I met with an elder lawyer recently. She came highly recommended by a friend. Needless to say, she charges a lot of money. What she's offering is to A) set up a trust so that we can hold onto at least 1/2 of my mother's assets, and B) to gather documents and file the application for Medicaid. I (the only child) have no idea what I'm doing as far as Medicaid and would love legal help like this. The fees will come out of my mother's account (but I haven't yet mentioned this to her). Those of you with experience in this area, is it worth the exorbitant fee to have a lawyer handle this? I certainly would not know how to create a trust, and the Medicaid application seems tedious and complicated.
One of the members mentioned that her father had "a significant monthly spend down" to qualify for Mediciad, even though her mother is still living.
This is one example of the many complexities of applying for Medicaid coverage for nursing home care. Unless both spouses need nursing home care, you shouldn't need to spend down their assets; Medicaid regulations require only that the assets be held in a way that complies with the laws and regulations in your state that protect Medicaid applicants and their spouses. Often, it takes an attorney in your state who is trained in the field to recognize all of the facts and know which regulations can help people who are going through tough times of transition.
A Committee On The Unauthorized Practice Of Law Appointed By The Supreme Court Of New Jersey issued an Opinion on May 16, 2016 to answer questions involving people in similar situations.
The New Jersey committee took a look at: "non-lawyer advisors [who] advised a family member that she could receive monies as a caregiver when the family member did not qualify for that status; advised a family member to spend down an IRA when it would have been more reasonable to purchase an annuity with those monies; advised a family member to draw down her assets when it would have been more sensible to transfer monies to a disabled child; advised a family member to transfer real estate when it would have been prudent to address the significant tax implications of that plan; and the like."
In all of those situations, you need legal advice to protect yourself and your family.
"[A]dvisors [had] also counseled people on wills and powers of attorney; on the need for guardianships and the authority to transfer assets; on the standards for Medicaid coverage; on nursing home laws; on transfers of property; on the impact of marriage and divorce; on estate administration and the elective share; and similar legal matters." The New Jersey Committee said that these non-lawyer advisors "may not provide legal advice on strategies to become eligible for Medicaid benefits, including advice on spending down resources, tax implications, guardianships, sale or transfer of assets, creation of trusts or service contracts, and the like."
Guidelines may be available in your state for decisions on whether to go with a non-lawyer application preparer, or hire an elder law attorney who understands the laws and regulations that can help you.
In 2011, another review board in Ohio came to the conclusion "that Medicaid planning requiring specialized legal training, skill, and experience constitutes the practice of law. However, especially in situations where the applicant’s income and resource levels are near the Medicaid limits, there may be some Medicaid planning scenarios involving only document review and a financial calculation." So, "whether nonattorney involvement in Medicaid planning constitutes the unauthorized practice of law must be determined on a case-by-case basis."
The Attorney General in Tennessee said people should consider "whether the legal assessments or advice at issue would require the professional judgment of a lawyer."
The Florida Bar’s Standing Committee on the Unlicensed Practice of Law heard evidence in 2015 about the types of harm caused by non-lawyer Medicaid planners, including: Denial of Medicaid eligibility, Exploitation, Catastrophic or severe tax liability, and Purchase of inappropriate financial products threatening or destroying the client’s life savings.
These results illustrate how you may not end up saving money by relying on a Medicaid application preparation service.
Read more at:
https://www.judiciary.state.nj.us/notices/2016/n160518c.pdf
http://www.floridasupremecourt.org/decisions/2015/sc14-211.pdf
Yes, Get a lawyer. The hard part is not getting Medicaid, it's keeping it.
www.naela.org
for real lawyers in your city
Pick out 3 that offer a free 1 hr consult
Make your questions very specific.
Trust your gut.
Try to get a lawyer that will communicate by email afterwards and is included in the up front fee - this is critical. You will have more questions later than in the beginning.
Medicaid can be a life saver but getting a good caseworker is luck of the draw - you will need a lawyer and also you will need a backup plan in case you ever become Medicaid ineligible. That's where the lawyer can help with maintaining assets in the beginning to liquidate later if necessary.
If you are lucky, a social worker may be of help.
Document everything.
Spend money only on the beneficiary, immediately.
My mother in law could not have more than 3000 in the bank and couldn't make more than 2200 a month. Any and all assest must be transfered 5 years prior to application.
They wanted copies of ALL life insurance policies, mortgage information and a copy of the title to her car.
It is very sad that anyone has to go thru this yo get thier family help.
Keep in mind that Medicaid regs vary from state to state. I had a lot of questions for the person I chose especially "What happens if we go through all this and it doesn't get approved?" Their reply was: "We always get approval."
They were right. I gave them whatever documentation they asked for, answered whatever questions they had and let them handle it.
Keep in mind that after approval is obtained, the case will be reviewed annually so you will need to continue to account for any income your Mom may receive.
Most of the people posting seem to think it's a good idea. I simply paid out of pocket but much more is known now so if I'd had it to do over maybe I'd do it differently.
Good luck,
Carol
Given no elder attorneys in our community, we could not get help. Post-application, the best we could do was see an estate/probate attorney. He is willing to try to find some straight answers from the state, but admits this isn't his area of expertise.
Since many resources will be lost anyway, I'd just as soon pay some to an attorney as the state. Those same dollars forfeited to the state don't build a stronger legal community. At least a smart attorney will learn something and can apply it to future cases, such as yours.
In earlier years knowledge, expense, and experience in difficult times potentially pays off. A better education, a better job, housing, financial stability, opportunities for children and grandchildren.
SNF Medicaid education and experience without good legal help accelerates the process by which the cs meets the federal/state goal of impoverishment. The less legal help you employ, the quicker you become a statistic. SNF state Medicaid can more readily present it's statistics of dollars saved. Medicaid statistics don't carry footnotes that reference the government's corresponding achievement of cs poverty.
Approximately 120K maximum assets retained by a 70 year old spouse is much more devastating than 120K retained by an 85 year old cs. The 85 yr. old has almost achieved his/her life expectancy as projected by Social Security. The 70 year old is projected to live 18 more years. The 120K now gets stretched over a projected 38 year remaining life span.
Maybe good legal advice can delay this process so cs can have a few more years of quality life. Anything an attorney can help with is probably worth the money. Especially the younger the snf spouse and cs are when this all starts.
Medicaid is NOT a single one time paperwork & eligibility event.
All the states have some sort of renewal paperwork with required documentation to accompany the renewal - so if you are hands-off in the initial application you are going to have to on your own dime pay the initial atty or get a new atty. to do the renewal and get the whatever paperwork required for renewal done and within the very tight timeframe the states set for renewals. Keep in mind that once mom goes onto NH Medicaid, she is required to do a co-pay (also called her SOC - share of cost) of ALL her monthly income to the NH less a smallish personal needs allowance (which varies by state from $ 35 - 105). Any future costs needed for management of mom's or her assets (like her home, car, taxes, legal, funeral, etc costs) will need to be paid by you or others from day 1 of Medicaid till whatever time frame is needed to get out of probate or any other after death legal.
Please realize that once mom dies there will be MERP (estate recovery) to deal with as MERP is required to send an NOI (notice of intent) with a questionnaire in an attempt for a recovery of any & all assets to recoup $ Medicaid paid for care. Usually for a trust to be Medicaid compliant my understanding is that a trust either needs to be done irrevocable 5 years prior OR is a special needs trust which has the state as it's beneficiary. So for SNT $ left in the trust at mom's death goes to the state. No $ to heirs. SNT are wonderful as it enables them to get things that Medicaid either doesn't pay for or pays for low cost items. But if your planning on having those funds, not going to happen. I was a trustee on a still living independently cousin's SNT for several years and it has been spent on getting him a car retrofitted for him to drive, caregivers for outings & travel; a very specialized pneumatic wheelchair, etc & all things not ever going to be paid by Medicaid or Medicare. There is an annual reporting on items paid by the SNT. There will be no SNT funds left eventually so it will dissolve but till then has done what an SNT is about - providing for care & equipment & services to enable them to live life better.
Now you do need an atty as there is legal that does need to be done - DPOA, MPOA, a will or codicil, a guardian in case of incapacity document (if your state does these). But the Medicaid application, imho you need to be involved with and reviewing the documents submitted and active in gathering these together as if something is needed later on OR the application is denied, it's you who will be on the hook financially to pay the NH for all those months mom was/is there which Medicaid denies to pay.
Also laws can change. Items that pass outside of probate (like Life Estates) were viewed as beyond MERP so used for Medicaid asset avoidance. But now many states (NYS) are going after life estates under MERP.
Also another item on things can change…..till very recently, term life insurance was not viewed as a spend-down asset. Only whole life insurance was as it had a obvious cash value. Now states are starting to require LIFE INSURANCE POLICY CONVERSIONS aka Life Care Funding, aka Medicaid Life Settlement. So far 8 states (mine - Louisiana - is one and regs apparently are being written like now so probably in effect in 2017) have done the legislation on this. TX & FL have done it, so all the other states are sure to follow. Basically it means that all insurance policies (whole, term, GUL, universal) over a minimal value (like under 3K - 5K) will need to convert to an irrevocable account with the funding used to pay for their care and any $ left after death to the state as the beneficiary except for either a death benefit of 5K or 5% of policy - whichever is less. The insurance co probably love the states move to conversions.
Medicaid means "at need" both medically & financially.Financially for NH Medicaid they just have to be impoverished & stay that way. States are doing whatever to make sure that happens.
Dad has passed 5 yrs. ago. Good Luck and God Bless♥