Serving Special Needs
Kids
By Pamela Savage Forbat
from Registered
Representative, September, 2001
They're typical new clients: A couple approaching middle
age, 2.4 kids, a nice home and comfortable income looking
to plan for a financially secure future. But one of their
children is disabled. You could craft a dazzling retirement
and estate plan, yet actually jeopardize the family's financial
future. Your plans could wind up disqualifying their disabled
child from receiving government benefits. What's worse,
the government could come after them to repay aid the child
already has received. And if the couple fears they'll have
to dip into assets earmarked for siblings to pay for the
child's expenses in adulthood, hold on for a family feud.
A different set of financial planning rules kick in for
families with special needs children. Forget about using
UGMA or UTMA accounts for the special needs child: Nice
tax savings, but there's a big penalty to pay if the child
uses or ever wants to use government support programs. Forget
about an estate plan that neatly provides equal inheritances
for all the couple's children. The special needs child will
need a bigger share of assets.
“Families want the comfort of knowing how much it will
cost so they can save the money,” says John Nadworny, a
fee-based adviser with Bay Financial Associates in Waltham,
Mass., a financial planning firm specializing in special
needs families. “The reality is you must have as much as
possible set aside.”
Learning the Rules
Advisers who learn the rules to help a client plan for
a disabled child's future are in a unique position to impact
an extended family. Close to 15 million families in the
United States have special needs children ...To work effectively
with a family, an adviser needs to assemble a team that
includes parents, siblings and grandparents as well as the
child's social worker, doctors, therapists and teachers.
An attorney familiar with special needs planning must be
brought in to set up the right kind of trust. [...]
“You're planning for two generations,” Nadworny says.
A family with a young special needs child has quite a financial
education in store as the child nears adulthood. “There's
very good financial support [from the government] until
a person reaches adulthood. Then you fall off the face of
the earth in terms of funding,” says Kirsten Nyrop, executive
director of United Cerebral Palsy.
At age 18, disabled individuals unable to earn a self-sufficient
wage become eligible to receive a monthly income allowance
through the Social Security Administration's Supplemental
Security Income (SSI) program. They also qualify for payment
of health services through Medicaid. All of these benefits
can be cut off immediately if the disabled person earns
or has assets worth more than $2,000 (excluding a home,
car and household possessions). The government allows a
disabled person to receive only $60 of unearned income per
quarter. And the individual must be incapable of earning
more than $500 per month.
A family can have an attorney draw up a trust and adjust
their will once they know a child will need lifetime support.
The family may be told to make a large gift in their will
to a sibling to provide for the disabled child's care. Known
as a “morally obligated gift,” this strategy leaves the
disabled person vulnerable. The sibling can't be legally
forced to use the gift to benefit the disabled person and
might be taxed at a higher rate than the disabled child
or trust. And should the sibling die before the disabled
person, the money will go to the sibling's heirs. The money
also can be claimed by creditors or the sibling's spouse
in a divorce settlement.
Some attorneys will add a paragraph about special needs
to a custodial account document. “They often use trigger
words such as ‘support and maintenance’ or use a Crummey
clause,” says Jeffrey Minde, a special needs estate planning
attorney in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and president of National
Special Needs Network, an information clearinghouse.A Crummey
Trust allows the beneficiary to withdraw $10,000 a year
as part of the annual exclusion.
But if a child already is receiving government benefits
and your client has a trust that says it's for the child's
support, the Social Security Administration likely will
do a three- to five-year look back at the child's assets,
Minde says. The child will end up ineligible for government
benefits for those three to five years. The government also
can require the trust to reimburse the cost of all government
benefits provided so far.
Special Needs Trust
A special needs trust is the essential tool to protect
a disabled child's financial future. Also known as a supplemental
needs trust, the special needs trust preserves eligibility
for federal and state benefits by keeping assets out of
the disabled person's name. The trust does this by earmarking
all assets for expenses other than basic support. The trust
can't pay for room and board, but can pay for the following
needs: medical/dental expenses, annual checkups, transportation
and vehicle purchase, equipment, training programs, education,
insurance, rehabilitation, vacations and a home health aide.
The special needs trust is irrevocable and must be set
up by parents or a third party. It can be part of a will
or structured as a living trust. The trustee has discretion
to use assets for the benefit of the disabled person and
must handle all distributions from the trust. When the disabled
person dies, unused assets can go to other heirs. If parents
feel their child might be able to handle their own finances
as an adult, they can allow the trustee to evaluate competency.
The assets can then be transferred to the child.
There's a lot of flexibility in funding the trust. “You
can be impoverished, on Medicaid and have the Taj Mahal
in the trust,” Minde says. The trust can be a life insurance
beneficiary and can hold money from legal settlements. Minde
advises clients who are receiving a structured settlement
for a disabled child to get a court order to require the
insurance company to put the money directly into a special
needs trust. If the disabled person receives settlement
money even for an instant before transferring it to a special
needs trust, the government treats it as income and will
yank eligibility.
Advisers need to examine every source of potential income
to the disabled child. “All beneficiary designations must
be changed,” says Theresa Varnet, a special needs estate
planning attorney in Chicago. “Parents often will change
beneficiaries in their wills, but forget their insurance
and 401(k)s. If a parent leaves an annuity to a special
needs child in a will, a financial planner typically will
recommend the annuity be paid out as a small monthly sum
for the rest of the child's life rather than as a lump sum.
But if the annuity is paid out monthly, the government considers
it unearned income and will subtract the amount dollar for
dollar from government aid. If the lump sum is paid directly
into a special needs trust, that won't happen,” Varnet says.
Alert anyone who's likely to gift assets to the disabled
child. “If a grandparent isn't in the loop about the $2,000
[asset cap], a great deal of damage can be done if the grandparent
simply puts a check in the child's name,” Sullivan says.
Funding the Trust
Choosing the right trustee is central to a special needs
trust strategy. Varnet recommends a corporate trustee.
“The rules about how goods and services must be paid for
often confuse a family member trustee,” she says. For example,
a family member or sibling acting as trustee might give
the disabled person pocket money and end up jeopardizing
government aid. Plus, the ongoing burden of making decisions
and keeping detailed records makes it difficult to discharge
the duty.
Minde recommends having a family member as co-trustee.
He's seen situations in which a corporate trustee is so
concerned about conserving trust assets, that the disabled
person receives low-quality services.[...]
How much money should be put into the special needs trust?
Advisers suggest starting with the following calculation:
Determine the potential needs as an adult, compute the present
value of those needs, then total the parents' assets that
would be available after death, disability or retirement.
Finally, estimate the dollar value of available government
programs. Monthly SSI benefits range from $350 to $500.
If a person lives in a group home, the state typically will
take three-fourths of the monthly benefit, Varnet says,
leaving a person as little as $30 to $50 a month for living
expenses. She advises funding a trust with $250,000, which
should provide about $1,000 a month, assuming the trust
earns 5% after taxes and expenses.
Merrill Lynch expects to have an online special needs calculator
available to the public early next year.
Nadworny advises parents to factor in the cost of hiring
an advocate for their adult child, someone who can navigate
the government aid system. He typically advises parents
that money should be set aside to afford a $100,000 condo
and $1,000 a month for the rest of the child's life.
[One financial advisor] assumes a 6% to 10% rate of return
on assets, adjusts for inflation over time and sets a goal
of generating $32,000 a year in the special needs trust
for the child's lifetime. He's careful to do a comprehensive
financial plan for the family before putting money into
a trust.
“Parents often fear that if they leave a large portion
of assets to their special needs child, they may need to
use those assets for their own long-term care,” [he] says.
“We need to make sure what we do for the child won't adversely
affect another part of the parents' plan.” [...]
Life insurance is the best funding vehicle. The simplest
approach is a survivorship, or second-to-die policy, which
covers both parents and pays out on the death of the second.
The special needs trust is named as beneficiary. “Financial
planners usually use these policies only for wealthy families,
just to provide enough for estate tax payments,” Varnet
says.
To paraphrase the 12-step program's serenity prayer: Families
with a special needs child need to accept the things they
cannot change, and change the things they can. Financial
advisers can help them do both.
OBRA Trusts May Preserve Benefits
Be careful with assets in a custodial account. The money
can't simply be transferred into a special needs trust.
Commingling the child's money in a custodial account with
third-party money put into a special needs trust taints
all the trust money, making the child ineligible for government
aid, says Theresa Varnet, a special needs estate planning
attorney in Chicago.
Financial advisers say they often counsel clients to draw
down custodial account assets now for expenses, and set
up a special needs trust for future funding.
There's an alternative. Under the federal Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1993 (OBRA), disabled people may transfer
their own money into a special needs trust set up under
OBRA rules and still be eligible for public benefits. The
catch: All assets remaining in the trust when the disabled
person dies must be paid back to the government.
Walter Roberts, Prudential Securities branch manager in
Wayzata, Minn., faced the transfer dilemma with his daughter,
now age 18. He set up a custodial account soon after she
was born and began funding it with zero-coupon bonds. He
moved the money into stocks and watched the money grow considerably.
When Roberts began to realize a few years ago that his daughter's
special needs might make fully independent living impossible,
he began to plan.
He discovered a number of state and federal aid programs
that would be available to his daughter at age 18 — but
not if she held assets in a custodial account. The OBRA
special needs trust was a sensible way to provide assets
to his daughter for the greater expenses of adulthood, Roberts
says, and protect eligibility for government aid. The trust
also established a way for family members to continue to
contribute money.— P.S.F.
First Steps for Special Needs
John Nadworny suggests the following questions as a good
place to start with a special needs family. Nadworny is
a fee-based adviser with Bay Financial Associates in Waltham,
Mass., a financial planning firm specializing in special
needs families:
1.What is my vision of the legacy I wish to leave
my child with special needs?
2.Have I established proper wills and trusts that transform
my clear vision into an absolute future reality?
3.Does my executor/rix or guardian have a Letter
of Intent that outlines my wishes for the future care
of this person?
4.Will this Letter
of Intent be passed on to others who could eventually
care for my child should she/he outlive my caregiver?
5.Is the trust endowed with enough money to ensure
that distributions will not consume the principal throughout
the beneficiary's lifetime?
6.Have I ensured that care-giving survivors are financially
protected from the future expenses in the care of my loved
one with special needs?
“Find out how much the family accepts the situation before
you begin the formal planning process,” Nadworny says. “You
must listen as much as you talk. It's critical to have the
client create a vision for their child.”— P.S.F.
National organizations that represent people with specific
disabilities are good resources to educate clients about
special needs planning.
Local chapters of The Arc (www.thearc.org), which represents
the mentally retarded and others, can provide names of attorneys
who specialize in special needs issues. The organization
also offers fact sheets to use in planning.
The Federal Consumer Information Center (www.pueblo.gsa.gov)
offers a brochure, “Planning for Your Special Needs Child.”
Look under the Children section.
The National Special Needs Network Foundation, a nonprofit
information clearinghouse. Its Web site, www.nsnn.org, offers
a variety of resources on special needs.— P.S.F.
© 2001, PRIMEDIA Business Magazines
& Media Inc. All rights reserved.

|