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Is there a newer edition ?
I could not find the chapter specific to this Special needs trust.
Appreciate your help & guidance.
Is that what you're really up against?
If you are DPOA, then go to see an attorney to help sort out the options that can be done on your dad's behalf in your state. If you're not DPOA and he just won't do that, then eventually there will be an accident / emergency / medical condition that places him again in the hospital and the doc's will discharge him to a NH and he will be unable to leave and his assets will have to be used to private pay for his care and probably permanent stay there. His $$ saved will have to be used for this and at 5K to 10K a month for room & board at a NH, his $ will get used up in short order unless he is truly generationally wealthy. He will be fortunate in that by being private pay he can choose a facility and have the option of paying for individual services that Medicaid NH recipients do not. Good luck as none of this is easy.
However, if within the near future, you should apply for Medicaid to pay for your needed NH or other Medicaid paid for service, then the state requires that those benefits go to those that meet both the financial and medical criteria for the program. Medicaid is a needs-based program for the very poor.
Because Medicaid is needs-based, doing a 5 yr look-back on the applicants assets is critical for the states to operate the program. If we were able to transfer all of our assets, empty out accounts, spend monthly retirement & SS on nonNH stuff today then go into a NH tomorrow paid 100% by the state, the system couldn't afford it & there would not be any NH to go to & be paid by Medicaid.
Medicaid compliance is all about either doing very advanced planning beyond 5 years; spending your share by paying almost all of your income to the NH; and spending down your assets wisely & legally to qualify for impoverishment.
Medicaid gets to the heart of the issue of who should pay for long-term care -- the public through the tax-supported Medicaid program, or users of long-term care through their personal resources, including those remaining after death.
If you choose to sell or transfer a property at a lesser value, without good cause, and then apply for Medicaid, you will face a transfer penalty period in which Medicaid will not pay until the transfer penalty is paid first.
If you don't want to spend down your assets to qualify for Medicaid for NH you don't have to but you have to private pay for the NH care. No one is making you apply for Medicaid and hopefully you have the long term fortune to private pay for all your care forever. It's my experience, that if you live long enough and are in a facility, that you will eventually run out of $ and sooner than you ever thought. And thank goodness that there is Medicare and Medicaid out there to pay.
He wants to have his money to spend when he's in the home so he can buy "what he wants when he wants", you know, to feel in control of his life. I know he can buy what he wants for himself (possessions, E.G. TV , radio, microwave, ..) in the 5 year window and it won't count against him. What happens if he buys a TV for himself and then gives it away in the following week? Does Medicaid check to make sure he still has the TV?
What would stop him from buying a high-end TV and then returning it the next day, taking the cash and then putting it away? Would this be a loophole?
if the intent was done for Medicaid avoidance combined with when it was done. In general the state sends out the transfer penalty letter that assumes the transfer was done with intent and you have to prove otherwise. Then you kinda have to factor in your state's management of the Medicaid program AND the specific nursing home AND how proactive the family member who is the financial point person for the elder is AND the amount & type of transfer penalty AND most importantly if you have an attorney. If you get a penalty letter, the first thing is to file an appeal which basically gives you an additional 90 days (I'd defientely get an attorney in this 90 day period). The appeal has to be faxed (with a transmission report so you can show you did it) or sent return registered mail so again you can show you did this).If your parent is in the NH "Medicaid pending", the NH has to keep them during this appeal period. But the NH can ask that someone within the family sign off to be financially responsible for the elder - often that form was already done in the plies of paperwork in the initial admission. So if Sissy signed mom in and signed her name to all, then Sissy is financially responsible for the NH debt. The NH can and will send someone a bill and the family need to figure out how to pay for it either by doing a guarantee against the elder's assets or their own assets. So if Sissy signed them in, that means Sissy will likely get the bill for private pay amount for the elder's NH stay.
Now if Sissy signed all forms as "Jane Smith Jones as DPOA for Mary Smith" then she is not responsible. This is imho a very important item to do on all paperwork and in the rush and stress of getting them into the NH is overlooked.
For tangible property - like a home or a car - the state will easily found out if ownership is changed or transferred and the amount paid or gifted.
Tangible property value is usually done by each county or parish assessor and then dovetailed into the state's database so that info is just keystrokes away.
At my mom's first NH, there was a lady whose son transferred her home into his name after she was in & on Medicaid, imho done deliberately to avoid the state from taking it after she died. Also imho he is a total jackass. House definitely under 100K in value, maybe 50K. The lady was in the NH for several months before the transfer was found out. She was across the hall from my mom. State sent NH and family a letter regarding a transfer penalty was in effect. Son did the whole not gonna pay nonsense for like 4 months and what happened is that the lady was made an ward of the state and shipped out to a NH in another county that was desperate to fill their beds,as she was a ward of the state the family wasn't told; the son was billed probably 60K by the NH to forever be on his credit history and a claim was probably placed on the property by the state. This is an awful situation. So if he ever wants to do anything with the house later on, that claim has to be released in order to get a clean title. Not even to start to talk about what the little lady probably went through. What is so loco about what he did was that if he had just left the house alone and left it in her name and he just paid whatever minimum on it - like taxes - then when she died the state probably would not even have done a MERP (estate recovery) claim on it because the value of the house is too low to be worth going after it in probate and the time and costs involved in all that. So he would have gotten the house in the end in the probate hearing and the state would have paid for his mom's NH stay 100%.
That divisor number (average cost in a state) is set by each state in January. To find out what it is in your state, call your state Medicaid eligibility department.
She has about $45,000 left. We do not have a 5-year look-back. In 2012, she gifted me $13,000 and her grand-daughter, $5,000 at graduation. She has less than a year's worth of savings before being Medicaid eligible. I understand there will be penalty on the monetary gifts because they fall within the 5 year look-back. Can someone tell me what these penalties may be? Can she make furniture purchases to support her comfort/care? She does not own life insurance, property, stocks or mutual funds. She is non-ambulatory, relatively healthy and not on any pharmaceuticals. We do not plan on having her go into assisted living as we feel her care is best managed at home with our family and emotional support. Any and all help is greatly appreciated. I'm retired with no pension, small social security, overwhelmed and with limited resources. Thank you.
MERP is run according to your state's law on death and probate. Like in some states MERP is done via a lein on the property. Other states - like TX - have it as a Class 7 claim against the estate (so class 1 - 6 get paid first). Some states are actively going after recovery, while other states (FL) not so much. Remember Medicaid is a joint federal & state program, but the individual state manages Medicaid and has to do so that it complies with state laws. Really this means you have to find an elder law specialist who understands how it runs in your state.
But back to the co-pay, what happens is that since they are required to do a co-pay of their income if they are on Medicaid, there is no more of grannies $$ to pay for everything on the house. Whether or not the state allows for some of grannies monthly income to be diverted to the costs on the house is by each state's discretion. Some states do and for a certain period of time, while other states don't. So if your state doesn't allow for a diversion, then family has to then pay for everything (taxes, insurance, utilities, maintenance, yard work, repairs.....etc) for grannies house. If there is still a mortgage, this could add up to alot of $ each month. So the house ends up getting sold with the proceeds from the house to pay or reinburse Medicaid the costs of grannies care. For most folks, it's just not feasible in cost to deal with a house for the possible years and years that grannie could be in a NH and then do whatever needed to get the MERP exemption after grannie dies. Plus often family totally run out of a sense of humor in having to cut the grass, or having to pay property taxes or all the other stuff that can happen with an empty house. Good luck & keep a sense of humor!
I don't want to compromise anything when it is time to go back on Medicaid so we are not sure how to handle this. Any help would be appreciated.