Archive for the ‘Elder Law’ Category

New Stipend Program for Caregivers of Veterans Disperses First Payments

Monday, August 1st, 2011

Family members caring for veterans received their first payments from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs’ new Family Caregiver Program in July.

The new program, officially titled the Family Caregiver Program of the Caregivers and Veterans Omnibus Health Services Act 2010, provides a monthly stipend to family members who care for veterans that were seriously injured in the line of duty after Sept. 11, 2001.

Nearly 200 Family Caregivers of Veterans completed the program’s required caregiver training program in time to receive a stipend in July. The VA is dispersing more than $430,000 this month, with each caregiver receiving an average of $2,500. This figure will lower to around $1,600 in following months, as the first payments are retroactive to the date of the application.

Since the program’s launch on May 9, approximately 1,250 Family Caregivers of Veterans applied for the program. The program requires applicants to complete a caregiver comprehensive core training program – developed by VA clinical experts and the nonprofit community-based health agency Easter Seals – before they can begin receiving payments. Eligible Family Caregivers of Veterans are also given access to mental health services and health care insurance if they do not already have it.

Caregivers who qualify for the program can also utilize in-home and community based care for when a veteran needs additional help, respite care that can help care for the veteran for a short time while the caregiver needs relief, additional education programs covering severe traumas like Traumatic Brain Injury, and caregiver support groups

Caregivers who wish to apply may download the application at www.caregiver.va.gov.

For more information about Littman Krooks LLP, visit www.littmankrooks.com or call (914)684-2100.

PACE Helps Seniors Remain at Home

Monday, July 25th, 2011

Most seniors prefer the warmth and familiarity of their own homes to nursing homes. The Program of All-Inclusive Car for the Elderly, or PACE, assists seniors who wish to remain in their homes by providing care and services similar to those provided by nursing homes.

Seniors who use PACE are assessed by a team consisting of professional and paraprofessional staff. The team creates a care plan tailored to an individual senior’s needs and delivers many services to the senior’s home, including acute care services and nursing facility services. Other social and medical services are completed in an adult day health center. These include adult day care, dentistry and prescription drugs.

To qualify for PACE, seniors must be at least 55 years old, qualify for Medicare or Medicaid, live in an area serviced by PACE, and be eligible to receive nursing home care from an appropriate state agency.

Seniors who use PACE pay a monthly premium, but all Medicare services are covered if the senior is eligible. The premium amount is dependent on the senior’s financial situation. Medicare also covers a small portion of the monthly premium.

The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 founded PACE as a national service and established it as a permanent part of the Medicare program. A similar program operated in California as early as the 1970s. The program is currently available to all eligible seniors near one of its 75 centers in 29 states.

In New York, the law firm of Littman Krooks LLP features Certified Elder Law Attorneys nationally recognized by the National Elder Law Foundation who can help seniors plan for their futures. To learn more, visit http://www.elderlawnewyork.com/blog/ or call 914-684-2100.

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National Resource Center on LGBT Aging Website Launches Legal Support Resources

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011


This week’s guest blogger, Hilary Meyer, is the Director at the National Resource Center on LGBT Aging

In February 2010, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services awarded a landmark grant to establish the National Resource Center on LGBT Aging — the country’s first and only technical assistance resource center aimed at improving the quality of services and supports offered to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) older adults. Last week, the National Resource Center on LGBT Aging released a variety of new legal and financial resources on the website, providing critical legal information and tips to older LGBT adults, and seeks to inform aging services providers and LGBT organizations of LGBT elders’ legal needs. New resources include:

  • An interactive state-by-state map designed to direct LGBT older adults to legal resources specific to the state they live in
  • Informative articles on the legal documents every LGBT older adult should have, such as wills, advance directives, financial power of attorney, and more
  • Videos that clearly illustrate the legal and financial issues unique to LGBT older adults
  • Publications to help LGBT elders get a jumpstart on legal and financial planning  and
  • Various multimedia resources explaining Social Security and its importance to LGBT older people.

The website materials are designed to encourage older adults to draft the legal documents needed, especially because end-of-life issues can be of special concern for the LGBT population. Namely, if someone becomes incapacitated without the proper legal documents in place, or if the person dies intestate, the majority of states give decision-making authority and inheritance to the next-of-kin— either a legally recognized spouse or blood relative. Because so few states legally recognize same-sex relationships, this could result in surviving LGBT partners or other loved ones being unable to carry out end-of-life decisions, funeral and burial wishes, being shut out of an inheritance, forfeiture of a family home, and other unintended consequences.

The legal support section is one in a series of interactive, multimedia resources that the National Resource Center on LGBT Aging will unveil over the next year. These online resources will span the many issues affecting LGBT older adults —from housing and HIV/AIDS, to retirement and healthcare access and more.

The National Resource Center on LGBT Aging is a project of Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders (SAGE) in partnership with 10 LGBT and aging organizations nationwide, including the American Society on Aging; CenterLink (the national association of LGBT community centers); FORGE Transgender Aging Network; GRIOT Circle; Hunter College; The LGBT Aging Project; the National Association of Area Agencies on Aging (n4a); the National Institute of Senior Centers (National Council on Aging); Openhouse and PHI (a national training expert).

HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT… RideConnect?

Tuesday, June 7th, 2011

By Amy C. O’Hara, Esq.

RideConnect is an information and referral service that provides transportation options for older adults, individuals with disabilities and home health care workers in Northern Westchester. There are no membership fees to use RideConnect and riders will only pay the fare charged by the transportation provider. Currently, transportation providers are based primarily in Bedford, Lewisboro, Mount Kisco, Pound Ridge, North Salem, North Castle and Somers, but transportation can be arranged to destinations outside of the towns served. You can contact RideConnect at (914) 242-7433.

For more information, visit www.elderlawnewyork.com or www.littmankrooks.com

Chronic Illness and the Estate Plan

Monday, May 16th, 2011


Martin M. Shenkman, Esq., (www.shenkmanlaw.com) focuses on the estate and business planning needs of high-net-worth individuals, closely held business  owners, and real estate owners/developers. We recently spoke to him about estate planning when a loved one has a chronic disease.

Q: What’s different about estate planning for someone with a chronic illness?

A: You need to focus on the specific disease, the individual’s experience with it, and its likely future course. There’s lots of variability.  Generic approaches don’t work; I can’t think of a worse candidate for online estate planning. The standard disability clauses that appear in most legal documents, even lawyer-prepared documents such as a shareholder’s agreement, should be examined. People make lots of dangerous assumptions—even professionals.

Q: Can you give me an example?

A: For instance, they may automatically structure an estate as if the person will be or has been unable to work.  Take MS–you can be diagnosed with it as a child but the average age is in the thirties. Someone with MS may be able to work for 10-20 years, some until retirement. Or look at Parkinson’s.  Most people experience its onset in their mid-sixties or later, but some begin to have symptoms in their thirties.  The older individual diagnosed with chronic illness may have had a full career during which to acquire assets. Planning is not only for the elderly and not only about special needs issues. Each situation requires a different approach.

Q:  What about advance directives?

A:  That’s another area that requires careful consideration.  Consider diseases such as MS and Crohn’s that involve uncontrolled attacks. A good way to approach power of attorney (POA)  in such cases might be to structure an immediate limited POA that would authorize someone to handle routine matters—bill paying—for a couple weeks.  But they wouldn’t be able to handle anything major, such as selling someone’s home.  The comprehensive POA would “spring” when the illness became incapacitating.

Q: You’ve said that estate planning tools should empower, not disempower.  What do you mean?

A: Disease disempowers. If you are living with a chronic illness or disability it limits what you can do. It disempowers you on some level or in some manner. There’s a big emotional component to planning for a loved one with a chronic illness, and there are creative means of preserving someone’s independence as much as possible. Take a situation in which an individual has bipolar disorder.  The person may be exceptionally bright and capable, but a manic episode could pose serious problems. The bulk of this person’s estate could be protected by establishing a fully funded living trust having family and institutional trustees.  But the trustees could be directed to establish a small account –say, $5,000–outside the trust that’s accessible to the individual by checkbook, credit and debit card. This would empower the person to do anything anyone else can do.  It could be replenished, as necessary, while the bulk of the estate would remain protected.

Estate planning tools should be used to ensure quality of life.  They shouldn’t be used as blunt instruments.

Thanks, Marty, these are thoughtful approaches to complex situations.  I hope they prompt readers whose loved ones have chronic illnesses to think creatively about their own estate planning.

Aging Outside the Nuclear Family

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

The demographics of aging are shifting, and the number of single, childless seniors is growing.  Baby boomers, now entering retirement, are much more likely to be childless than previous generations. Some estimates run higher than 25 percent. In addition, more couples have opted to live together outside marriage.  Add to that the fact that women tend to outlive men, and it’s obvious that an increasing number of seniors will be on their own.

Most of them, at some point, will develop a chronic disease or disability. So who will call the  insurance company or ensure that they’re taking their medication?  Most in-home care for the elderly is performed by family members. Hospital stays are getting shorter, driven by cost-saving initiatives, making it even more likely that these seniors will need outside help at some point in their lives.

Their options include friends, paid caregivers and government-sponsored social services. There may be an increased need for long-term care insurance to cover in-home, as well as nursing home, services. And more advance directives are likely to designate friends as health and financial decisionmakers.

Stories are beginning to appear about women building networks of close friends to share household and home care costs, to advocate for one another, and to provide the emotional support that might otherwise come from a spouse or child.  So far, it appears, men have  been less likely to test such situations.

One problem is that such measures are largely unprotected by law.  The Family Medical Leave Act, for instance, provides no benefits to individuals who may wish to care for a grievously ill friend.

There is also little guidance on how to financially structure such mutually supportive arrangements. There’s an emerging movement, though, that seeks to change that.  Some legal scholars are  espousing the establishment of “friendship law,” which would confer certain rights upon “designated friends”  who play a significant caregiver role—including hospital visitation,  tax breaks and claims to an estate if no will has been established. This is, to say the least, controversial.

On the other hand, when the nuclear family can’t provide an answer, what sort of “caretaking community” can step in? There’s  research to support the important role that friends play in the aging process.  Studies indicate that, especially for seniors, having friends can improve both physical and mental health.  It reduces stress, correlates with better immunity and may even be a factor in women’s longevity, given their .greater likelihood of having strong social networks. Ethan Leib, who teaches law at the University of California at Hastings, points to public savings that accrue when friends step in during illness and other emergencies.

Boomers have repeatedly changed our culture. Although childless seniors would seemingly be at greater risk than others, research indicates that –so far—they do not receive less care or enjoy life less than their counterparts.

Do you know someone in this situation? How is that individual planning for the likelihood that, at some point, outside help will be needed?

For more information, visit www.elderlawnewyork.com or www.littmankrooks.com.

4th Annual National Healthcare Decisions Day

Friday, April 15th, 2011

April 16, 2011 is the 4th Annual National Healthcare Decisions Day (NHDD). NHDD exists to inspire, educate, and empower the public and providers about the importance of advance care planning. Read an entry from Bernard A. Krooks, Esq., regarding advance directives:

Advance Directives: Ensure your Wishes are Honored

What kind of medical care would you want if you were too ill or hurt to express your wishes? Advance directives are legal documents that allow you to convey your decisions about end-of-life care ahead of time. They provide a way for you to communicate your wishes to family, friends, and health care professionals, and to avoid confusion later on.

Advance directives allow you to appoint others to make decisions for you in the event you are no longer capable of making them yourself. Although we hope that we never become incapacitated, it is much better to plan in advance for this situation. If you don’t plan in advance, then your family may end up in a lengthy and costly court proceeding. More importantly, your wishes may not be carried out. There are basically three different advance directives that all of us should have:

  1. Power of Attorney
  2. Health Care Proxy (sometimes called Health Care Power of Attorney)
  3. Living Will

A power of attorney is a legal document pursuant to which one person (the principal) appoints another person (the agent) to act on behalf of the principal with respect to certain financial matters. A general power of attorney authorizes the agent to perform virtually any act on behalf of the principal. A limited power of attorney authorizes the agent to perform limited acts, such as selling a home, and remains effective for a limited period of time; e.g. 60 days. The power of attorney is presented to a third party as authorization for the agent to act on the principal’s behalf. The third party might be a bank, a stockbroker, a title insurance company, or any other person with whom the agent must deal. A durable power of attorney is one that remains in effect even after the principal becomes incapacitated. This is important because it is at that point in time that the agent must begin to act on behalf of the principal.

Make your wishes known. You have the right to make these decisions for yourself while you have legal capacity.

The selection of an agent is particularly important in a power of attorney. It is critical to select an agent who is trustworthy. A trustworthy agent will carry out his fiduciary duty not to self-deal and to act only on behalf of the principal. The agent must also be diligent and get things done.

It is also important to include a successor agent in your power of attorney. If the primary agent dies or becomes disabled and in the meantime the principal has become incapacitated, a guardianship will be necessary. By naming a successor agent, the guardianship proceeding may be avoided.

Some individuals prefer to appoint two people as agents under a power of attorney. If two agents are appointed, does the principal want them to be able to act independently of one another or should they be required to act together? There are pros and cons of each method and these should be carefully considered.

In most states, gifts of the principal’s assets under a power of attorney are not valid unless specifically authorized by the document. This also is the position of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Good practice may dictate inclusion of gifting powers in the document. In determining the extent of gifting authority, consideration should be given to naming those persons to whom gifts can be made (including the agent, if appropriate), whether to limit the amount of the gifts to the annual gift tax exclusion amount (currently, $13,000), whether gifts can be made for education expenses, whether gifts can be made to charities, and whether gifts can be made to qualify the principal for public benefits including Medicaid.

These are just a few of the many items to be considered when your power of attorney is being drafted. Keep in mind that the power of attorney applies only to financial matters. In order to appoint someone to make health care decisions for you in the event you are incapacitated, you need to execute an advance health care directive.

An advance health care directive can be in the form of a health care proxy, living will, or both. Without an advance health care directive, the process of deciding what to do medically—and when to do it—can be a time-consuming and emotional task for caregivers, family members, friends, and health care providers.

Advance health care directives allow you to select in advance the person most trusted as your agent to make health care decisions in case you can’t do it yourself. A living will is an expression of how you want to be treated during end-of-life care. It generally applies if you are in a persistent vegetative state, coma, or you are terminally ill. The health care proxy is a delegation of authority to a third party to make health care decisions for you when you are unable to do so. All states and the District of Columbia impose legal requirements on the content and execution of these documents for them to be valid.

Once you have made the decision to have advance health care directives, there are many issues for you to consider, including:

  • Who will serve as your health care agent and successor agent?
  • Under what conditions, if any, do you want to authorize the withdrawal of life-sustaining medical treatment (life support)?
  • Does your authorization to withhold or withdraw life-sustaining medical treatment extend to artificial nutrition or hydration?
  • Do you have specific preferences concerning health care facilities or providers?
  • Do you have any moral or religious convictions that dictate the use or rejection of certain forms of medical treatment?
  • Do you want to make anatomical gifts (organ donation) or give the agent the power and authority to make these gifts?

In light of the privacy rules in the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
Act of 1996 (HIPAA) and related regulations, the advance directive should also include a specific authorization under HIPAA for your health care agent to obtain confidential information concerning your medical condition. This will allow the agent to talk with your physicians and review your medical records. Although many individuals are accompanied by their children to routine medical appointments, in an emergency situation the children need to know that they will be able to talk with the treating medical professionals about their parent’s condition.

You want to make sure that your agent, family, and health care providers know that you have advance medical directives. At a minimum, you should have a candid and frank discussion of the advance directives and your health care preferences with your immediate family, health care agents, and primary care physician.

Typically, individuals do not like to think about advance directives and end-of-life care. These are not easy decisions to make and, for many, religious beliefs play an important role in the process. The important thing is to make your wishes known. You have the right to make these decisions for yourself while you have legal capacity. However, once you no longer have capacity, others will make these decisions for you, and their decisions may not be consistent with your wishes.

So, give yourself and your family the gift of peace of mind by completing your advance directives.

Bernard A. Krooks, JD, CPA, LLM (in taxation), CELA®, is a founding partner at the law firm Littman Krooks LLP and a nationally known and widely quoted expert on elder law.

For more information regarding advance directives, visit www.littmankrooks.com, www.elderlawnewyork.com, or www.specialneedsnewyork.com.  For more information about National Healthcare Decisions Day, visit www.nationalhealthcaredecisionsday.org.

Vets Often Overlook Important Government Benefits

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Many former members of the armed forces are unaware of benefits available to them through the Veterans Administration. The Aid and Attendance Improved Pension—which has been available for nearly 60 years–is a case in point.  It provides funding to help defray the costs of ongoing assistance with such tasks of daily living as eating, taking medication, bathing, and toileting. Care in nursing homes or assisted living facilities due to mental or physical disabilities are also covered.

Vets, 65 or older, who served during a period of war, and whose income and net worth fall within the required range, are eligible.  Compensation is not tied to service-related injuries. Surviving spouses and dependent children qualify for more limited coverage.

A “homebound pension,” also available to those needing care, is less restrictive than Aid and Attendance and can frequently be used to compensate family caregivers or to defray the costs of adult day care.

There is also a “basic pension,” having no medical pre-conditions, available to vets 65 or over who have limited income. Unmarried vets with no dependent children must have annual incomes under $11,830.  Those with a spouse must have an income of under $15,493 yearly.

An elder law attorney can advise you on methods of protecting personal assets while qualifying for, and coordinating, Veterans and Medicaid benefits, the latter often needed to cover long-term care.

For more information,  visit www.elderlawnewyork.com or www.littmankrooks.com.

Help is Available for Aging Drivers in New York

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

As the baby boomer generation increases in age, the number of elderly drivers on the road will rise dramatically. The New York State Department of Motor Vehicles reported that motorists over the age of 65 will increase by 60 percent by 2016.

Programs are available to help keep this increasing number of seniors mobile and educate them about safety as they age. In New York State, the Department of Motor Vehicles operates a unique service known as the Office of the Older Driver that offers education, information and referral materials to aging drivers.

This Office is committed to offering a selection of the best available educational and referral materials to older drivers and, importantly, to deliver these services in a supportive manner.

Among the many services offered is an assessment of the senior’s driving skills. It includes a physical evaluation of vision, reaction times, and “cognitive ability” as well as an overall driving evaluation. Upon completion of the assessment, the Office for the Older Driver can recommend a driver rehabilitation specialist who can help if the senior needs to improve their driving skills.

Occupational therapists are normally the rehabilitation specialists who conduct driver rehabilitation evaluations. The primary purpose of occupational therapy is to help the person remain independent. However, an evaluation may determine that a person needs to stop driving. In these cases, the occupational therapist can help the person and their family to find transportation other than driving.

In addition, the Office for the Older Driver also works closely with CarFit, an AARP and AAA sponsored program, to help elderly drivers determine if their vehicle is a appropriate for them. In the past, CarFit has found that more than one-third of elderly drivers have at least one important safety issue in their vehicle that needs correction. Very often, something as simple as adjusting the position of the seat or alignment of the steering wheel can increase a driver’s safety.

The website also provides forms that are commonly needed by the senior driver – such as the MV-80 Physicians Statement, MV-619 Eye Test Report and MV-232 Change of Address. The website also offers information about health issues that may directly impair driving abilities, such as cataracts, dementia or Alzheimer’s disease.

For more information, visit the Office of the Older Driver.

To learn more about New York elder law, New York estate planning, visit http://www.elderlawnewyork.com or www.littmankrooks.com.

Help is Available for Aging Drivers in New York

Monday, March 28th, 2011

As the baby boomer generation increases in age, the number of elderly drivers on the road will rise dramatically. The New York State Department of Motor Vehicles reported that motorists over the age of 65 will increase by 60 percent by 2016.

Programs are available to help keep this increasing number of seniors mobile and educate them about safety as they age. In New York State, the Department of Motor Vehicles operates a unique service known as the Office of the Older Driver that offers education, information and referral materials to aging drivers.

This Office is committed to offering a selection of the best available educational and referral materials to older drivers and, importantly, to deliver these services in a supportive manner.

Among the many services offered is an assessment of the senior’s driving skills. It includes a physical evaluation of vision, reaction times, and “cognitive ability” as well as an overall driving evaluation.  Upon completion of the assessment, the Office for the Older Driver can recommend a driver rehabilitation specialist who can help if the senior needs to improve their driving skills.

Occupational therapists are normally the rehabilitation specialists who conduct driver rehabilitation evaluations. The primary purpose of occupational therapy is to help the person remain independent. However, an evaluation may determine that a person needs to stop driving. In these cases, the occupational therapist can help the person and their family to find transportation other than driving.

In addition, the Office for the Older Driver also works closely with CarFit, an AARP and AAA sponsored program, to help elderly drivers determine if their vehicle is a appropriate for them. In the past, CarFit has found that more than one-third of elderly drivers have at least one important safety issue in their vehicle that needs correction. Very often, something as simple as adjusting the position of the seat or alignment of the steering wheel can increase a driver’s safety.

The website also provides forms that are commonly needed by the senior driver – such as the MV-80 Physicians Statement, MV-619 Eye Test Report and MV-232 Change of Address. The website also offers information about health issues that may directly impair driving abilities, such as cataracts, dementia or Alzheimer’s disease.

For more information, visit the Office of the Older Driver at http://dmv.ny.gov/older-driver/older-driver-resources

For blog archives, please visit www.littmankrooks.com/blog or  www.elderlawnewyork.com/blogs