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I like the idea of a simplified summary. I haven't told my friend all that I have done to get rid of everything in a good way and he doesn't understand how much his care is costing him. I never talk about it, just take care of things. He would not remember what I tell him and it was easier for me to just make the decisions and get things taken care of without asking or explaining.
Good luck on this journey of care. It is important for you to do this and I hope things go well and easily for you, too!
All the bills are on auto pay now and I can review online. I applied for all the senior discounts for all the fixed expenses if it wasn't already done. I was going to shred all the paper I collected to until I found some important docs. Just so I wouldn't miss anything I ended up getting a shredder and spent time shredding, The papers seemed endless in each closet, under the bed, drawers, etc.
Not necessarily - while I did need the POA for some, most "billers", such as utilities, newspaper, phone, etc, didn't care. Most of them I called and provided the account name/number and requested a billing address change. They don't care where the bill goes, they only care about getting paid. I did NOT add my name to any accounts (two of us were already on mom's credit union account.) The town water dept even ASKED me if I wanted the bill mailed to me without me asking first (called to check on the balance due, as the bill was MIA.)
If OP can snag the bills, even older ones, just to have the contact information, then a simple call to most with a request to change the billing address should work. As with others who have dementia, if it doesn't show up in the mail, they will likely not remember that they should be getting it! Best first step is the POA paperwork. Second step should be the bank(s) he uses. From there it would be billers and CC. With CC, if you choose to let him keep it for now, check the available limit and have them reduce it considerably! Mom's was good credit, good payments, so her limit was some ridiculous double digit amount - ripe for abuse if card is lost, stolen or he gets talked into giving the number/date/CCV out! Next would be to consider taking over SS as rep payee and same for any other income he has (this was the only way I could get access/have documents sent to me.)
The only entities who required the POA were the credit union, the bank, and mom's credit card. That last one was the biggest PITA! They gave limited access and denied any online access. At some point I froze the account and then closed it.
It might not be the same everywhere, but not one biller (other than CU, bank and CC) ever asked me who what when where or why. I also avoid autopay - there are too many of my own accounts and mom's to juggle all that - I find have paper statements easier. Then there's always a chance of an oops on their side, resulting in taking too much! It is easier for me to have the paper trail handy if I ever need it! I DO use the billpay system, but it only requires set up once and then just schedule date and amount of payments. Push rather than allowing them to pull.
on the plus side, usually once the $ hits a certain tipping point, the creditor should send her a check to zero out the account.
That will show if there is a balance
And if possible sign up for paperless billing so you will get the bills.
But ..how long will you need this? Is he going to remain in his home? At some point, and it sounds like soon you will have to manage all of the finances for him not just bills but taxes as well.
When my mother passed, my father asked me to help him with the bills. I told him it would take me 3 months to get everything balanced (no, I have no idea why I said 3 months - I later learned that it really does take 3 months when you go in blind). When he said that I wasn't doing it the way my mother did, I told him nicely that I could only do it the way I knew how. I got his funds balanced and paid his bills for him. I took him shopping and showed him how to put out his pills on a weekly basis. He was on so many medications that the pills were split to morning, noon and night. I got out a pad and his medications and made a chart he could follow for which pills to take at what time of the day. Really it was a list and the pills separated by Morning, Noon and Night.
Just keep offering. Not demanding. Offering to assist. Never strip your father of his independence. Put yourself in his place - we were all children being told what to do when growing up - none of us liked it. So try to be patient and offer to help instead of telling him what to do.
I prayed for patience and guidance every single night and it helped me.
Good Luck and Bless You.
it also wouldn’t hurt to review his will while he can still qualify to make decisions. And also if he has life insurance, check beneficiaries, same goes for beneficiaries on any asset holdings.
once POA is in place, you can talk to dad about how you’d like to make his life easier by setting up things so bills are paid automatically and you can take care of transfers or bill paying so he can just relax. If he wants you can show him a monthly accounting of his money incoming and outgoing.
My father hated to go to the doctor and would refuse. Playing the little "trick" was the beginning of getting him treatment. That was in 2011. My mom passed in 2013 and she was easy in comparison because her body fail but her mind was still clear. I have been my dad's caregiver for 5 1/2 years and he was placed in hospice today. I will see him through to the end. My advice is to get him to an neurologist so you have a doctor on your side. If he sees a general physician they can refer him "or you" to a good neurologist.
Ask about POD, etc.
Also FYI having durable PoA will still not allow doctors and hospitals to release or discuss your father's medical info with you...he must sign a Medical Information Release form at every doctor he sees (and names you on it as his representative). This is very important that you do this. HIPAA rules make no exceptions for close family members.
I have an "immediate" POA for my nephew meaning it was in effect when hecsigned it. So I can handle his money and talk to Drs.
We have changed many of MIL's bills to auto pay as suggested by others. She was still "with it" enough to understand and approve that move -- although sometimes she grouses about it these days. She can see them on the bank statement (on the rare occasion she looks at those).
All medical bills go to SIL's home address -- she has POA. SIL will bring those over and show MIL, and give her the opportunity to pay them by check. If MIL balks or doesn't believe she owes it -- SIL goes home and writes a check from MIL's account and pops it in the mail. MIL gets cranky about her daughter "Taking over" -- but it had to be done, MIL had let a $12 bill go to collections, and taken over 7 months to pay the $400 she owed to the nursing home for her rehab stint (She had the money, just didn't think she needed to pay it).
The tricky part for us, is the odd bills that still come to the house - property taxes, a plumbing repair, etc. I try to monitor the mail piling up on her coffee table and dig through it for bills. If I can get her to pay it, I will. If she refuses, I'll sneak off with the bill and get it to SIL - let her know that her mom doesn't believe she owes it and won't pay it. Then SIL can try again, and if it fails she just writes the check and mails it.
So I guess, we try to let MIL handle some of it, when she is willing, but we have a big safety net in place to catch things before they go to collection agencies (it's happened!) or she loses her house over not paying a $5 property tax bill!
So: when he struggles with working out the tip, what happens? Does he just go for it, throw in some change, and let it pass? Do you intervene, or does he ask the waiter to see to it?
This is a very delicate situation for you and it does want careful handling. First of all, pick the right battles - just suppose your father does incur one or a few months' interest on his credit card, how much will that cost him in total? Is it enough to be a real worry for him, or just an annoying waste?
Once the papers are in hand, then you can start agreeing with him which tasks he can first of all "explain" to you so that you will know how he likes things done, and then once that goes smoothly - fingers crossed - you can begin to take over certain routines and then eventually all of it.
Work out with him how you will keep him informed, too. This aspect is likely to get seriously repetitive and boring, but you'll want a simplified summary that you can show to him for reassurance.