I am on a joint bank account with my Dad who will be applying for Medicaid in a couple of years. He has been in a NH for 5 years. Can I pay myself a small salary for handling his financial affairs or will that count as a tranfer for the look back period. One caseworker I talked to actually told me that I could spend the money on myself since its my account too as long as the item was for me personally and I had a receipt. Can this be correct? I'm in Texas.
If he needs to Qualify for Medicaid in the next 5 years, you will give it back.
I started gifting in 2009 and put it all in an account that I could't spend so if the five year lookback ever kicked in I could put it back.
As far as paying yourself for handing expenses......really?
If he was living with you that's one thing, but in a NH and all you do is review expenses and write some checks? shake it off.
It's time to cut the apron strings...
My parents chose to have me.. They also wanted me to grow up and support myself not them! How do I support myself when I am caring for my Mom 24/7..
You better be saving for your Elder years because you'll need the money for a nursing home..
I don't know if you have children but do you really expect them to give up their career and own family to financially support you?
I would never expect my children to financially support me it's humiliating and demoralizing...Have some respect...
Life's not about what you get when their dead.. It's about what you give while they're still alive...
The trust provides for payments as I see fit. It also allows 5% of the estate per year. I could put her in a NH and she would NOT get the care she now gets. We don't drug her so she sleeps all the time. We do hear about old times and over and over but at least she is participating.
Don't go out and buy a new Caddy and say it is to take mom to the doctor once every 6 months. That's a bit extreme, don't you think. But do get paid for actual expenses and make them less than what a NH would cost. I don't feel guilty. I feel blessed. Blessed to have mom with us. No two situations are the same. "My situation is different" is always true.
I make him take her to her doctors I take groceries and because she has nothin I called social services and they do nothin home so my feelings are he's taking her money and she's getting nothin he has a check he has a check bo he is convinced by not to give her any money when I take he is convinced bank if not give her any money when I take her and if she needs groceries
it is so frustratin so we do without sim my mom has her mad and her food and whatever she needs
Money is to provide for their care regardless of who provides it. Many caregivers have become poor while benefitting entitled siblings. Most parents in this situation would want to pay the child caregiver, that is why Medicaid allows it.
TexasD - Just how much time are you spending on you dad's finances per month that you feel a need to be paid?
Also if someone in the family or you have a mental illness assets in some cases can be turned over without penalty. Again that is why the elder care attorney is helpful. It is saving my Dad and us a lot of money.
If your don't see life as a gift and see caregiving as an unwelcome obligation, than your perspective makes sense.
However, it seems that the tasks you mentioned are ones our parents did for us...cooking, cleaning, teaching, chauffeuring and more. Granted that it's more difficult to do those for an elder person with an acquired mind set than it is for a child who can be disciplined and told what to do.
I don't disagree that caregiving is a challenge, often an unwelcome one, and one that's made more difficult by a modern lifestyle that places less value on home life and bonds and sometimes more on being able to be technologically savvy and market that savvy effectively.
I also wouldn't deny that some parents either didn't have or weren't able to learn good parenting skills, or had some other issues that rendered them unable to be loving parents. And I certainly understand the resentment that would accompany anyone feeling forced into caregiving for those parents.
But as to the specific question, I don't see that simply taking care of a parents' finances is so time consuming that it warrants payment. Unless you're managing investments and contacting a stockbroker on a regular basis to play the market or gaming the commodities markets, financial management of a parent's funds just isn't that time consuming.
Peach44, I really have to challenge your assertion that attorneys just "rip you off by charging more...". You have to consider their training, acquired knowledge, and the need to continually keep up with changing statutes and case law.
Granted, there are unscrupulous attorneys, just there are unscrupulous doctors, engineers, contractors, politicians...you name the field and there's likely someone of questionable ethics. It's unfortunate that so many people single out lawyers for attack.
If you really believe they're rippffs, perhaps you should investigate what it takes to become one, and try doing the work you might otherwise have them do by yourself. Without assistance. Try researching a subject, Shepardizing it, and see how difficult it really is. Or try to draft a Will, or more challenging, a revocable trust.
If your loved one has the finances to afford it don't feel guilty about taking an income. I'm sure they'd rather see you get the money than some agency.
I don't know anyone that can work all day and then, work on this stuff all night.
You are not asking for anything more than reimbursement for time spent. An attorney or accountant would not do this work for free. Pay yourself.
heirs than to give it all to a money making home or hospital. It's the principal of the situation.Hospitals today do not keep people as long as they used to & expect family members to pick up the 24 hr care, which forces them to give up jobs, personal lives indefinitely. This makes it very difficult on caregivers. I don't think the elders would want this scenario for their children, or turn their care into a "life sentence" for their spouse. Consult with elder care lawyer while your loved ones can still express their wishes, including a living will.
Second – I so wish people would bite their tongues when they feel compelled to rant on the subject of "your parent(s) raised you and sacrificed for you all your life and how dare you...."
Considering that you haven't "walked a mile in the shoes" of the person you're scolding, it is really insensitive. You have no idea what kind of parenting they enjoyed (or survived) during their childhood and, as is pointed out EVERY TIME the comment arises, children aren't born with obligation to their parents. Their parents choose to have them.
Some adult children can't or choose not to be their parent's direct caregiver. The idea that they are "not as good" as adult children who do take up that role is offensive.