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The Special Needs Trust - How to Secure the Future for Your Disabled Child

Until 1993, as a parent with a disabled child or the spouse of someone in a nursing home, you faced a difficult decision: if you left a legacy for your disabled child or spouse, you might make them ineligible for government assistance.

When the federal government enacted the Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1993, however, it made it possible for you to 1) provide funds to support your special-needs child and 2) retain your child’s eligibility for federal, state and private charitable benefit programs such as SSI and Title 19 Medicaid.

The Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1993 excluded from benefit program eligibility requirements the legacy left to special-needs children in a properly created Special Needs Trust. A Special Needs Trust may provide no advantage if it is not properly established.

How to Secure the Future with a Special Needs Trust

The Special Needs Trust is simple to establish, and it not only provides immeasurable peace of mind, it also gives you complete control over your child’s care.

You work with your estate planning attorney to appoint Trustees for your child’s Special Needs Trust. The Trustees oversee your child’s well-being and manage the estate you or anyone else leave for his or her benefit. So there is no need for a probate court to determine your child’s fate.

Unlike the guardian or conservator a probate court might appoint, these Trustees are people you know and trust. Relatives or close family friends can be appointed to supervise your child’s personal care.

To work with financial institutions and manage the estate, you may want to appoint a professional financial advisor, as a Co-Trustee.

As part of setting up your child’s Special Needs Trust, you provide detailed written instructions in the trust to direct the Trustee’s activities. By law, Trustees must follow these instructions to the letter. So you have a tremendous degree of control over your child’s education, housing, and other needs.

Best of all, the Special Needs Trust preserves your child’s eligibility for federal, state and charitable benefit programs such as SSI and Title 19 Medicaid. The only requirement is that the funds withdrawn from the Special Needs Trust must be for purposes other than those covered under the governmental and private benefit programs. The concept is fairly simple, but the execution is technical and complex. Special Needs Trusts are carefully scrutinized by government benefits agencies and one error in the language of the trust can undo everything it is designed to accomplish.

You can contact me here or call (860) 593-0404 to reserve your free consultation to discuss if a special needs trust can help your family.

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Index Tags: estate planning, nursing home, probate, special needs, special needs trust, title 19 medicaid

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