Special needs trust/supplemental needs trust
While planning for the care of a special needs child certainly tops the list of
emotionally-charged topics, the peace of mind parents gain from a well-designed
estate plan, more than compensates them for having to plan for the unthinkable.
The mere idea wrenches the heart of any parent: if untimely death or disability
strikes, who will care for your children? Because no one is immortal, most of
us recognize the need for an estate plan, preferably one that appoints a
suitable guardian for our children, sees to their financial needs, and avoids
probate.
In the best of circumstances, it’s a task requiring clear thinking and good
legal advice. But when a child has special needs, the challenge intensifies.
Before we explore estate planning strategies for parents of special needs
children, let’s look at why all parents need an estate plan.
A PAGE FROM OLIVER TWIST
“A ward of the court” may sound like something out of the nineteenth century.
But that’s precisely what becomes of children whose legally disabled or
deceased parents have failed to plan for their care. Unless you’ve created an
estate plan that spells out who should assume responsibility for your child,
the courts will step in. And that’s true whether you’ve left behind an estate
worth millions or nothing at all.
When children take center stage in probate court, it’s because the court wants
to ensure that a responsible person is supervising their physical needs and
financial affairs. The court will appoint a guardian to assume responsibility
for your child’s personal care. To oversee your child’s financial affairs, the
court will appoint a financial guardian. Often, the financial guardian is not
one person, but an entity, such as a bank or a professional money management
institution.
Probate judges have tremendous discretion in whom they may appoint as
guardians. So, there’s very little assurance that the judge’s appointments will
be the same individuals you would choose. In fact, if qualified family members
aren’t available or deemed suitable, the judge may very well appoint
professional guardians who may be strangers to you and your child.
The guardian will be supervised by the probate court judge assigned to your
child’s case. The guardian is usually required to obtain judicial approval
before undertaking any significant financial transactions on your child’s
behalf. Busy schedules and heavy caseloads often mean that it can take weeks—or
even months—before a financial transaction can be reviewed and approved by the
supervising judge. That may create devastating delays in providing care and
comfort for your child.
Because the court is involved in supervising their activities, guardians
frequently hire attorneys to help them navigate through the legal system. The
fees for these attorneys—as well as the fees charged by the guardian and the
probate court itself—all come out of the estate you’ve left behind for your
child’s benefit. These expenses leave less money to provide for your child’s
care, education, and other requirements.
UPPING THE ANTE: PLANNING FOR THE SPECIAL NEEDS CHILD
Clearly, every parent has a responsibility to plan for the unthinkable. But
when the child has physical, emotional or mental challenges, careful estate
planning is even more crucial for three important reasons.
First is the simple fact that these children have greater needs. Depending on
the degree of their disability, they may require specialized treatment that
encompasses therapy, housing, education, adaptive equipment, and in-home care,
among many other costly services. The need for this care may extend throughout
their childhood and last well into adulthood, or even their entire lives.
Providing the appropriate degree of care requires careful financial planning.
Here’s the second critical reason why parents of a special child need a special
estate plan: it is the only way to ensure that you can provide for your child
without jeopardizing the child’s eligibility for government and private benefit
programs.
Finally, for parents of children with special needs, estate planning is the
only way to protect the child’s financial interests today as well as in the
future, when you may no longer be on the scene.
THE HORNS OF A DILEMMA
It’s a painful dilemma that parents of special children often face: to keep a
disabled child eligible for important federal and state benefit programs, the
child can have few assets. That leaves parents with a difficult choice: provide
a legacy for their special child and hope it will be sufficient for all his
needs, or make the child a virtual pauper and retain his or her eligibility for
government assistance.
Fortunately, there is a simple answer within reach of nearly everyone: the
Special Needs Trust.
HOW THE SPECIAL NEEDS TRUST WORKS
The Special Needs Trust allows a parent, grandparent or guardian to provide
funds for a disabled child without disrupting the child’s eligibility for
government aid. Setting one up is a fairly simple process.
Working with your estate planning attorney, you appoint trustees for your
child’s trust. The trustees will manage the assets you transfer to the trust
for your child’s benefit. In the event of your disability or death, the
trustees will also supervise your child’s finances.
During your lifetime, you can serve as trustee and remain in complete control
over your child’s finances. Should you die, however, your successor trustees
will step in and take care of your child’s finances on your behalf.
Unlike the guardian, a probate court might appoint, your successor trustee is
someone you know and trust. Relatives or close family friends can be appointed
to supervise your child’s finances. To work with financial institutions and
manage the estate, you may also want a trusted financial advisors to serve as
trustee.
As part of setting up your child’s Special Needs Trust, you will provide
detailed written instructions to direct your trustees’ activities. By law,
trustees must follow these instructions. So you can rest assured your child’s
education, housing, and other needs are being taken care of.
Best of all, the Special Needs Trust will preserve your child’s eligibility for
federal, state and charitable benefit programs. This is accomplished by
providing that the funds can only be withdrawn from the Special Needs Trust for
purposes other than those covered under the governmental and private benefit
programs.
PLANNING WHEN THE DISABLED INDIVIDUAL HAS ASSETS
One of the most heartwrenching aspects of a child’s disability is that it may
be the result of negligence or preventable error. A doctor’s misdiagnosis, a
mistake at the hospital, or a product defect, for example, may create a child’s
lifelong impairment. When that’s the case, a lawsuit – and sizable settlement –
can be the result.
In most cases, the disabled child will be the recipient of the funds. And that
can make the child ineligible for government support.
When the federal government enacted the Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1993
(OBRA `93), one of its intents was to close the door on Medicaid abuse.
Legislators realized that taxpayers sometimes deliberately impoverished
themselves – and often used trusts to do so – to retain eligibility for
Medicaid and other government aid programs. OBRA `93 resoundingly closed the
door on that abuse. In fact, Americans who give away their assets to qualify
for government aid can be effectively “blackballed” from federal assistance for
a period of time which varies depending on the value of the assets given away.
Fortunately, however, OBRA `93 left the door open for disabled individuals who
receive damage awards. The law allows them to use their own money to fund a
trust very similar to the Special Needs Trust without jeopardizing their
eligibility for federal, state and private charitable benefit programs. Going
by such names as a "disability” trust or “Medicaid Pay-back” trust, these
trusts are similar to the Special Needs Trust with one significant exception.
When the disabled individual dies, any money left in her trust will be used to
repay whatever government assistance that was received during his or her
lifetime.
Although these trusts are authorized by federal statutes, many states have not
as yet officially approved them. That’s why you may need the assistance of an
estate planning attorney well versed in this aspect of the law if your child’s
situation fits into the scenario described above.
BUYER BEWARE: ESTATE PLANNING SHORT-CUTS THAT CAN DERAIL YOUR GOALS
While acknowledging the need for estate planning for their children, some
parents take short-cuts that create as many problems as they solve.
One of the biggest mistakes parents make – and it happens with alarming
frequency – is naming their children as beneficiaries of their insurance
policies, qualified pension plans, stocks, and other financial instruments.
Unfortunately for these parents and their children, neither the financial
institutions or the probate courts will hand that money over to minor children.
Instead, the money will be turned over to a guardian who will hold the money in
trust for the child. If you haven’t appointed a guardian, the probate court
will do so for you, and once again, you’ll have little guarantee that those in
charge of your child will be the people you would have selected.
PLANNING FOR THE UNTHINKABLE
As difficult a subject as it might be, all parents owe it to their children to
ensure that they’re well cared for, come what may. Parents of special needs
children face an even greater imperative to do this essential planning.
Schedule
a free initial consultation to discuss your needs.