors and their Home | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Podcast Show #6 Long Term Care Planning - Are You Prepared? | In the sixth
installment of his podcast, Elder Law Today, Yale Hauptman invites
guests Heidi Rinsky Schnapp and Lisa Cook Bayer of Life Management
Resources, an elder care consulting firm and Gregory W. Bushwell, of
B & M Brokerage Services, a long term care insurance specialist
to a roundtable discussion on long term care.
The
panel first discusses preplanning options and Greg shares his advice
on long term care insurance products and services. Learn why there
is no such thing as one size fits all when considering the amount of
insurance coverage for long term care, what pitfalls to avoid when
purchasing long term care insurance, what additional services besides
nursing home care are covered and the difference between disability
insurance and long term care insurance.
If
you or your loved one is already in the midst of a long term care
crisis, then youāll want to hear Heidi and Lisa discuss with
Yale the types of services their elder care consulting firm provides.
Youāll learn how elder care mediation can help families stay
out of a public and expensive legal battle. Heidi explains what
geriatric care managers do and how they can help families separated
by long distances. Lisa shares with the audience what daily money
management services are and how essential they can be for the
elderly.
Yale
then takes listener emailed and live call in questions as he and his
guests discuss the goal that each of us wants to accomplish when we
face the aging process, that is, to age in place and remain in our
homes as long as possible.
Click here to listen to the show
Heidi Schnapp Lisa Bayer Life Management ResourcesLife Management Resources 973-533-0839Greg Bushwell B & W Brokerage Servicesbushwellorg@yahoo.com 973-716-7594To subscribe to our podcasts click herePlease send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Podcast Show #6 Long Term Care Planning - Are You Prepared? | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Show #5 VA Aid and Attendance - The Best Kept Secret in Long Term Care | In the fifth
installment of his podcast, Elder Law Today, Yale Hauptman, takes
Elder Law Today on the road to a Caregiving Symposium he spoke at
recently. Yale interviews a geriatric care manager, a contractor who
makes modifies homes for the elderly and other vendors who attended
the symposium about the variety of services they provide to the
elderly.
In the second segment Yale discusses in greater depth the Veterans
Administration Aid and Attendance program, which provides wartime
veterans and their spouses who qualify, as much as $1800 per month of
additional income which can help pay for home based care and assisted
living care. Learn the details of this little known program and why
so many people have been incorrectly told by the VA that they donāt
or canāt qualify. Yale talks about terms such as income for
Veteran Administration purposes and unreimbursed medical expenses and
why they donāt mean what you might think.
Listen
to Yale explain the income and asset levels that must be met and how
they differ from those of Medicaid. Yale cautions that in taking the
steps necessary to obtain the VA benefit you must be careful not to
leave yourself ineligible for other government benefit programs such
as Medicaid that might be needed further down the road of what Yale
refers to as the elder care journey. Yale explains how it is
possible to preserve eligibility for both programs. This is
definitely a program you wonāt want to miss.
Click here to listen
To subscribe to our podcasts click herePlease send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Show #5 VA Aid and Attendance - The Best Kept Secret in Long Term Care | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Show #4 Long Term Care Planning - The Way to Avoid Nursing Home Care | In the fourth
installment of his podcast, Elder Law Today, Yale Hauptman, a
practicing New Jersey elder law attorney, discusses how long term
care planning actually decreases the likelihood of ever needing
nursing home care. Learn how the long term care system actually
works to push people towards nursing homes when they have no more
money. Medicaid home based benefits often pay only a part of the
cost of aides needed on a 24 hour 7 day a week basis, but will pay
the entire cost of care if provided in a nursing home setting. It
is, therefore, important to plan ahead to have the funds available to
be able to stay at home.
Yale
also reviews for listeners an unknown Veterans Administration benefit
for eligible Veterans that can provide as much as $1800 per month in
additional income to cover the cost of home aides and assisted living
care. The Veterans Aid and Attendance program can help qualified
seniors preserve their much needed assets. But Yale cautions that
one must keep an eye on the next level of care so as not to
jeopardize eligibility for other benefit programs down the road.
This requires the coordination of a long term care plan to meet all
levels of care, not just the current one.
In the second segment
Yale interviews Angie Hicks of Angieās List, a website offering
reviews by consumers of local home improvement contractors. Yale and
Angie talk about how Angieās List is seeing more inquiries in
recent years by children who need help finding services for their
parents who live long distances away. Seeing the aging of America,
Angie tells Yale that Angieās List now offers ratings of
various elder care services to assist families who are faced with the
task of caring for the elderly members of the family unit from a
distance.
Click here to listen to the show.
Visit Angie's ListTo subscribe to our podcasts click herePlease send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Show #4 Long Term Care Planning - The Way to Avoid Nursing Home Care | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast #3 Live Call in | In the third
installment of his podcast, Elder Law Today, Yale Hauptman, a
practicing New Jersey elder law attorney, answers listenersā
questions by phone and email. Yale corrects common misconceptions
people have about some of the basic legal issues facing seniors
today. For example, Yale explains that making gifts up to the annual
gift tax exclusion amount will carry a Medicaid transfer penalty.
Yale explains what probate is and why you donāt necessarily
have to fear and avoid it.
Learn why it is a good
idea to have a will and not rely on a stateās intestacy laws to
distribute your assets. Is it a good idea for a parent to transfer
his/her home to the children? Yale discusses the pros and cons to
consider from a Medicaid, tax and long term care perspective.
Yale answers a
callerās question on a little known Veterans Administration
benefit that can provide much needed additional monthly income to be
used for home care and assisted living care. These are just some of
the topics covered in a very informative and enlightening evening.
Click here to listen to the show.
To subscribe to our podcasts click herePlease send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast #3 Live Call in | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast Show #2 The Basics of Medicaid | In the second
installment of Elder Law Today Podcast, Yale Hauptman, a
practicing New Jersey elder law attorney, explains the basics of the
Medicaid nursing home program. Yale explains how this needs-based
program works, including the asset and income tests for eligibility.
Learn what countable and non-countable assets, Medicaid transfer
penalty and lookback period are and why Medicare will not cover most
nursing home stays.
Yale also explains why
long term care planning must be done well before entry to a nursing
home becomes necessary. Congress passed significant changes to the
Medicaid laws 2 years ago, known as the Deficit Reduction Act of
2005, changes that the average American is unaware of. Learn why
even if you spend down your assets to the Medicaid levels you still
may face a Medicaid transfer penalty.
In the second segment,
Yale interviews Barbra London of Freedom Eldercare, a licensed home
health care agency. Listen to Barbra and Yale talk about the types
of services a home health care agency provides and common
misconceptions people have about this important resource. They also
discuss why, under the new Medicaid laws, hiring an aide directly,
rather than through an agency, can trap the unwary and cause a
Medicaid ineligibility period.
Click here to listen to the show
To subscribe to our podcasts click hereTo contact Barbra London 201-883-1200 or toll free 866-7 FreedomPlease send us your feedback | Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast Show #2 The Basics of Medicaid | Play in Popup.
| |  |
| Elder Law Today Podcast #1 What is Elder Law? Special Needs Planning with Guest Matthew Glass | In the debut of his podcast, Elder Law Today, Yale Hauptman, a practicing New Jersey elder law attorney, explains what elder law is and how an elder law attorney can be a valuable counselor to seniors and their families. Learn how elder law differs from traditional estate planning. A will, while important, addresses only one scenario, what happens when one dies. Elder law, however, encompasses so much more, what can be termed life planning or long term care planning. In other words, what happens if I donāt die, but instead have a lengthy illness, need increased care, (ie. home care, assisted living, or nursing home care) and do not have the funds to pay for it indefinitely. Yale discusses the need to have a plan in place, one that includes the necessary documents (ie. power of attorney, health care directive, will, trust) but also brings the family together to work towards a common goal of assisting the senior family member to tackle head on the legal and social issues associated with aging and navigating through the maze of laws and available government benefits.
In the second segment, Yale interviews his first guest, Matthew Glass, a certified special needs advisor. Matthew explains how he assists young families with special needs children. Yale and Matthew then discuss how special needs planning will increase in frequency as parents age and are faced with their own long term care needs. Because that care is expensive, without proper planning they may be forced to spend most or all of their assets on their own care, leaving nothing for their children with special needs. A specifically tailored plan, usually involving a special needs trust, can avoid this drastic result and provide peace of mind to families.
To listen to the show click here
Here is how you can contact Matthew Glass
732-632-5854 or 800-333-7964 visit the The RHG Group Website
Don't forget to subscribe to our podcast by clicking here.
We welcome your questions, comments and suggestions send us an email
| Get at Short URL | Download Elder Law Today Podcast #1 What is Elder Law? Special Needs Planning with Guest Matthew Glass | Play in Popup.
| |  |
|
|
|