New Social Security Rules Ease Trust Eligibility Process
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How can you meet Social Security rules on asset and income eligibility? If you have resources, you might be able to transfer them to a special needs trust. The idea has been around for quite a while. Still, a lot of questions have lingered over details of the eligibility rules. A recent release of new […]
Good News: The IRS Simplifies Its Proposed ABLE Act Rules
NOVEMBER 23, 2015 VOLUME 22 NUMBER 43 The Achieving a Better Life Experience (ABLE) Act initially looked like it would provide important opportunities to people with disabilities. Although much work was left to the Internal Revenue Service, the Social Security Administration and individual states, advocates hoped that it might open up a simple choice for […]
State Court Does Not Control Social Security Payments
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MAY 12, 2014 VOLUME 21 NUMBER 17 At Fleming & Curti, PLC, we do not handle divorce cases. From time to time, though, a divorce case raises the same kinds of issues that we see in the guardianship, conservatorship and probate cases we do handle. A recent Arizona Court of Appeals decision is a case […]
Planning for Retirement: Does the Three-Legged Stool Work?
DECEMBER 16, 2013 VOLUME 20 NUMBER 47 For decades accountants, financial planners, lawyers and government workers have talked about Social Security and the “three-legged stool.” The metaphor had a simple attraction, especially when Social Security was a young program. The three legs? Social Security, private retirement programs and personal investments. You should have some of […]
Posthumously Conceived Twins Denied Survivors Benefits
MAY 28, 2012 VOLUME 19 NUMBER 21 The United States Supreme Court doesn’t very often weigh in on Social Security rules, so when it does those of us in the elder and disability law community pay attention. Last week’s decision by the Court, interpreting Social Security regulations as applied to posthumously conceived children, addressed interesting […]
Massachusetts First on Modern Conception and Inheritance
JANUARY 7, 2002 VOLUME 9, NUMBER 28 If a husband and wife “bank” sperm so that the wife may conceive artificially, and the wife conceives through insemination of this sperm after the husband dies, will children resulting from such a pregnancy enjoy the inheritance rights of “natural” children in Massachusetts? Last week the Massachusetts Supreme […]
Evidence Rebuts Presumption Of Paternity For Social Security
FEBRUARY 19, 2001 VOLUME 8, NUMBER 34 Sometimes lawyers remind their colleagues and clients that legal problems would arise less frequently if individuals would simply lead more orderly lives. Clarence Schoenfeld and family helped prove that basic legal maxim. Clarence “Clay” Schoenfeld was 50 and a professor at the University of Wisconsin when he married […]