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if he continues to own his home or has other exempt assets, that can be more complex, so maybe let the law firm do year 1 renewal then you do it.
* RE: the awards letters, some States internally X reference for this, so you don’t have to. But most still expect the POA to mail or scan or update to the renewal document thier info. For SSA it’s the letter that gets mailed out in Nov that states to the penny what SSA will be paying each month for the SSA retirement income for the incoming year. Other pensions & retirments do this as well. LTC Medicaid wants this as that is precisely what they base the copay or SOC due to the NH each & every month by your Uncle to the NH. Also by your sending it, it kinda establishes you know what his income will be…. so no excuses on not paying exactly what is owed.
For the annual Medicaid renewal, we don't have to submit any paperwork. They send a printout with last year's information (value of accounts, cost of insurance, etc.) and we are to just cross out the old amounts, update, and POA signs. It also asks if any assets have been sold or disposed of, and in that case we'd probably have to send some kinds of documents.
there will be a renewal process as well and very much some of the items just submitted will be once again required plus newer ones. I had zero idea this happened and had out all of my moms paperwork into bins AND INTO STORAGE. Then the renewal letter landed….. was due in like 14 days for the date of letter which was actually postmarked later than the letter created date. It was a long azzz weekend.
so get a binder going to keep items of his as they come in for the renewal. For my mom her initial application was abt 130 pages, the renewals abt 25/30 pages.
oh and that at the NH in-house trust account that u put $ in for barber shoppe, that is technically his. And whatever in it along with whatever else nonexempt assets he continues to have (like in a bank account he still keeps) all - ALL - count towards his overall asset tally. If his state has nonexempt assets at $2,000 maximum, be sure you count that barbershop $ in the overall figure.
Once my uncle is on Medicaid he will keep/receive $50 per month. That seem paltry to pay for shaves, haircuts and clothing.
I have and am still in process of doing spenddown. I also have retained an eldercare attorney for the Medicaid application and sorting out his financial situation. WOW, this a long and arduous process.
When I was POA for my father I charged for that service even when he went to the nursing home. Every check I had to write or phone call I had to take on his behalf was paid for. The nursing home didn't like it because they wanted every penny and then some, and tried to petition for conservatorship over him which they lost. Check with that lawyer because you may have a legal right to get paid as POA.
In terms of pre-paying for services, I would advise against that. Once he qualifies for Medicaid long term nursing home coverage, each month (assuming he receives a monthly Social Security payment and perhaps other "retirement funds/pension" (?); your State will calculate a monthly "cost of care contribution" amount he needs to pay from his incoming income. Generally, most States take about all of any incoming income except for perhaps $80 or $90 dollars.
So you will have to pay (as his POA) this monthly amount to his nursing home. Some of these facilities are not set up for on-line payment and therefore a monthly check has to be sent in (kind of a pain if you do not live nearby). I would drop off a check each month for my mom when we were in this situation as I could not trust "snail mail" (the check has to arrive and process within the month) AS YOU MUST keep the total monthly balance in his account BELOW your State's incoming limit,
Because of this "need to keep the balance" below the State's income limit on a monthly basis, paying for needed items as you go will help you keep that Monthly Limit. If you pre-pay for things now; YOU WILL STILL NEED to spend funds on something as this moves forward JUST TO KEEP him below that monthly income limit.
Keep all receipts as you'll also need to file annual taxes for him, another reason to pay in the year incurred rather than upfront! Hopefully you have on-line access to all his accounts (any banking, SSA, retirement, Medicare, Medicaid, etc). Handling it all on-line is so much easier. Also, each year there is a "redetermination" process whereby you will need to upload into your State's Medicaid long term nursing home portal (bank statements for the prior year, state and local taxes filed, receipts of expenses for anything spent out of his funds, etc.). Again, so much easier to do with on-line access.
Good luck with this. The paperwork on this continues until they pass, with filing their final taxes the year after they pass.
One consideration -- talk with elder care attorney -- if (this often happens) your LO needs to go to the hospital, Medicaid long term nursing home coverage does NOT include (except for a day or two) a "bed hold" at the nursing home. This means, even if he's in a top quality nursing home that your have worked out, IF he has to be hospitalized for something you may loose his bed and upon discharge he may be transferred to another (perhaps poorer quality) facility. Worth figuring that out and how much (if any) you or he is willing to pay for a "bed hold" which can be $400 a day or more.
The other consideration is to work out what if any DNR (do not resuscitate) decisions need to be made now. As lacking this, the nursing home staff will do what ever to resuscitate them and that likely sends them to the hospital. Hard, but this is a thing to figure out now when placed rather than in an emergency situation.
If the nursing home bill is paid monthly that means the 'bed' is paid for for the month even if someone goes to the hospital.
What I did with my father who was in and out of the hospital several times during his nursing home stay, was to always get monthly statements from Medicare. If they were paying for some of the nursing home days because there was a need for skilled nursing for some days, I would deduct the cost of those days from the following monthly bill.
It takes a little legwork but no one has to pay a nursing home one cent more than they are owed.
Geaton is spot on with her take on all this.
But what you can do is for every Care Plan meeting is request that someone from billing is in attendance. Normally they are not, it’s nursing, dietary, activities, social work, maybe PT/OT. But billing would be good as they can let you know what’s what and with input from the other teams as to where they see things he could need and that you can buy or they can order and either way you pay for it.
CPMs are required by Medicare. First one will be pretty soon after he officially enters as a custodial care resident. Afterwards they are every 90 days and you can do them via Zoom or just a on speaker phone call. Or have it set for a time to be when in person works for you. SW usually coordinate these. Fwiw I went to maybe 2/3 of my moms in person as I live in another State. And for these, I took in a snack (muffins, clementines, sm apples, sleeves of kids birthday party ice cream), after the first time I did this, nobody missed showing up for moms CPMs. They went from 15/20 minutes to 45-1hr. Anything extra went to the DONs office aka the Director of Nursing who is the goddess and ruler at the NH. Just sayin’…..
Other than clothing there is not much he will need. His toiletries will be provided. As will his Depends. Not sure if I would do the gift card thing. I would check with a Medicaid caseworker.
We also pay for salon services, cable and phone, and clothing. When we visit her we call and ask if there's any special foods or treats she'd like and we buy that for her. We also use her funds to purchase a supplement for her to prevent UTIs, and to "tip" the staff on special occasions. Sometimes they have special dinner events and her funds pay for us to attend that with her. She is 100% immobile and has mild dementia and short-term memory impairment. She got 2 govt covid payments so her bank account swelled up but honestly has no where to go since there's really nothing else she needs. Medicaid paid for a very fancy wheelchair with a higher back and side supports because she leans to one side and has chronic back pain.
I would wait for him to be in and on Medicaid for a few months before over-thinking it. You've done a good job figuring it out to this point. My MIL is basically healthy 88-yr old, just cognitely impaired and refused to get out bed anymore. But your Uncle may be more able to do things than my MIL, or have different needs.