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medi-cal planning | SEONewsWire.net http://www.seonewswire.net Search Engine Optimized News for Business Fri, 17 Dec 2010 02:55:06 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.8 The Law Offices of Osofsky and Osofsky Offers Tips on Contesting the Will http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/12/the-law-offices-of-osofsky-and-osofsky-offers-tips-on-contesting-the-will/ Mon, 20 Dec 2010 02:53:53 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=6948 Contesting a will is not easy, but may sometimes be necessary to preserve the proper distribution of an estate. A person may be able to contest their loved one’s will if the person has good reason to believe that it

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Contesting a will is not easy, but may sometimes be necessary to preserve the proper distribution of an estate.

A person may be able to contest their loved one’s will if the person has good reason to believe that it is invalid. Contesting a will is a process that is based on a person’s firm belief that something is wrong with his or her loved one’s will or in the manner in which it was signed or procured.

A person should not contest a will simply because he or she thinks the loved one made a distribution of which he or she does not approve. Rather, one must have valid grounds to make the contest. To begin with, a will is presumed valid if it appears valid on its face, i.e. contains the signature of the loved one and the requisite signatures of disinterested witnesses in accordance with state law. In order to challenge a will, the challenger has the burden of coming forward with legally valid evidence that would justify a court of law in setting the will aside. There are only certain circumstances that would warrant a court doing so:

If the person can prove that the person making the will (also known as the testator) was suffering from mental incapacity to the degree that he did not know that he was making a will and/or did not know the nature or extent of his assets, nor the identity of his family, one may be able to establish that he lacked the requisite mental capacity to make a will. Evidence in this regard may include medical records, witnesses who had interaction with the testator and, possibly, the opinion of a forensic psychiatrist.

If a person believes that another person applied undue pressure upon the testator to change the distribution made in a prior will and/or to disinherit someone who would be the natural object of his bounty, that circumstance may perhaps show undue influence, which is often another basis to challenge a will.

Fraud is another basis to contest the will. For example, if a person can prove that the testator signed the will document without knowing or realizing that it was actually a will, or that he was given misinformation that caused him to sign the will in its present form or to change the distribution plan of a prior will, one may be able to establish that he was fraudulently influenced.

Further, if a person can show that the will was not properly executed according to state law, this may furnish another basis to contest a will. Example: the testator did not sign in the presence of the required number of disinterested witnesses, or that the actual signing was not properly witnessed.

“If you believe that your situation is similar to any of the above circumstances, you may wish to contact an attorney immediately to help you file a claim to ensure the proper distribution of your loved one’s estate,” said Gene L Osofsky, an elder law and estate planning attorney with the Law Offices of Osofsky Osofsky, with experience in trust administration and estate planning. “Also, be mindful of time limits. Usually a will contest must be filed before the will is admitted to probate. Speed may therefore be essential.”

To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit http://www.lawyerforseniors.com/.

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Making Loving Gifts to Grandchildren to Ensure Their Future Security http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/12/making-loving-gifts-to-grandchildren-to-ensure-their-future-security/ Fri, 17 Dec 2010 02:53:34 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=6946 Grandparents sometimes consider lifetime gifts to grandchildren when planning for their financial future. Not only will the gifts give the grandchildren a good start in life and perhaps a brighter future, but by such gifts may have an added benefit

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Grandparents sometimes consider lifetime gifts to grandchildren when planning for their financial future. Not only will the gifts give the grandchildren a good start in life and perhaps a brighter future, but by such gifts may have an added benefit to your estate: by gifting to your descendents you can reduce the size of your estate and, possibly, reduce estate taxes payable upon your passing.

The simplest form of gift is to make an outright gift, providing that your grandchild is of an age to be considered an adult. In California, that age is 18. As long as that the gift is not more than $13,000 per year per grandchild, no gift tax report is required. Married couples can double their gift. By way of example, if you and your spouse have four grandchildren, by doubling your gift, you could give away up to $104,000 per year without incurring any gift tax and without any need to file a gift tax return. Gifts that do not exceed this amount per year are called “Annual Exclusion Gifts”.

You can also make direct payments to your grandchild’s school or college for tuition and tuition related costs, as well as for his health care expenses. These payments can be made on top of the $13,000 per year, providing that you pay the school and/or medical provider directly. These gifts are sometimes referred to as the “Educational or Medical Payment Exclusion”.

If your grandchild is still a minor, you may make a gift into a custodial account managed by someone you designate. While the account can be managed by a parent if you so designate, there may be tax reasons to nominate another person to manage these accounts for the grandchild, such as an uncle or aunt. These custodial accounts are sometimes known as “UGMA” or “UTMA” accounts, and most banks and stock brokerage firms have the relevant forms to assist you in setting them up

You may also consider making gifts by funding “529 Accounts”, which are accounts set up to help pay for your grandchild’s education. There are of course other gifting vehicles, including U.S. savings bonds. It is best to check with your tax advisor or estate planning attorney regarding your planned gifting program, especially if you are contemplating gifts of appreciated property.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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California’s Nursing Home Law Reaffirms Requirement of Proper Staffing Ratios in Nursing Care Facilities http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/11/california%e2%80%99s-nursing-home-law-reaffirms-requirement-of-proper-staffing-ratios-in-nursing-care-facilities/ Tue, 30 Nov 2010 02:24:47 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=6767 Recent Legislation Will Help Ensure Better Quality Care for Patients and Law Offices of Osofsky and Osofsky Gives Tips on How to Evaluate a Nursing Home There are new changes in state law regarding California’s skilled nursing homes. Nursing homes

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Recent Legislation Will Help Ensure Better Quality Care for Patients and Law Offices of Osofsky and Osofsky Gives Tips on How to Evaluate a Nursing Home

There are new changes in state law regarding California’s skilled nursing homes.

Nursing homes will now face fines if they do not maintain state-mandated staffing requirements under the reauthorization of AB 1629 signed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Oct. 19. The state will now have new tools to enforce the existing staffing requirement of 3.2 nursing hours per patient per day, required of all nursing homes licensed in California that receive Medi-Cal or Medicare payments.

These changes were established for accountability’s sake to ensure that all nursing homes meet state requirements. They were designed to reinforce the Long Term Care Reimbursement Act of 2004, which increased funding for nursing homes to help them meet these staffing requirements. Until now, the 2004 act had not fully met its goal of improving patient care.

The new law will also increase the number of auditors investigating the nursing homes. It will also establish fines for those who are non-compliant.

“The reason for this legislation was to provide better enforcement of the required staffing ratios in nursing homes, in order to improve the quality of patient care,” said Gene Osofsky of the Law Offices of Osofsky and Osofsky, which specializes in elder law, estate planning and trust administration.

Skilled nursing homes and care facilities will face penalties and fines if they do not meet the staffing requirements as required by law. Although some nursing homes already staff at the state’s requirement, others will now be forced to comply through imposition of fines and penalties. “We hope that the new law will provide better enforcement of the required staffing and improve the quality of care for patients,” Osofsky said.

Gene Osofsky also gives tips on how to choose and evaluate a proper nursing care facility. Gene Osofsky is a lawyer who also deals with nursing care issues.

“What’s more important than a nice looking facility is the quality of care. One must look at how the residents in the nursing home are being attended to and how well they are being treated and respected. Try to visit a facility at a time that hasn’t been prearranged in order to get an unrehearsed version of how the place operates,” Osofsky said.

To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit http://www.lawyerforseniors.com/.

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The Cultural Changes in VA Healthcare System: Serving Female Veterans—the Invisible Minority http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/11/the-cultural-changes-in-va-healthcare-system-serving-female-veterans%e2%80%94the-invisible-minority/ Wed, 17 Nov 2010 02:24:40 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=6765 U.S. military veterans are getting older and have been actively seeking services from the Veterans Affairs healthcare system – from veterans who served in WWII, Korea and Vietnam to the most recent theatres, Iraq and Afghanistan. However, there has been

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U.S. military veterans are getting older and have been actively seeking services from the Veterans Affairs healthcare system – from veterans who served in WWII, Korea and Vietnam to the most recent theatres, Iraq and Afghanistan. However, there has been an invisible, less talked about sector that is growing – female veterans.

The VA just recently created services for female veterans, and they are now being treated in veteran’s hospitals throughout the nation. Even female veterans coming out of military service are surprised to find that there are now services geared especially for them.

Today, only a third of all U.S. Veteran Affairs hospitals and clinics offer a women’s clinic for female veterans, but the VA plans to expand women’s clinics across the board. There is a surge of women joining the services, meaning more women in the military will be seeking services when they get out and when they get older.

According to the Department of Veteran affairs, women today account for 15 percent of active-duty roles, compared to only 3 percent of the military during the Vietnam era.

Since there is no real delineating line between men and women on the front lines during combat, more and more women are being killed and subjected to combat injuries and trauma. This in turn will affect their family and support systems and ultimately the VA healthcare system.

Gender-specific treatment is the ultimate goal of the VA healthcare system for women who have served in the military, some of whom are suffering from things like combat related injuries, PTSD and sexual trauma. NPR stated that there are more than 2,000 women who fought in Iraq or Afghanistan and, since treatment had historically been geared for men and war stories were about men, the plight of injured female soldiers faded into the background.

Now, the women getting out of the military are being acknowledged in the VA healthcare system and the VA is actively trying to get the word out to the general public, as well as to female military members themselves. When these women get older, they will be fitting into the categories of their male counterparts in regard to their need for long-term medical treatment, health-care services and VA prescription drug benefits.

For more information on veteran’s medical benefits and how you can qualify, go to http://www.LawyerForSeniors.com/.

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N2Care’s MedCottage a portable dwelling for elder relatives http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/09/n2care%e2%80%99s-medcottage-a-portable-dwelling-for-elder-relatives/ Sun, 12 Sep 2010 15:57:02 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=4539 Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, offers some pertinent commentary about a biometric shelter that now has a working prototype. Caring for aging family members now has a new wrinkle. Last month, a small Salem, Virginia-based

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Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, offers some pertinent commentary about a biometric shelter that now has a working prototype.

Caring for aging family members now has a new wrinkle. Last month, a small Salem, Virginia-based firm called N2Care trotted out its first prototype of a portable, high-tech dwelling intended to provide temporary shelter for a sick or elderly relative in their family’s backyard. Filled with biometric technology, the 12-by-24-foot prototype would allow a family or health-care providers to monitor the condition of an aging or disabled relative while foregoing costlier options such as confinement in a long term care facility. The brainchild of a Methodist minister, the MedCottage contains air-filtration systems, video links, devices that allow the remote monitoring of a patient’s vital signs and sensors that could detect an occupant’s fall.

“It’s new, but it’s intriguing,” says Gene L. Osofsky of Osofsky & Osofsky, a California-based firm geared to the practices of estate planning and the intricacies of elder law. The concept inherent in the MedCottage has already been endorsed by the Virginia General Assembly via HB1307, which would supersede local zoning laws and allow families to install such a dwelling on their property with a physician’s order.

But will the concept catch on beyond Virginia? It has also received a cautious endorsement from AARP; the lobbying group for Americans aged 50+, which has said that local zoning laws pose one of the bigger obstacles to making such dwellings a practical solution to caring for aging family members in what it calls “accessory dwelling units.”

Osofsky has a wait and see attitude about the MedCottage, and notes objections harbored by the temporary shelter’s naysayers. “Detractors have taken to calling the innovation the ‘granny pod’ and predicted that accessory dwelling units could create conflicts between neighbors who find the dwellings unsightly,” Osofsky says. “And some critics also worry that the setup could foster instances of neglect involving the persons placed in the dwellings.”

But as upwards of 80 million baby boomers edge toward retirement age, so-called “granny pods” might prove to be a viable alternative to nursing homes. “It’s a lot like a modular hospital room that one might find in an aid mission,” Osofsky says. “And there’s also a comfort factor involved for the occupant of such dwellings – their loved ones are only a few steps away.”

To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit http://www.lawyerforseniors.com/.

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HHS Secretary Sebelius Announces Pre-existing condition insurance plan http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/09/hhs-secretary-sebelius-announces-pre-existing-condition-insurance-plan/ Sun, 12 Sep 2010 15:55:32 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=4537 The Affordable Care Act Program will provide temporary coverage for Americans who lack insurance due to pre-existing conditions now through 2014, when the new insurance exchanges are established. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced earlier this

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The Affordable Care Act Program will provide temporary coverage for Americans who lack insurance due to pre-existing conditions now through 2014, when the new insurance exchanges are established.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced earlier this summer the establishment of a new Pre-existing Condition Insurance Plan (PCIP) that will offer coverage to uninsured Americans who have been unable to obtain health coverage because of pre-existing health conditions.

The Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan, which will be administered either by individual states or by the Department of Health and Human Services, will provide a new health coverage option for Americans who have been uninsured for at least six months, have been unable to get health coverage because of a health condition, and are a U.S. citizen or are legally residing in the United States.

Created under the Affordable Care Act, the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan is a transitional program until 2014, when insurers will be banned from discriminating against adults with pre-existing conditions, and individuals and small businesses will have access to more affordable private insurance choices through new competitive Exchanges. In 2014, members of Congress will also purchase their insurance through Exchanges.

“For too long, Americans with pre-existing conditions have been locked out of our health insurance market,” said Secretary Kathleen Sibelius. “Today, the Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan gives them a new option – the same insurance coverage as a healthy individual if they’ve been uninsured for at least six months because of a medical condition. This program will provide people the help they need as the nation transitions to a more competitive and fair marketplace in 2014.”

The Affordable Care Act provides $5 billion in federal funding to support Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plans in every state. Some states have requested that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services run their Pre-Existing Insurance Plan. Other states have requested that they run the program themselves. For more information about how the plan is being administered where you live, please visit HHS’ new consumer website, www.HealthCare.gov.

“Health coverage for Americans with pre-existing conditions has historically been unobtainable or failed to cover the very conditions for which they need medical care,” said Jay Angoff, Director of the Office of Consumer Information and Insurance Oversight (OCIIO), which is overseeing the program. “The Pre-Existing Condition Insurance Plan is designed to address these challenges by offering comprehensive coverage at a reasonable cost.”

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Sensors at Home Can Make Your Elders Safer http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/08/sensors-at-home-can-make-your-elders-safer/ Thu, 12 Aug 2010 14:29:28 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=4269 Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky weighs in about some helpful sensors. For a lot of our elders, living alone isn’t what it used to be, especially in the sense of devices and technologically-advanced sensors placed

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Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky weighs in about some helpful sensors.

For a lot of our elders, living alone isn’t what it used to be, especially in the sense of devices and technologically-advanced sensors placed in the home for safety reasons.

When Malcolm McGill, 94, slipped on a wet floor in his Bayonne, New Jersey home without wearing his emergency alert pendant, and could not phone for help, he felt desperation.

Fortunately, a tiny wireless sensor beneath Mr. McGill’s bed detected that the nonagenarian had gotten up. Motion detectors in his bedroom and bathroom registered that he had not left the area in his typical pattern and relayed that information to a central monitoring system, prompting a call to his telephone to ask if he was okay. When he did not answer, more calls were triggered – to a neighbor, to the building manager, and finally to 911, which dispatched firefighters to break through his door. He’d been on the floor less than 30 minutes when help arrived – courtesy of a system known as eNeighbor.

“It’s amazing some of the technology that’s available even for isolated elders living alone,” asserts Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, “That man might have died in similar circumstances a generation ago.”

Technologies such as eNeighbor offer a surprisingly high standard of care – and are backed by corporate giants such as Intel and General Electric – the latter a household word for most elders. But the devices can be expensive, remain largely untested, and are seldom covered by the government or private insurance plans. Doctors are not trained to treat patients using remote data and no mechanism exists for them to receive compensation for doing so. In fact, many such devices – including motion sensors, pill compliance detectors and wireless devices that transmit data on blood pressure, weight, oxygen and glucose levels – can have unintended or even adverse consequences.

“It’s difficult to substitute electronic measurements for face-to-face contact with doctors, nurses, and family members,” Osofsky explains.

Mr. McGill, who has congestive heart disease and suffered a broken hip five years ago, said he could not live on his own without the system that probably saved his life, built and distributed by a Minnesota company called Healthsense.

“Despite their limitations in 2010, in a few years I predict a lot of these sensors will become more practical and pervasive,” Osofsky concludes.

To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit http://www.lawyerforseniors.com/.

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Let the Bank Do It? http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/08/let-the-bank-do-it/ Thu, 12 Aug 2010 14:28:36 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=4267 Should you allow a large bank to help care for your elderly parents? Baby Boomers are aging fast, their parents even more so if they’re still around. Caring for an elderly parent can be a big responsibility. Boomers might even

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Should you allow a large bank to help care for your elderly parents?

Baby Boomers are aging fast, their parents even more so if they’re still around. Caring for an elderly parent can be a big responsibility. Boomers might even be realizing the pitter-patter of their own quickening years.

Large banks are realizing this trend too. Some are betting on enriching their client base – and adding to their receivables while they’re at it – by providing financial elder-care services. Can a bank be effective at helping you care for the elders you cherish?

Sources such as the Wall Street Journal, in a recent article, assert that the larger banks have received positive initial reviews when it comes to such everyday necessities as sorting out medical bills, hiring in-home care, or perhaps administering the sale of a home. Flush with such successes, banks are beginning to delve into more in-depth services such as estate planning; establishing power of attorney subsequent to a crisis (the proverbial “break a leg” comes to mind, or more aptly a hip); health and home care assessments; selecting Medicare coverage and claims management – even scouting long-term living options like retirement communities and assisted living facilities.

Is rushing down to your nearest apparently elder-friendly bank getting you psyched? Advice might be similar as for riding a spirited steed when you’ve never sat in a saddle – Whoa! Treat a bank like you would any other attorney or professional advisor. While a horse might be guileless, a bank probably isn’t. By targeting the elderly population and their family caregivers, from a bank’s perspective seeing their asset management annual fees jingle out of their clients’ pockets might be reason enough for their foray into elder-care services –no matter how convenient their plans might sound.

Even if a particular bank does offer in-depth options worth trying when it comes to elders and their care and also financial legacies, careful investigation and research – as well as asking all the key questions – is essential before choosing any advocate for your beloved elder – be it a bank or otherwise. The person or institution to hire should truly know their stuff, especially the ins and outs of the law and the care-giving industry. A mere dabbler you don’t want. In fact, seeking out the advice of an Elder Law attorney before and not after you make a decision may help you choose the best bank – if that’s truly a direction you still want to go.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Limited-Duration Long-Term Care Insurance http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/07/limited-duration-long-term-care-insurance/ Sun, 11 Jul 2010 15:46:11 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=4054 It seems attractive on the surface. But elder law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of Osofsky & Osofsky advises that buying a limited-duration long-term care insurance policy entails inherent risks. Consumers are increasingly buying shorter-duration insurance policies as a remedy for

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It seems attractive on the surface. But elder law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of Osofsky & Osofsky advises that buying a limited-duration long-term care insurance policy entails inherent risks.

Consumers are increasingly buying shorter-duration insurance policies as a remedy for making long-term care insurance an option. 2009 highlights the trend nicely. That year 32% of individual consumers purchasing a long-term care policy opted for a three-year benefit window, according to a report published by the American Association for Long-term Care Insurance. Will such purchases ensure sufficient coverage to the policyholder or allow benefit dollars to keep on keeping on?

“Actually, the risk of running out of benefits on a three-year policy is quite modest,” asserts Gene L. Osofsky, an elder law attorney with the firm of Osofsky & Osofsky, “particularly for men.”

Osofsky’s perspective is supported by empirical evidence. According to a consumer’s guide published by the industry trade association, the risk of “running on empty” as far as benefits are concerned is small, especially for men. For those purchasing policies longer than three years who made a claim for long-term care, only 13.1% required that care for 3+ years. As the insurance window grew longer, only 7.6% of those with a policy that paid out 4+ years actually required care longer than four years and a mere 4.5% of those buying policies with a payout window of 5+years needed care beyond that threshold.

Osofsky is also accurate when gender is considered. Men with a three-year policy who begin a long-term care claim at age 82 (a prevalent indicator) have a 12.4% probability of exhausting their benefits, compared to almost twice that number (23.5%) for women.

“The research is showing that the cost savings is substantial too,” adds Osofsky, “less and less people are buying unlimited long-term care policies nowadays.”

There is, however, a caveat. “If you do happen to be one of those individuals whose claim extends beyond the actual number of years stated in your policy, you can expect to need care for several additional years,” advises Osofsky, “Even a year of actually needing long-term care but facing such a necessity without coverage in place can be devastating to both lives and legacies. Prior to buying this type of insurance, consumers should be informed of the real risks involved.”

To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit http://www.lawyerforseniors.com/.  

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Living Overseas on Social Security http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/07/living-overseas-on-social-security/ Sun, 11 Jul 2010 15:44:56 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=4052 Many elders would love to spend their retirement traveling, or even living overseas. But can you get your social security check sent to Timbuktu? You’re retired, reasonably healthy, and love to travel. Can you still get your Social Security benefits

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Many elders would love to spend their retirement traveling, or even living overseas. But can you get your social security check sent to Timbuktu?

You’re retired, reasonably healthy, and love to travel. Can you still get your Social Security benefits in a place like Andorra? The short answer is yes. While you aren’t eligible to receive Medicare when you leave the country, Social Security benefits are available to retirees in other countries. If you leave the United States for another country, and have been outside U.S. borders for 30 days consecutively, a retiree is considered “outside the United States” and the rules for collecting benefits apply as if you were still in Bayonne, or even Akron.

There are some exceptions. The Social Security Administration (SSA) is not allowed to send checks to Cuba, or North Korea, for instance. Even in a forbidden place, however, you’re not entirely out of luck. If you’re living in Cuba, or North Korea, you can still receive any withheld checks if you go to a country where paychecks can be sent, to pick them up. Also, for your information, the SSA doesn’t typically send checks to Cambodia, Vietnam, or areas of the former Soviet Union (other than Armenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, or Russia), but eligible retirees may be able to apply for an exception – which are occasionally granted. In these instances, retirees may have to agree to certain conditions. Appearing in person at the U.S. Embassy each month to receive benefits may suddenly become very do-able if it’s the only way to receive your Social Security benefits.

If you are a retiree, and also a U.S. citizen, you are entitled to continue receiving benefits for as long as you’re living abroad. That said, citizens of other countries who receive Social Security may have restrictions placed upon their eligibility regarding the length of time they can continue to receive monthly benefits. In these cases, the rules can become quite complicated and a relevant Social Security publication Your Payments While You Are Outside the United States should be obtained. The SSA website also makes available to beneficiaries a payment screening tool that lets them know about their eligibility status if they remain outside the U.S. for longer than six months.

If there is any doubt, a more hassle-free option is for a retiree to use direct deposit into a U.S. bank account. Direct deposit is also available in certain countries and has the additional advantage of avoiding check-cashing and currency-conversion fees.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com. 

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Osofsky Encourages His Clients to Become Tech Savvy http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/06/osofsky-encourages-his-clients-to-become-tech-savvy/ Wed, 16 Jun 2010 14:08:14 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=3910 Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, is excited about the current trend among elders to use their electronic devices. U.S. elders, even the extremely aged, are becoming increasingly attracted to the same gadgets and gizmos that

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Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, is excited about the current trend among elders to use their electronic devices.

U.S. elders, even the extremely aged, are becoming increasingly attracted to the same gadgets and gizmos that younger folks have been using for a while. It’s no longer too surprising to learn that Grandpa is in the habit of texting and that Grandma is becoming fond of certain “apps” on her Smartphone.

Just because we age, doesn’t mean that we should shut down opportunities to enjoy new technologies,” asserts Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, “they’re intended to be enjoyed.”

While long lines waiting to buy the newest iPhone incarnation or video game consoles that stream movies for TV are becoming more of the rule than the exception, this may not be a bad thing. “The more tech-savvy an elder is, the better,” explains Osofsky, “and like NASA’s Space Program, the idea of knowing more can have useful spin-offs, especially when it deals with a person’s affairs.”

In the contemporary marketplace, elders need to be aware of a lot more of what’s new – just to stay safe. “A lot of the scams out there victimize elders, even while employing advanced technologies – everything from emails to texting to streaming videos to Skype,” Osofsky argues, “Now is not the time to be an ostrich with your head in the sand.”

Being tech-savvy can also be fun. “Life is meant to be enjoyed,” he says, “Why shouldn’t an elder get to watch a streaming movie online, or text a grandchild?”

The more technologically-competent one is might also equate to better investment decisions in a fast-paced environment, or even help to produce attractive legacies such as family histories, digital wills and electronic diaries composed of a myriad of blog entries. Osofsky also mentions social networking. “Participating in a social networking site like Facebook can enhance an older person’s life by giving it an intriguing new dimension, and also offer exciting opportunities for contact with others who have like interests,” Osofsky says, “It’s a way for elders to stay connected.”

In actuality, even centenarians are increasingly utilizing the newest mass consumer technologies. Up to 12% of 84,000 U.S. centenarians recently surveyed have listened to music on an iPod, for instance. “Why does our sense of wonder have to end as we age?” Osofsky concludes.

To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit http://www.lawyerforseniors.com/.

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New Electronic Devices Catch the Fancy of Elders http://www.seonewswire.net/2010/06/new-electronic-devices-catch-the-fancy-of-elders/ Wed, 16 Jun 2010 14:06:26 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=3905 A techno-blizzard of new gadgets and gizmos are proving attractive to elders too. Mildred Jones, 87, is the last person you’d expect to see ogling her Smartphone. A native of Oxnard, where she grew up “by the wharves” during the

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A techno-blizzard of new gadgets and gizmos are proving attractive to elders too.

Mildred Jones, 87, is the last person you’d expect to see ogling her Smartphone. A native of Oxnard, where she grew up “by the wharves” during the Great Depression, she hadn’t paid much attention to technology—except for an occasional science fiction movie – until lately. “My granddaughter is a high school senior, and she showed me her Smartphone,” Mrs. Jones says, “I couldn’t get enough of it, so I bought my own.” Her Smartphone is purple and came with “a jillion apps,” asserts the more techno-savvy elder, “and even the ring tone’s nice; it’s meant to sound like Darth Vader.”

Elders all over America are waiting in line for Smartphones and iPads and kindling newfound appreciation for their Kindles. “We don’t have to be left behind,” explains Mrs. Jones, “after all, we’re not gone yet.”

In fact, advisors to America’s elders, everyone from attorneys equipped to practice elder law, to financial consultants, to those involved in routine care & interactions with U.S. older populations – are supportive of the newfound awareness and enthusiasm toward electronic devices suddenly becoming manifest.

For those newly infatuated with electronic devices and the latest gizmos, a good website to check out might be ElderGadget.com, a site intended to nurture this nouveau intrigue. At that site, readers are submitting a growing amount of feedback. Gadgets that are most popular appear to be those with big screens, easy to use, and are pleasant looking and lightweight. A growing number of devices fit such a bill. “The key to a lot of the technology out there is that it has senior-friendly features,” says marketing guru Geraldine C. Davis, “and even those over age 100 are becoming enthused about many of these products.”

Of more than 84,000 U.S. centenarians interviewed recently, a surprising percentage (8%) have sent someone a text message or instant message, 12% say that they have listened to music on an iPod or similar device, 11% have used YouTube, 2% Facebook, 5% have used TiVo to watch a TV program at their convenience, 4% have used Google, 1% have used an “app” on an iPhone or similar device, and 1% have used an online dating service.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about elder law and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Creative Ways to Boost Your Social Security Income http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/10/creative-ways-to-boost-your-social-security-income/ Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:40:22 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=2109 Elder law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky and Osofsky suggests putting on “your thinking cap” when it comes to obtaining additional social security income. Every year, more than $10 billion in Social Security benefits go unclaimed.

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Elder law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky and Osofsky suggests putting on “your thinking cap” when it comes to obtaining additional social security income.

Every year, more than $10 billion in Social Security benefits go unclaimed. Asserts attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, “This is primarily because married couples do not know how to optimize their social security benefits.”

Much of this unclaimed bonanza does consist of spousal benefits that most people don’t even know they’re entitled to receive. “These benefits can increase your income and solve the riddle of whether it’s more advantageous to get immediate monthly income at age 62 or wait until you’re age 66 and get a bigger check – maybe significantly bigger,” Osofsky says.

If you do wait until age 66, which the U.S. government considers full retirement age, for people born between 1943 and 1954 the monthly benefit will be one-third greater than if you take it at age 62. If you wait until age 70, the check will be 76 percent larger. The longer you live, the more it will matter, and chances are, you’ll live a long time. The typical 65-year-old can expect approximately an additional twenty years of life. Within that pertinent group of 65-year-old elders, 41 percent of women and 28 percent of men will live to age 90 – and half of those women will make it to age 95, as will one-third of the men.

Spousal benefits offer a way around the potential conundrum. “If you’re married – or if you’re divorced after ten years of marriage and haven’t remarried, you can claim a benefit not only on your own work record, but also on your spouse’s,” explains Osofsky. No, you can’t collect those benefits simultaneously. But you might be able to get them consecutively. “You can file first to get a spousal benefit, and then later to get your own benefit after it has grown as large as possible. It just has to be done in the right order,” Osofsky says.

Being astute about these spousal benefits and how they work, can result in increased social security income for a married couple. “You may be able to increase your household income substantially over time,” Osofsky concludes, “You just have to be smart about it.”

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Blended Families Can Prove Challenging to Caregivers http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/10/blended-families-can-prove-challenging-to-caregivers/ Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:38:02 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=2107 Divorce seldom fails to up the complexity quotient when you add stepparents into the caregiving and estate planning equations, explains Elder law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky. Attorney Diane Fener, based in Virginia Beach,

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Divorce seldom fails to up the complexity quotient when you add stepparents into the caregiving and estate planning equations, explains Elder law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky.

Attorney Diane Fener, based in Virginia Beach, Virginia, has family duties when she travels to New England to visit her parents. Her mother lives in the dementia unit of an assisted living facility in Rhode Island. She then meets with her father at his apartment about a half-hour drive away in Massachusetts. Her father’s second wife, Ms. Fener’s stepmother, lives nearby in a nursing home and she too, has dementia. She last visits her stepfather – the man who was her mother’s second husband for more than two decades.

“I’m sure that Ms. Fener doesn’t get to spend as much time as she might like with each of her parents,” says attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, “but her situation is typical of many blended families today.”

During the 1970s, there was a spike in U.S. divorce rates. In the aftermath of that spike, states liberalized their divorce laws and working women became less inclined to remain in unsatisfying marriages, the cultural stigma of divorced lessened, and grown children of these broken marriages are dealing with the unintended consequences. “A new layer of complexity has been added to an already complex and emotional situation, especially for caregivers,” Osofsky explains.

In fact, the added stresses of divorce, family upheaval, and tighter finances can be so detrimental to your health that the effects can linger for years into the future. Because Osofsky & Osofsky is frequently engaged to help divorced or remarrying couples update their estate plans to protect their newly blended families, Ms. Fener’s plight struck an empathetic chord with Osofsky. “Divorce can have poignant and practical effects 20 or 30 years down the road,” he explains, “not just on the couple but also on their grown children now acting as caregivers.”

Adult children of aging parents can find themselves caring, not only for mom and dad, but also for stepmom, stepdad, and sometimes even extra sets of stepparents from an additional or current marriage. “Dividing time and often finances between so many parents with new and special needs can quickly take its toll,” Osofsky concludes.

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Kennedy Trusts Seen as an Educational Tool http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/10/kennedy-trusts-seen-as-an-educational-tool/ Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:35:52 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=2105 The recent death of Massachusetts Senator Edward M. “Ted” Kennedy might provoke some insightful thought about the nature of trusts – and how comprehensive and versatile they can be. Joseph P. Kennedy, the patriarch of the Kennedy Family, left behind

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The recent death of Massachusetts Senator Edward M. “Ted” Kennedy might provoke some insightful thought about the nature of trusts – and how comprehensive and versatile they can be.

Joseph P. Kennedy, the patriarch of the Kennedy Family, left behind a labyrinth of blind trusts to manage the millions he had earned from scratch. He put his wealth into trusts with a long-term strategy in mind, to manage the family’s holdings for several generations of Kennedys. These blind trusts are run by financial experts whose goals are to invest conservatively and maintain the principal. Small amounts of profit are doled out to members of the Kennedy family annually. This network of blind trusts has maintained their overall wealth during the recent recession and in some instances they have flourished, even though the family can at times be hard pressed for ready cash.

In 2006, the recently-deceased Ted Kennedy could count as holdings five distinct family trust funds worth a minimum of $45 million to possibly as much as $150 million. Kennedy estimated that the family’s multiple trusts distributed $500,000 to $5 million in annual income. Before 2006, Senator Kennedy’s filings listed assets at less than $20 million. As only the family’s financial advisors were privy to details about the primarily blind trusts, it’s difficult to determine what made them double in value during the course of a single year. One thing for certain: Edward M. Kennedy passed away near the peak of his family’s net worth.
Trust instruments possess a unique nature. The Kennedy Trusts are excellent examples of how comprehensive and versatile trusts can be. First established as a single trust in 1926 by Joseph P. Kennedy, the Kennedy patriarch followed with successive trusts in 1936 and 1949. Each was “entrusted” with its own purpose; for instance, the 1926 trust was intended for Rose and their children, and the 1949 instrument was intended for his grandchildren. Each trust was established as a blind trust, in that it acted independently from any other trust.

The Kennedy trusts had staying power and were built to last, with each ensuing trustee active in providing for the beneficiaries while simultaneously protecting the principal for future generations. It was sad and tragic that Ted Kennedy has been taken from us as Americans. His stature as a voice in the U.S. Senate is beyond dispute. But the Kennedy trusts are a legacy for all of us, an excellent example of how trusts can be designed to protect and build even a relatively modest estate.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Despite Estate Tax Uncertainties, Better Not Procrastinate http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/10/despite-estate-tax-uncertainties-better-not-procrastinate/ Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:33:38 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=2103 While Obama might be procrastinating about what to do about the estate tax, you’d better not. President Barack Obama was supposed to tackle the thorny issue of the estate tax from the get-go, considering that the expiration date was already

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While Obama might be procrastinating about what to do about the estate tax, you’d better not.
President Barack Obama was supposed to tackle the thorny issue of the estate tax from the get-go, considering that the expiration date was already set for 2010.

Mr. Obama is at heart a cautious man. During his 2008 campaign, he pledged to raise income tax rates for top earners, but has since reneged, as advisors have told him that such an elimination of high income “tax cuts” as Republicans like to call them – would have an adverse effect on a chronically ailing economy during a deep recession.

Despite the “Death Tax Repeal” movement’s best efforts, it looks like the estate tax is here to stay.
Democrats seem determined to act with deliberate speed to prevent the estate tax’s scheduled repeal. A prior levy on large inheritances was first approved by Congress under President George W. Bush in 2001. Rollbacks were phased in, albeit slowly, with a full elimination in place for next year.

The Senate Finance Committee is expected to propose legislation to reverse the scheduled elimination in lockstep with a likely announcement of the Obama Administration’s detailed estate tax preservation proposal in his October 2009 budget. This anticipated “swift action” by Democrats was associated with a rationale that it would be politically more difficult to initiate their plan to resuscitate the estate tax once it was gone.

Under the Obama plan detailed during the campaign, the estate tax would be locked in permanently at the rate and exemption levels that became law in 2009. Estates of up to $3.5 million (twice that for couples) would be exempt from any taxation. The value of estates above that would be taxed at 45%. If the tax were restored to Clinton-era levels, the first $1 million would be excluded from being taxed and the remainder taxed at 55%.

Nearly a year has gone by since candidate Obama’s campaign promises were initially voiced regarding the estate tax. But despite the procrastination of our elected leaders, a version of the estate tax will likely be still in place next year, although the sort of permanency that estate planners might have wished for may remain elusive. So despite the fact that uncertainties exist and are likely to linger, it’s not the time to “sit on the fence” when planning your estate. Contact your elder law attorney or estate planner at your earliest opportunity to review your personal situation.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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I’m Dad’s Executor. What Do I Do Now? http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/10/i%e2%80%99m-dad%e2%80%99s-executor-what-do-i-do-now/ Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:29:53 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=2101 The death of your parent is bound to be an emotionally confusing time without the additional responsibilities of being named as executor of his or her estate. Elder Law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky

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The death of your parent is bound to be an emotionally confusing time without the additional responsibilities of being named as executor of his or her estate. Elder Law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky has some sound advice and insight for those placed in such a predicament.
Having being named the Executor of the Estate for your father, which by many is considered an honor, means that you must have more patience and focus than the remainder of your family. This is difficult to do in times of high stress due to a death in the family. Some of the responsibilities which you must thereby assume include the following:

Creating an accounting for the deceased’s assets and liabilities

Giving notice to potential creditors

Settling outstanding debts

Making distributions for estate taxes, if applicable

Making fiduciary income tax return

Making distributions to named beneficiaries

Filing a final accounting with the court to close the probate process

Included with these responsibilities is the duty to keep the estate viable during the probate process. This may include paying the mortgage on a house or even making car payments. Probate can often be a lengthy process, which is why you can petition the court to release short term funding for these purposes while probate continues.

“If you’re thinking that this sounds like no easy job, you’re absolutely right,” says Osofsky. It is an endeavor that should never be undertaken lightly. Executors are generally entitled to compensation from the deceased’s estate, but most immediate family members decline this option. “One good bit of news from this,” explains Osofsky, “is that you are not financially responsible for any debts the deceased may have accumulated.” To emphasize, all debts, taxes, legal fees, and administrative costs should be paid from the estate of the deceased, not from your own pocket. If you have advanced any such costs, you are usually entitled to claim a refund from the estate.

But the responsibilities of an executor can often be accomplished more efficiently with the help of a knowledgeable Elder Law attorney, such as Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky. “We receive requests from clients to assist them in handling their responsibilities as an executor, especially when the executor is overwhelmed with grief and not accustomed to some of the required duties,” Osofsky explains, “If you find yourself in this situation, seek out an attorney knowledgeable in this process.” It will ease your burden, give you peace of mind, and may prevent needless family squabbles.

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Nursing Home Residents Won’t Be Affected by Medi-Cal Budget Cuts http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/10/nursing-home-residents-won%e2%80%99t-be-affected-by-medi-cal-budget-cuts/ Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:26:17 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=2098 According to Elder Law attorney Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, the fear factor is high among Californians that many of our Elders in nursing homes may be directly impacted by Medi-Cal budget cuts. While this

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According to Elder Law attorney Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, the fear factor is high among Californians that many of our Elders in nursing homes may be directly impacted by Medi-Cal budget cuts. While this isn’t true, for Elders not living in nursing homes the story might play out quite differently.
July 28, 2009, was the day when embattled California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the new budget into law. “Like most states, California has been greatly affected by the serious recession that began in late 2007,” says Elder Law attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, “and budget cuts to programs serving our Elders have not been immune.” Consequently, fears from Osofsky’s clients and colleagues about how residents of California nursing homes might fare in Governor Schwarzenegger’s controversial budget have fueled rampant speculation. Many California nursing home residents rely significantly if not primarily upon Medi-Cal to help pay for their care. But there is good news to be found. “Residents of California nursing homes won’t have their Medi-Cal subsidies for ancillary services such as dental and podiatric care directly affected,” explains Osofsky, “Although the budget cuts made to close the $26 billion gap will have a tremendous effect upon Medi-Cal programs for persons not residing in nursing homes, upon child welfare programs, AIDS prevention, adult day care, and low cost health insurance for low income children.”

Specifically, Medi-Cal funding to skilled nursing facilities has been penciled in at $96.4 million in the Governor’s budget, but a raft of caveats have been included in the budget as a whole. “There will be a reduction of $60.5 million in Medi-Cal county administration, and also a reduction of $47.9 million in the funding for private hospitals,” Osofsky says, “as well as limiting services to a maximum of three days per weeks – at a savings of $28.1 million – for adult day health care.”

These austerity measures are likely to adversely affect many Californians who may be Elders both directly and indirectly, depending upon their circumstances. “A few years from now, the ripples from these recession-beating budgetary maneuvers may prove more far-reaching than anyone first anticipated,” Osofsky concludes.

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Living Will Hyperbole Is Disingenuous to American Elders http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/10/living-will-hyperbole-is-disingenuous-to-american-elders/ Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:23:24 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=2096 In the so-called “town hall” meetings debating the Obama Administration’s controversial health care reform plan, shrill cries of “euthanizing old people” to characterize potentially productive doctor-patient conversations concerning end-of-life issues have distorted the discourse and may cause real harm. The

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In the so-called “town hall” meetings debating the Obama Administration’s controversial health care reform plan, shrill cries of “euthanizing old people” to characterize potentially productive doctor-patient conversations concerning end-of-life issues have distorted the discourse and may cause real harm.

The debate about health care reform, especially as it pertains to end-of-life issues, is becoming increasingly contentious in so-called “town hall” meetings across America. Various political luminaries such as former Vice-Presidential candidate and resigned Alaska governor Sarah Palin have been saying some things bristling with emotionally charged phrases. Palin released the following statement on her FaceBook page:

“The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down’s syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama’s ‘death panel’ so his bureaucrats can decide based on a subjective judgment of their ‘level of productivity in society’ whether they are worthy of health care,” Palin says, “Such a system is downright evil.” Palin continued, “Health care by definition involves life and death decisions. Human rights and human dignity must be at the center of any health care discussion.” Palin claimed that the Orwellian Obama plan would surreptitiously herd elder Americans into euthanasia and assisted suicide via rationing of medical treatment.

But does President Obama’s health care reform initiative really do what she claims? In fact, the plan, although controversial, encourages potentially productive doctor-patient conversations concerning end-of-life issues which may indeed be relevant to most anyone. The proposal’s language was designed to encourage doctor-patient conversations, but it was taken out of context and distorted beyond recognition for political advantage. In fact, a Living Will is good for individuals, and good for the country. It gives people essential choices about how they choose to end their days. It puts Americans in control of their destiny. Most attorneys already discuss these issues with their clients when preparing estate plans. Doctors often have these discussions now with their patients. The proposed health care reform bill will now enable the doctor to be paid for spending the time to help patients think through these important decisions. When the President’s mere mention of living wills used as a fear tactic to senselessly frighten our elders , the tactic is not only dangerously disingenuous, but may actually cause real harm. It may discourage essential conversations between doctor and patient. Proactive Elder Law attorneys continue to encourage their clients to create a Living Will or an Advance Health Care Directive – before it’s too late. Under the plan, doctors and their patients will now be encouraged to have this conversation, as well.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Family Fireworks: When a Last Will and Testament Becomes Contested http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/10/family-fireworks-when-a-last-will-and-testament-becomes-contested/ Thu, 15 Oct 2009 17:18:42 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=2094 Even the most congenial of families can fight like wolverines when a Last Will and Testament is contested. For this to happen, they don’t have to be from Michigan. A Last Will and Testament is a legal declaration by which

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Even the most congenial of families can fight like wolverines when a Last Will and Testament is contested. For this to happen, they don’t have to be from Michigan.

A Last Will and Testament is a legal declaration by which a person names one or more people to manage their estate and provides for the transfer of property upon death.

Death is inevitable. But a careful choice in selecting an executor is seldom a given, especially where property and money are involved. During life, families may seem to get along fine, but the mixture of the death of a loved one, considerable property to be disbursed, and an executor who seems unfair or biased — can be a recipe for conflict. The living, prior to their passing, don’t always write out their wishes in clear and concise ways. If there is uncertainty in a family about what might occur upon the death of a patriarch or matriarch, for instance, the atmosphere following death can become an emotional war zone.

Family dynamics can disintegrate into shouting and resentment. Such family “fireworks” have little to do with the 4th of July, and can have long-lasting impact upon family relationships. Seemingly devoted family members fighting like wolverines don’t require an alumni card from the University of Michigan.
Unresolved disputes can result in a will contest. That contest can take on a life of its own, with potentially grim consequences for family harmony. Emotion often outshines logic in these contests. Where disputes occur, the litigation process can stretch out seemingly forever and become very expensive. For this reason, when preparing your Last Will, serious thought should be given to the selection of the best person to serve as one’s executor.

The best executor is one that approaches his or her duties professionally, with tact, with due regard for family dynamics, and with professional guidance from a knowledgeable attorney. If a will contest nevertheless does occur, at least it should then be grounded in a semblance of law and fair play. For this reason, it is important to choose the best person to serve. If you or someone you love is named as an executor, it is imperative that you engage a knowledgeable attorney early on in the probate process in order to help manage the proceedings, mediate expectations, lend assistance and guidance to the executor, and hopefully minimize family friction. By doing so, you just might preserve the very loving family of which the deceased was so fond.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Accidents Have Consequences http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/08/accidents-have-consequences/ Mon, 10 Aug 2009 17:59:35 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1931 Gene L. Osofsky, who specializes in Elder Law, advises that while you can’t always be protected from accidents, you can often mitigate their consequences. Some people are accident prone. It’s often a matter of luck, being in the wrong place

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Gene L. Osofsky, who specializes in Elder Law, advises that while you can’t always be protected from accidents, you can often mitigate their consequences.

Some people are accident prone. It’s often a matter of luck, being in the wrong place at the wrong time. Sometimes what seems to be an accident isn’t really one; it could have been prevented by better planning or care. But sometimes an accident is just that, unavoidable. “Who hasn’t had a computer crash without warning, or a pipe break in their basement, flooding it?” asks Attorney Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, who specializes in Elder Law. Events don’t always go right, and sometimes an important paper or a document can be accidentally misplaced and lost with the passage of time. “I’ve misplaced things,” Osofsky admits.

This can even happen with crucial estate planning documents, most significantly after they are executed. “My clients have been known to misplace things too,” says Osofsky.

To prevent such avoidable mishaps, Osofsky offers some advice.

“You should always make copies,” he says, “and these should be kept separate from your signed originals. Photocopies should be made and placed where they can easily be found by your agents. A closet in your office or a bookshelf in your library can be ideal for storing photocopies.”

Original documents should be placed somewhere safe from easy theft and in a place that’s less susceptible to natural disasters, such as fires or floods. “A home fire-safe can be an excellent investment,” Osofsky says, “I also like safe-deposit boxes, although the box should be in the name of the established trust rather than your own.” Agents and fiduciaries should have extra copies of essential documents “just in case.” Adds Osofsky, “Don’t forget your Advance Healthcare Directive and your HIPAA Privacy Authorization.” Your nominated guardians should have the original document allowing them “to make health care decisions for your minor child should you become unavailable,” he concludes.

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Michael Jackson’s Will http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/08/michael-jackson%e2%80%99s-will/ Mon, 10 Aug 2009 17:58:04 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1929 The last will and testament of pop music superstar and cultural icon Michael Jackson seemed to indicate a fair degree of planning. Yet the specifics remain murky and many questions remain. Gene L. Osofsky, who specializes in Elder Law and

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The last will and testament of pop music superstar and cultural icon Michael Jackson seemed to indicate a fair degree of planning. Yet the specifics remain murky and many questions remain. Gene L. Osofsky, who specializes in Elder Law and Estate Planning, offers a few insightful comments about what the famous entertainer left behind.

Attorney Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, was as much taken aback as the rest of us by the sudden and premature death of pop music superstar and cultural icon Michael Jackson at the age of 50. Unlike many middle-aged “baby-boomers,” Jackson did have a will drawn up, and it was even made public. The document aroused Osofsky’s curiosity. Like millions of Americans, the attorney specializing in Elder Law was somewhat familiar with the publicized particulars of Jackson’s turbulent life, and the release of a will was not entirely unexpected by Osofsky. “There was considerable media speculation about Michael Jackson and his will, and it seemed logical that he’d created one.” The will was five pages long, and shifted Jackson’s entire estate into an instrument called the Michael Jackson Family Trust. Still, it revealed little about Jackson Estate specifics or instructions about how his estate would be handled.

Jackson’s will wasn’t exempt from the law. Although a will can remain private while a person is alive, it becomes a matter of public record once it is submitted to the probate courts after a person dies. But a trust is usually a private document, and in most cases remains private. In Jackson’s case, the financial details are presumably all in the trust. There was a detail on page 4 of the five-page document that did catch the attorney’s eye. In paragraph 8 of his will, on page 4, just above his signature, Jackson states, “If any of my children are minors at the time of my death, I nominate my mother KATHERINE JACKSON, as guardian of the persons and estates of such minor children. If KATHERINE JACKSON fails to survive me, or is unable or unwilling to act as guardian, I nominate DIANA ROSS as guardian of the persons and estates of such minor children.”

Asserts Osofsky, “Whatever odd or inexplicable things Jackson may have done during his life, he seems to have taken steps to provide for his children’s care, financial needs and privacy after his death. That’s more than I can say for a lot of people.”

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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The Scamming of Our Elders http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/08/the-scamming-of-our-elders/ Mon, 10 Aug 2009 17:55:31 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1927 It happens as much through e-mail as it does through postal mail or via telemarketing calls these days. You receive an offer you can’t refuse promising riches or else alleging that you’ve already won. If it seems too good to

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It happens as much through e-mail as it does through postal mail or via telemarketing calls these days. You receive an offer you can’t refuse promising riches or else alleging that you’ve already won. If it seems too good to be true, it usually is.

You’re checking your email. A message from someone you don’t know has arrived. They’re begging for your help. The situation might seem contrived or even preposterous, but you are tempted. You can’t help reading it. Your experience in growing up during the Great Depression has instilled a spirit of always wanting to help someone in need, and this message is even better: If you do help this person, providing information about yourself or your finances, sending some money, the writer promises that you will be rewarded many times over. You fall for it. Perhaps you succumb more than once.

Sometimes a postal mail, email, or telemarketing call identifies you as a lottery or contest winner. It doesn’t matter that you never entered; this fact is clouded by the fact you’ve won. Why would someone tell you that you’ve won something when you haven’t?

Because, as is too often the case — you’ve been scammed, that’s why. Less sophisticated online than many younger people, and vulnerable also to cheats in the “snail” mail, American elders are often victimized by fraudulent scam artists eager to separate them from their money. Duped elders have lost assets acquired over a lifetime – sometimes losing tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars.

With the Internet’s global reach, African countries like Nigeria and Sierra Leone have emerged as “scam industry centers.” Elderly victims tend to fit a profile. They often live alone, may have recently lost a loved one, or may be experiencing the early signs of diminished capacity. Besides routine crime prevention steps that can be taken to protect a loved one, an attorney specializing in Elder Law can establish some protection from con artists by building effective language into trusts and estate plans. In extreme situations, a trusted family member can be given power of attorney over bank accounts and financial matters. But being scammed can be painful for young and old alike.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Caregiver 360®: The Caregiver’s Gal Friday http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/08/caregiver-360%c2%ae-the-caregiver%e2%80%99s-gal-friday/ Mon, 10 Aug 2009 17:54:13 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1925 This interactive Web service can be a personalized care guide for caregivers so that your loved one may receive state-of-the-art 24-7 care in the comforting environs of your home. Ken Ziel came to the nuts and bolts of compassionate care

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This interactive Web service can be a personalized care guide for caregivers so that your loved one may receive state-of-the-art 24-7 care in the comforting environs of your home.

Ken Ziel came to the nuts and bolts of compassionate care the hard way. When his son Austin was born in 1990 with multiple disabilities, he was fearful that his son would not be approached with the same level of skill, compassion, and love that he and his wife could provide. Among other things, Ziel learned that without individualized instructions or personalized care guides, the very act of providing care could prove problematic.

Enter the system Ziel invented, Caregiver360®. An easy to use interactive Web service that assists in creating a safe and secure Personal Care Guide, it can serve as a comprehensive database of intimate experience, knowledge, and specific needs of your loved one. Besides providing immediate access to this personalized care guide, this Web-based service (economically priced at < $10.00 per month) makes available ample caregiving resources through a searchable online library. Testimonials on Ziel’s website address a potpourri of circumstances where hiring at-home caregivers and complementing their efforts with Caregiver360® might prove practical – children with chronic illness, adults with developmental disabilities, compassionate Alzheimer’s care, assorted elder issues, and persons suffering traumatic injuries such as brain stem encephalitis.

When you’re faced with a loved one in need of 24-7 at-home care, just getting away for an afternoon or evening can be a hurdle. It can be an even greater challenge to plan care for your loved one’s future if you were to become incapacitated or pass away. Locating and hiring a caregiver qualified and skilled enough to address your loved one’s needs is difficult enough. But that carefully selected caregiver will need detailed lists of instructions so that all your best intentions concerning your loved one’s needs are addressed, including a litany of “what ifs?” Caregiver360® can keep a record of all details, regimens, and instructions including prescriptions and medications, and update and communicate that information as circumstances change. To have this comprehensive record linked to the latest research, resources, and best-practice recommendations at the click of a mouse can be a comforting resource.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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The Time to Update Your Estate Plan Is Now http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/07/the-time-to-update-your-estate-plan-is-now/ Mon, 06 Jul 2009 16:20:39 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1528 Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, asserts that the “when” to update your estate plan is now – especially if you’re a procrastinator. You thought you were clever when you created an estate plan in the

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Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, asserts that the “when” to update your estate plan is now – especially if you’re a procrastinator.

You thought you were clever when you created an estate plan in the mid-1990s, and you were, for the time being. But now your estate plan documents are contained in a bank’s safety deposit box, gathering dust until they’re needed. Nothing has changed since 1994, right? Right, if you inhabit a vacuum and your family has not grown or changed in any way, and if suspended animation has become your form of existence. According to Gene L. Osofsky, such an existence is more likely in the genres of fantasy and science fiction, but seldom in real life. “If you are living as most people do, changes occur whether you want them or not. There are several reasons to update your estate plan – even if it seemed perfectly fine at one time.”

The passage of time: “This is actually the most common reason people update their estate plans,” Osofsky explains, “You are entitled to change your mind if a more sensible idea comes to mind. If you named your parents as trustees when your children were minors, you might wish to name your now 37-year-old son instead, especially if that much time has elapsed. No disrespect intended to your mom and dad, bless their souls, but now they’re in their early 90s! In addition, certain documents should be re-executed to avoid being perceived as stale.”

The birth or death of a beneficiary or fiduciary: “If you have new children or grandchildren, or a parent or sibling has passed on, it’s time to update,” Osofsky says.

Your own marriage or divorce, or the marriage or divorce of one of your beneficiaries: Says Osofsky, “It’s time.”

Moving to a new state: “Tax, health care, and estate planning laws vary from state to state. If you don’t take this into account, you or your descendants might be in for some rude surprises,” Osofsky insists.

A significant change in your financial status, or in the status of your business: “Your estate plan reflects the size and nature of your assets when you created your original documents. Different strategies might be more effective as the configuration of your estate changes,” says Osofsky.

Changes in tax law: “Back in the 1990s, A-B trust splits were in common use on the first death in order to minimize estate tax. With increasing exemptions, those trust splits may no longer be necessary for the estates of most couples,” Osofsky asserts.

But if none of the above has happened to you, you may be one of the few for whom updating your estate plan is no longer necessary because your procrastination has entered the realm of suspended animation.

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Setting Up a Trust for a Child You Love http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/07/setting-up-a-trust-for-a-child-you-love/ Mon, 06 Jul 2009 16:18:52 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1526 Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky and Osofsky, can help you establish a trust for your non-adult beloved child. There are advantages and disadvantages to establishing a so-called “kid’s trust.” Gene L. Osofsky, of the Law Firm Osofsky

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Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky and Osofsky, can help you establish a trust for your non-adult beloved child.

There are advantages and disadvantages to establishing a so-called “kid’s trust.” Gene L. Osofsky, of the Law Firm Osofsky & Osofsky, is a great person to help you figure out the pros and cons. Advises Osofsky, “It may be worthwhile to prepare a trust for a minor child even if you believe your estate is relatively small and your significant assets are few.” Often, just being the beneficiary on an insurance policy may warrant a trust for a child. According to some experts, every parent should consider a trust for their non-adult child, or children.

It’s often overlooked that children who are minors cannot legally inherit large sums of money directly or as indirect tangibles such as a vehicle or proceeds of an insurance policy. If a parent dies and attempts to leave a large sum directly to a child not yet of age, the court will intervene and appoint a guardian to manage the inheritance for the minor child. “This guardian may not be the trusted friend or relative whom you might have preferred,” Osofsky says, “But if you engage an attorney during your lifetime to help you establish a trust; your child may be spared from having to grow up with an additional layer of bureaucracy impeding them as they mature into adulthood. Without a court-appointed guardianship to worry about, in effect you gain control over how your gift of money is controlled and spent – even if you are no longer physically around.”

According to Osofsky, other benefits of creating a trust for your minor child may also come into play. “Your trust may make arrangements to pay for said child’s education, delay the age when your child has outright access to the money, or even reduce applicable taxes,” he explains. But choosing the appropriate trustee is also crucial. “You need someone reliable, detail-oriented, and great at handling money,” Osofsky says. If that combination seems daunting, perhaps consulting with a specialist in Elder Law matters (like Osofsky) may help you decide.

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Home Sweet Nursing Facility http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/07/home-sweet-nursing-facility/ Mon, 06 Jul 2009 16:17:10 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1524 Removing your loved one from the familiar environs of home and moving them into a nursing ‘home’ or facility can be a gut-wrenching experience. It doesn’t have to be. When you or a loved one are forced by age or

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Removing your loved one from the familiar environs of home and moving them into a nursing ‘home’ or facility can be a gut-wrenching experience. It doesn’t have to be.

When you or a loved one are forced by age or circumstance to move from “sweet home” into “sweet nursing facility, ” it can be a most agonizing decision. But there may be ways to make those decisions seem less daunting.

It is understandable for a family to experience a degree of apprehension when the comforts and familiar nuances of home are exchanged for the unknown, where your loved one is suddenly dependent upon others for their daily needs after a lifetime of relative independence. The most well-meaning nursing home staff is, when you get right down to it, comprised of strangers. Imagine how you would feel suddenly placed in a nursing home full of strangers especially if your next generation of friends and family are living too far away to easily visit. This predicament is a reality faced by many elders.

To ease the transition, and to monitor an elder’s care as they’re placed in a nursing facility, an attractive option for many families is hiring a Geriatric Care Manager. So-called GCMs can be a valued resource for elders and their families – an insider who knows the ins and outs of the system and can navigate effectively, matching the best care and services to each individual’s situation. But some families are asking their GCMs to stay in the picture even after gramp-pa is settled and acclimated to the nursing home, so that he continues to receive the best possible care. GCMs sometimes recommend the hiring of professional caregivers to check in with your loved one periodically, perhaps weekly or even daily, as required.

An excellent resource for finding a Geriatric Care Manager in your area is the National Association of Professional Geriatric Care Managers, which can be Googled. If the time is fast approaching but it’s not here yet, a call to your resourceful Elder Law attorney might be in order. Ask him to include a mention of the GCM preference in your estate planning documents or other relevant instructions.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Hospital Privacy Rules Can Be Exasperating http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/07/hospital-privacy-rules-can-be-exasperating/ Mon, 06 Jul 2009 16:15:26 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1522 Being confronted with hospital privacy rules while you or a loved one are hospitalized can drive one to distraction, but a little planning may help ease your exasperation. Recently a friend of mine was hospitalized for a gallbladder procedure. Going

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Being confronted with hospital privacy rules while you or a loved one are hospitalized can drive one to distraction, but a little planning may help ease your exasperation.

Recently a friend of mine was hospitalized for a gallbladder procedure. Going to visit her to lift her spirits sounded like a good idea initially, but when I somehow ran afoul of the hospital’s stringent regulations regarding visitors, my best laid plans went awry. After several attempts, I gave up. My grievous error was mentioning her by name to the “wrong” nurse, and in so doing I’d violated my friend’s privacy. The hospital perceived me as a threat, simply because I have a rather loud voice. Later when my friend wondered why I hadn’t gone to visit her, I explained, but my excuse seemed inadequate to say the least.

If you or someone you care about has been hospitalized recently, you’ve discovered that strict rules regarding patient privacy exist at most hospitals. Sometimes bordering on the Kafka-esque, these arbitrary regulations can seem like bureaucracy run amok, and in worst case scenarios, can shut out patients from visitors entirely. Hospital staffers are prohibited from dispensing information about patients to extended family members and friends, if not also to closer relations who may not possess proper identification. A frustrating trap of “Catch-22” can dramatically increase anxiety levels as information about people you care about is kept “confidential,” sometimes for no apparent logical reason except for the hospital’s self-centered liability concerns based upon strict laws regarding privacy.

Getting around strict privacy laws, however, is a doable proposition if you enlist the aid of an Elder Law attorney. A reputable Elder Law firm can suggest options that work and are perfectly legal. A comprehensive Health Care Directive and a signed HIPAA Authorization might be considered admission tickets to visiting your loved one or else a viable way to ensure cooperation of hospital staffers when you need it most. But creating these documents must be accomplished with planning and a bit of finesse, a fait accompli prior to you or your loved one ending up in a hospital.

An estate plan created by an Elder Law attorney would likely include not only financial documents, but also the precise documents needed to honor your wishes pertaining to medical care. If you wait until the hospitalization is upon you, however, your procrastination can leave you at the mercy of hospital staffers who may be sticklers for adhering to the letter of the rules regarding privacy.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Elder Law Expert Weighs in on U. S. Healthcare Crisis http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/05/elder-law-expert-weighs-in-on-u-s-healthcare-crisis/ Wed, 27 May 2009 18:11:33 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1291 Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky and Osofsky asserts that U.S. medical care has become a “mountain of cost.” Elder Law attorney Gene L. Osofsky, like many Americans, recently read a feature article in the April 27, 2009,

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Gene L. Osofsky of the law firm Osofsky and Osofsky asserts that U.S. medical care has become a “mountain of cost.”

Elder Law attorney Gene L. Osofsky, like many Americans, recently read a feature article in the April 27, 2009, issue of The Nation that gave him pause. The article, entitled “A System from Hell” by Kate Michelman, detailed the tragedy of a family that, despite possessing adequate insurance coverage, has nevertheless been pushed to the brink of destruction.” Her young adult daughter was paralyzed when a horse fell on her; her husband, who had been diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease, was then crippled and lost any hope of independence in the twilight of his life, after shattering his hip; and now the mounting medical bills keep on exacting a terrible toll – all this happens to a responsible couple who had seemingly prepared for health-related contingencies. How could this happen in America?” Osofsky asks. Michelman’s husband was placed in assisted living after surgeries and hospitalizations for his fractured hip. Ironically, the couple had thought to purchase private long-term care insurance years before their crisis, but although their insurance plan nominally covered long-term care, it did little to address her husband’s long-term care in respect to its actual costs. “How does one plan for a situation such as this? Kate Michelman certainly thought she and her husband had planned for every eventuality – she is a well-known and well-to-do public figure, he was a tenured college professor, they had excellent medical insurance, even long-term care insurance, and still it wasn’t enough,” Osofsky says, “They still found themselves on the brink of losing everything.”

According to Osofsky, Michelman’s story is frightening “precisely because it could happen, and is happening, to any of us.” The unfortunate truth about medical insurance, long-term care insurance, and Medicare/Medi-Cal for those who qualify, is that they often cover “most of the cost” of medical treatment and rehabilitative care. Asserts Osofsky, “Most is woefully lacking when we must face the awful reality of how high the costs actually are. Deductibles, co-payments, share of costs, and uncovered services have become a huge personal obligation, a black hole of debt where accumulated life savings can disappear in a heartbeat.” Is there a solution? The key is to enlist the help of committed experts who know how to navigate the convoluted worlds of the medical industry, insurance industry, and government benefit programs. Osofsky suggests “finding professionals who can help you build a plan to make the best use of those systems and what they offer.” But even that’s not a complete solution. Something needs to change. Concludes Osofsky, “Medical care in the United States has become a mountain of cost that even the young and the healthy ignore at their own risk.”

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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2006 California Case Disqualifies “Care Custodians” http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/05/2006-california-case-disqualifies-care-custodians/ Wed, 27 May 2009 18:09:04 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1289 Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, explains how being regarded as a “care custodian” may disqualify a person from being a beneficiary of a testamentary distribution. “It might seem counterintuitive,” says Elder Law specialist Osofsky, “but

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Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, explains how being regarded as a “care custodian” may disqualify a person from being a beneficiary of a testamentary distribution.

“It might seem counterintuitive,” says Elder Law specialist Osofsky, “but according to a 2006 case decided by the California Supreme Court, being designated as a ‘care custodian’ of a dependent adult, may actually disqualify such persons from receiving testamentary bequests.” Adds Osofsky, “Only if the person making the testamentary bequest engaged a separate attorney to conduct an Independent Review and affirm that the testator was of sound mind and knew what he was doing, could the bequest be upheld.” The law seeks to protect dependent adults from coercive beneficiary disbursements made under duress or as the product of overreaching or undue influence. In certain care settings, California law presumes the naming of a care custodian as a beneficiary of one’s Will or Trust to be coercive actions assumptive of an unscrupulous care custodian and therefore void.

The case of BERNARD V. FOLEY (decision handed down August 21, 2006) found that unrelated friends providing ongoing health services to a dependent adult were “care custodians” under the relevant state statute and were therefore disqualified from receiving a testamentary distribution. James Foley and Ann Erman were longtime friends with Carmel Bosco. Ms. Bosco lived with them for two months prior to her death. Foley and Erman assisted her with her daily needs, including preparing her meals, helping her bathe, changing her diapers, and administering oral medications. Three days before she died, Ms. Bosco altered her living trust to make Mr. Foley and Ms. Erman each 50 percent beneficiaries. They had not previously been beneficiaries of the trust.

But Ms. Bosco’s relatives protested. Petitioning the court to invalidate the amendment, they argued that Mr. Foley and Ms. Erman were disqualified from receiving a testamentary distribution because they were “care custodians.” “Under California law, there is a presumption that donative transfers to care custodians are procured by undue influence,” explains Osofsky, “The state Supreme Court merely affirmed that a ‘caregiver’ under the statute could even be a friend who renders care to a dependent adult without compensation.” According to the Court’s decision, the definition of custodial care includes uncompensated or nonprofessional care and there is no evidence the legislature intended to make an exception for preexisting personal friends who provide health care services. Concludes Osofsky, “Elders have to be protected from people who would provide them with unprofessional care simply as a pretense to inheriting their assets. The very fact that they require such care puts them in an extremely vulnerable position.” But even this can be less than ironclad. “Sometimes persons have legitimate reasons for wanting to make bequests to their non-family member caregivers. In California, this essentially requires two attorneys to be involved, one to perform the Will or Trust and a second to conduct the Independent Review. Is this a trap for the well-intended?”

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Pros and Cons of Joint Accounts http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/05/pros-and-cons-of-joint-accounts/ Wed, 27 May 2009 18:06:46 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1287 Probate can be a difficult process. But using joint accounts to avoid it may not always be a good idea. If you are thinking that joint accounts are a foolproof way to escape probate and funnel dollars to loved ones

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Probate can be a difficult process. But using joint accounts to avoid it may not always be a good idea.

If you are thinking that joint accounts are a foolproof way to escape probate and funnel dollars to loved ones as a sort of “poor man’s estate plan,” think again. Circumstances exist when a joint account is an excellent option. But the instrument has its pitfalls as well, and if misused or entered into without caution, joint accounts can pose serious risks. Adding a loved one to a bank account may seem like a prudent action, but such actions can impact Medicaid planning or even make your account “fair game” for your loved one’s creditors.

Applications for Medicaid long-term care coverage can be tricky. States are obliged to examine the applicant’s assets to determine eligibility. Although a joint account may include two or more names, states tend to make the assumption that the applicant is the owner and entirely responsible for the total funds in the account, irregardless of who might have contributed to the account. Imagine your name is on a joint account. You enter a nursing home. The state is still likely to assume that the account’s assets are yours – especially without proof otherwise. Realize also that proving anything is a lot more difficult from inside a nursing home, or even an assisted living facility, when you might not have ready access to your papers and files as you did within your home sweet home back when you were well and able.

It can get worse. What if you or the other joint owner of the account decides to take monies out of an account that is already under state scrutiny? This can be perceived as “improper transfer of assets” for Medicaid purposes, which may have an adverse effect upon your eligibility. You or the other joint owner could become ineligible for Medicaid for a period of months or perhaps years. In fact, if a joint owner is removed from an account, it can appear suspicious to investigators. Example: Your parent enters a nursing home. You decide to remove your parent’s name from the joint bank account. Again, this simple action, prudent on its face, can be construed as an improper transfer of assets.

Remember that an account remains exposed to all the account owners’ creditors. If your son is added to the account and falls behind (or worse, defaults) on his credit card debt and gets sued, guess who is on the hook? Under laws currently in effect, a credit card company can confiscate the money in your account to pay off your son’s debt. Another pertinent question revolves around trust. Can you completely trust the person you are adding?

Viable alternatives to joint accounts do exist. A consultation with your attorney specializing in Elder Law may suggest a durable power of attorney or else a well-considered trust instrument. Seek out a qualified Elder Law attorney near you.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Great Recession of 2009 Makes Power of Attorney Essential http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/05/great-recession-of-2009-makes-power-of-attorney-essential/ Wed, 27 May 2009 18:04:18 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=1285 The Durable Power of Attorney is no longer a luxury. For your Elder Law counsel, it has become essential. It is the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s. The decline and associated roller coaster ride on

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The Durable Power of Attorney is no longer a luxury. For your Elder Law counsel, it has become essential.

It is the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s. The decline and associated roller coaster ride on Wall Street has made durable power of attorney into not just a luxury when it comes to planning your estate, but an absolute necessity. Some Elder Law attorneys have come to view the instrument as even more integral to contemporary estate plans than a Will or Trust.

A Dow Jones newswire column is a case-in-point. It presents the cautionary tale of a female elder who had recently lost half of $6 million in savings. The losses were incurred almost entirely on the stock market. The woman’s woes only intensified when she became incapacitated, and her relatives were stymied when attempting to shift her investments, becoming increasingly frustrated as various remedies were attempted as damage control measures. But they lacked legal authority to take these corrective steps. An inherent irony was that the woman had once executed a power of attorney in case she ever were to become incapacitated, but the issue had become moot as the person she’d nominated had died and she’d neglected to name a successor. If dead men (or women) tell no tales, it’s also true that dead friends, no matter how trusted, cannot follow through with their power of attorney responsibilities.

Such columns have also tackled what many consider to be the thorniest question when executing a power of attorney. Is there someone you can actually trust with this power? Trust is always a thorny issue, but perhaps it is better to avoid naming someone if one-hundred percent trust has yet to be established. In fact, the powers of attorney instrument has become the subject of frequent “horror stories” in recent years, especially since the onset of our current Great Recession. In fact, exploitation of vulnerable elders by rascally persons misusing their powers of attorney roles is becoming epidemic.

But this doesn’t make the instrument less necessary in these difficult times, assert Elder Law experts such as Gene L. Osofsky. If someone trusted can be found, and if proper safeguards are in place, such as deciding who retains originals of the power of attorney document prior to when the instrument may be needed, then it can work well indeed. A power of attorney can take effect immediately or can become effective only when the subject is incapacitated as defined in the document and confirmed by a physician. In 2009, the need for a durable power of attorney has never been greater.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Keeping Your Living Trusts and Estate Plans Current http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/04/keeping-your-living-trusts-and-estate-plans-current/ Tue, 28 Apr 2009 19:02:19 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=977 The Osofsky Law firm urges clients to review their estate plans or living trusts to keep them current. Even economic conditions occurring in the U.S. can greatly alter your original intent. Revocable “living” trusts can be a prudent estate planning

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The Osofsky Law firm urges clients to review their estate plans or living trusts to keep them current. Even economic conditions occurring in the U.S. can greatly alter your original intent.

Revocable “living” trusts can be a prudent estate planning device, but must be kept current. Prior to the 2001 changes in the tax law, the personal lifetime exemption from estate tax was $675,000. Couples often based their plan design on that rule. But when the exemption was increased to $3.5 million, the playing field changed. In fact, many couples had not updated their trusts to accommodate this change. “The tax landscape had been dramatically altered since many couples originally designed their trusts,” says Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky and Osofsky. There were other differences in those pre-2001 documents. “Many of these older trusts contained directions to split the trust estate into mandatory sub-trusts upon the death of the first spouse. This mandatory split was usually ‘tax driven’ and designed to preserve each spouse’s personal exemption, and thereby reduce or eliminate estate taxes over the span of two deaths. The ultimate goal was to transmit the maximum gift to the couple’s remainder beneficiaries, usually their children,” Osofsky explains. When the exemption amount changed, these trust provisions became archaic, or else applicable to much larger estates. Sometimes in the aftermath of the change, with an out-of-date document in hand, the surviving spouse’s access to the couple’s original assets was restricted without a corresponding tax benefit ensuing.

An admonition to draw from all this would be difficult to hear. Married couples who have created Revocable “Living” Trusts prior to 2001, as well as many who had created such documents afterwards – especially by non-attorneys and by so-called “trust mills” — would be well advised to have their trusts reviewed by a competent professional.

More recently, a severe recession has created similar issues for estate plans, to the extent that they were designed with higher asset values in mind. Trusts should also be reviewed, even if is of recent origin. While the estate tax rate is 45% under current federal law, it stands to be eliminated in 2010, then scheduled to be increased to 55% in 2011 even as the exemption will be reduced to $1 million. Says Osofsky, “While the markers are present in the political landscape to likely reinstate the taxed estate rate at 45% in 2009, while keeping the $3.5 million ceiling intact, it’s not exactly clear if this will actually happen.”

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Protecting Your Online Persona http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/04/protecting-your-online-persona/ Tue, 28 Apr 2009 18:59:43 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=975 The Osofsky Law Firm is always seeking innovative ways to make their estate planning services stay ahead of the curve. With the ubiquitous nature of Internet access, provisions need to be made for the distribution and availability of login credentials,

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The Osofsky Law Firm is always seeking innovative ways to make their estate planning services stay ahead of the curve. With the ubiquitous nature of Internet access, provisions need to be made for the distribution and availability of login credentials, in the event of incapacity or death.

Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, has given thought to helping clients distribute their Internet passwords and online information in the context of estate and long-term care planning. He’s become preemptive about the subject. “It’s occurred to me that in preparing their estate plans, preparations should include some mechanism for transferring login credentials, like user names and passwords, and perhaps other online information they’d want disseminated should they be laid low by incapacity or death, or should a loved one become similarly afflicted or die,” Osofsky explains. The noted Elder Law attorney adds, “This could be pretty important. You or a loved one might have information on social networking sites such as YouTube or Twitter, for instance, and might want it removed, modified, or made accessible, according to personal wishes. What would happen to this information in the case of incapacity or death if you were no longer able to manage it?”

Companies such as Legacy Locker (www.legacylocker.com) are beginning to sprout up to address such needs. “While persons could certainly write down their passwords and pertinent online information on a piece of paper, companies like Legacy Locker (others will certainly follow suit) have taken such matters to the next level. Legacy Locker even provides a private letter to whomever the deceased wishes as a kind of final online testament,” Osofsky says. But Legacy Locker and other online vendors might not work for everyone. Many people might be justifiably reluctant to share their Email accounts or social network profiles. A potentially better solution might be an “online info” Confidential Insert prepared by your Elder Law attorney, the information contained therein transferred while you or your loved one are still of sound mind. This insert would contain all user names, passwords, and other information for on-line access that you or your loved one deem appropriate or essential in the event of incapacity or death. You’d establish clear instructions concerned with the terms and particulars involved with its release. What could be better than that?

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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The Wisdom of Leaving a Video Legacy http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/04/the-wisdom-of-leaving-a-video-legacy/ Tue, 28 Apr 2009 18:58:19 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=973 Elder Law attorneys are increasingly including video and other forms of tangible legacy as part of the estate plans they prepare. An estate planner’s office must necessarily be about death, but it should also be about life. In everyone’s lives

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Elder Law attorneys are increasingly including video and other forms of tangible legacy as part of the estate plans they prepare.

An estate planner’s office must necessarily be about death, but it should also be about life. In everyone’s lives are personal and extraordinary stories which are there for the telling, and if expressed well, might live long after our lives have ended. Additionally, elders have so much life experience and wisdom to share and pass on, and in many respects, the loss of this precious history may be as tragic as their passing itself. In fact, what goes for our elders is also true for any of us; especially if death occurs prematurely, or even if life continues only marginally, its quality diminished or nearly extinguished due to unfortunate circumstances.

When you sit down to create your estate plan, think not only about how to pass on your assets, but also how to pass on your unique family stories and wisdom. After all, the silver flatware may go back to your great-great grandmother, but the story behind it is what makes it such a valuable family heirloom.

With the easy use and availability of digital video technology, exciting opportunities suddenly exist to document the stories and experiences of loved ones among us, while they still can live and breathe and share. If you or a relative feel that you do not possess the expertise to do this loving task justice, you might consider hiring a documentary filmmaker or skilled videographer and interviewer, to record your loved one’s life stories while you have the chance.

The interview can be as simple as audio taping life experiences and colorful stories. A poignant story comes to mind involving the 12-year-old son of a journalist and filmmaker. This charismatic and engaging boy would visit the elders in a nearby rest home with tape recorder in hand, determined to impress his beloved father with the extraordinary stories he’d recorded. The boy himself was killed tragically at age 13, but the stories he had gathered remained, treasured in their own right as a reminder of the youngster’s remarkable personality.

If funds are available, a competent writer specializing in biographical writing might be hired to create a well-written and engaging account of a wondrous person who once lived, breathed, and was loved. What an extraordinary addition to any estate plan!

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Don’t Let Your Loved One’s Online Passwords Get Lost http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/04/dont-let-your-loved-ones-online-passwords-get-lost/ Tue, 28 Apr 2009 18:56:58 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=971 Recording and saving online passwords in a safe place should be a foremost consideration and an integral part of long-term care estate planning should your loved one become incapacitated or die. Even a decade ago, the keeping of gateways and

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Recording and saving online passwords in a safe place should be a foremost consideration and an integral part of long-term care estate planning should your loved one become incapacitated or die.

Even a decade ago, the keeping of gateways and access providers, such as passwords, must have seemed inconsequential to those charged with drawing up estate plans. That was before the advent of Twitter and YouTube, and all of the online banking, asset management and the like — when passwords to access these services hadn’t become such pervasive reminders of our recent technological prowess. Passwords have become ubiquitous enough that even our beloved elders use them liberally. The access codes are required for accessing almost everything on the World Wide Web, spidery as it is, and for most of us, our computers, hand-held devices, and other electronic gadgets that we’re constantly using are often locked from intruders (meaning anyone) until a user name and password are typed in.

Much of this secrecy is due to legitimate concerns and is extremely well-intentioned. Files and histories of sites that we visit on our computers are meant to be private. In the most ordinary sense, who wants the world to know every facet of our business? But by the same token, all of us have experienced the utter frustration that quickly develops if a password is suddenly misplaced or forgotten. Forgetting them is more common, considering that we may have so many, not just a few. But what if someone you love or know is laid low by incapacity or death, and the location or memory of these precious codes for navigating the Internet is suddenly gone?

This is no longer of little consequence. To a caregiver or family member responsible for a loved one, or more pointedly, for their affairs, access to certain information can be critical. Simply writing down a password on a scrap of paper may not be enough. While there is no easy solution for this problem, certain companies like Legacy Locker are attempting to address a burgeoning need. This site allows users to input their login credentials for the web services they access, where they are then kept safe until notification of the login info’s owner and relevant family members in the event of incapacity or death. Users can select which account information will be distributed and to whom. Such a service might seem like a good idea, but many people would be justifiably reluctant to share their Email accounts or social network profiles. What might work better for some would be an “online information” Confidential Insert added to an estate plan, which you’d provide directly to your Elder Law attorney, in connection with the preparation or update of your estate or long-term care plan while you are still of sound mind. This Confidential Insert would contain all passwords and other information for online access that would later be needed by your trusted agent, successor trustee, or executor. You would set the terms of its release. Alternatively, you might entrust this insert to your spouse, adult child, or other trusted person.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorney, Medi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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When It’s Too Late for a Spousal Protection Plan http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/03/when-its-too-late-for-a-spousal-protection-plan/ Tue, 31 Mar 2009 16:55:47 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=538 Osofsky & Osofsky offers crisis-engendered legal options when your spouse has already become incapacitated. Harry and Joan have been married for fifty-one years. Last year, they celebrated their Golden Wedding anniversary. They’d accumulated a modest “nest egg” over their working

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Osofsky & Osofsky offers crisis-engendered legal options when your spouse has already become incapacitated.

Harry and Joan have been married for fifty-one years. Last year, they celebrated their Golden Wedding anniversary. They’d accumulated a modest “nest egg” over their working years, but a tragedy common to growing old in America seems to be looming. Joan has been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, albeit in its early stages. Harry remains in relatively good health, and is currently able to provide adequate home care for Joan; for instance, he’s patient when she misplaces her toothbrush or the house keys, but he worries about the progression of his wife’s deteriorating mental capacity. He has other anxious moments. What if he develops a chronic illness, or worse, what if he dies before Joan? As a responsible husband, he wonders if there is any way that he can create a plan that would address the special needs of Joan if he should die before her, or if he suddenly became incapacitated.

He’s heard about something called a Special Needs Trust that would allow Joan to receive government benefits supplemented by their accumulated savings. He’s also been warned by well-meaning friends that a “Living Trust” can have a downside. He needs answers. Fortunately, he and Joan live in California’s East Bay in close proximity to the law offices of Osofsky & Osofsky. He calls the law office and hears the pleasant voice of Gene L. Osofsky, a leading Elder Law Attorney and co-author of The Consumer’s Guide to Medi-Cal Planning. Is there some other way to protect Joan?

“Yes, there is,” Gene says, “There is a way that couples can provide for the survivor in this situation. It requires special planning. Instead of relying upon a ‘Living Trust’ as the primary estate planning device, you should consider creating a plan which relies upon a specially designed Will which contains Special Needs Trust Provisions for Joan. Your plan should be coordinated in a special way with the Will.” Gene tells the suddenly reassured Harry, “If you die before Joan, the Will – not the Trust – will help protect Joan and provide for her needs.” “That’s wonderful,” Harry says. Gene offers his expertise as this is an urgent matter. “Your situation requires special skill and knowledge about government benefits, especially Medi-Cal benefits. Our firm may be able to help.”

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorneyMedi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Developing a Long-Term Protection Plan http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/03/developing-a-long-term-protection-plan/ Tue, 31 Mar 2009 16:53:18 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=536 The Osofsky law firm offers estate planning with a long-term care twist. Spouses should create a Long-Term Care Protection Plan for each other, before a lingering illness happens, just in case. Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky &

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The Osofsky law firm offers estate planning with a long-term care twist. Spouses should create a Long-Term Care Protection Plan for each other, before a lingering illness happens, just in case.

Gene L. Osofsky, of the law firm Osofsky & Osofsky, is frequently consulted about asset preservation techniques in connection with Long-Term Care Planning. Senior couples often ask how they might protect each other if one of them were to be afflicted with an incapacitating illness or lingering condition during their final years. The questions are often not about sudden death, or even about dying, but about surviving and needing extended long-term care.

Long-term care often entails devastating financial costs associated with placement in a nursing home facility. Asserts Osofsky, who specializes in such elder care issues while serving California’s East Bay area, “This is a real concern, as nursing home expenses average $7,500 per month in our community, and are likely to only increase over time. This concern is all the more real for those who have experienced the financial and emotional devastation that such expense can cause, perhaps by having to help a parent or other loved one meet those costs.”

The good news is that Osofsky & Osofsky has developed a very special plan that deftly addresses those concerns, as well as the more traditional question of “Who gets our stuff if we should both pass on?” The plan is called the “Spousal Protection Plan,” or SPP.

Osofsky’s SPP incorporates special powers into the traditional estate plan. One of the spouses is designated the “Well Spouse” and is authorized to seek a government subsidy for the ill spouse’s nursing care under the Medi-Cal program, and to take steps during their lifetime to protect the couple’s estate from “payback” after the demise of both spouses. By taking these steps, the SPP is designed to minimize or avoid the financial devastation to the couple’s savings, investments, home, or other estate assets, and thus avoid impoverishing the “Well Spouse” while protecting their children’s inheritance

To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorneyMedi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Is Planning to Access Public Benefits Ethical? http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/03/is-planning-to-access-public-benefits-ethical/ Tue, 31 Mar 2009 16:48:42 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=534 Not only is such planning “ethical,” in many cases it may be essential. It might even be considered a form of tax planning for the middle class. While longevity is increasing for both men and women, people are suffering from

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Not only is such planning “ethical,” in many cases it may be essential. It might even be considered a form of tax planning for the middle class.

While longevity is increasing for both men and women, people are suffering from more debilitating diseases, and requiring more long-term care than ever before.

The cost of that care promises only to increase; and, were it not for the Medicaid Program (called Medi-Cal in California) created by Congress, many Americans would be without the means to pay for that care or would risk financial ruin. Seniors and their families deserve to live and age with dignity. They should not have to choose between securing necessary care and financial ruin. Indeed, providing a payment source for seniors and the disabled to cover long-term care expenses was a social policy decision made by Congress years ago.

Avoiding impoverishment by taking steps to qualify for an available long-term care subsidy may require planning and the services of an Elder Law Attorney.

Is this ethical? Think of it this way: The wealthy plan their affairs and design their business strategies to minimize their tax burden. They may hire a team of expert financial advisers, accountants and attorneys to assist them in their efforts. Their success is applauded and the creative efforts of their “team” members are often highly compensated. When logic is applied, what is so different about the middle class planning their own affairs in a similar fashion, in pursuit of benefits to which they are entitled? Except for an inherent class bias favoring the wealthy, the answer is nothing. The impact upon the public treasury — whether the planning involves tax avoidance, or securing a Medi-Cal subsidy — is precisely the same. Such middle class “tax planning” is not only ethical, it is becoming absolutely essential.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning.To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorneyMedi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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Caregiver Agreements: A Creative Solution to the Elder Care Dilemma http://www.seonewswire.net/2009/03/caregiver-agreements-a-creative-solution-to-the-elder-care-dilemma/ Tue, 31 Mar 2009 16:46:06 +0000 http://www.seonewswire.net/?p=532 Caregiver agreements can be like a family-based insurance plan – creatively ensuring that elderly family members receive the loving care they deserve. Your frail mother is still beloved but she’s 92 and requires home care. Caring for her is a

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Caregiver agreements can be like a family-based insurance plan – creatively ensuring that elderly family members receive the loving care they deserve.

Your frail mother is still beloved but she’s 92 and requires home care. Caring for her is a labor of love, but difficult work; even when she smiles. Besides the tedious and unrelenting requirements involved, the “job” of caring for her can be a severe financial strain on the child. Studies have shown that a child serving in the capacity of primary caregiver can lose 75% of potential earnings during every year that the”job” of caring for their parent continues.

What if there existed a creative solution to your elder care dilemma? Caregiver agreements – formal contracts under which relatives are hired to care for elderly family members have been around for decades, but with the current economic downturn, an increasing number of families are choosing this option. This is good news, because caregiver agreements come with a number of benefits, not the least of which is that money given to a son or daughter under a caregiver agreement is not considered by the government to be “a gift” when an elderly person is attempting to qualify for Medi-Cal, Medicaid, or other public benefits. Another plus is psychological: to an aging parent, the idea of being cared for by a trusted family member may be especially meaningful. The contracted arrangements may also ease tensions and resentment among siblings, if for example, one child is rendering the lion’s share of the care.

The caregiver agreement must be in writing and it should be carefully crafted, preferably by an attorney specializing in Elder Law. There are also tax consequences. These agreements are legal contracts; should include details such as the cost of services with each service itemized; and the duties that the caregiver will be performing, spelled out in clear language. Authorizations for medical or financial decision-making should also be clearly described, especially if making medical and physical decisions will be part of the caregiving duties, those powers should be separately set forth in Durable Powers of Attorney for finances and Advance Health Care Directives for medical issues. Perhaps most crucially, the caregiver contract must be executed before the caregiver receives any compensation. If this final stipulation is ignored, a caregiver agreement could lead to a crisis instead of a solution.

Gene Osofsky is an East Bay elder law attorney in California. Gene Osofsky specializes in Medi-Cal planning, wills, probate, trusts, nursing home issues, special needs planning, and disability planning. To learn more about East Bay elder law lawyers, East Bay elder law attorneyMedi-Cal planning, Medi-Cal planning lawyers and The Law Offices of Osofsky & Osofsky, visit Lawyerforseniors.com.

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