In June of 2013 when my Grandmother was still lucid, she, along with my mother signed an agreement with me, in which I would be financially compensated for taking care of her (Grandma) and helping to keep her in her home for as long as possible. It was Grandma's idea to put $1,750 as the monthly amount, because she said that's about what she was getting between her SS, and her government retirement benefit.
In Sept. of 2013, she made me power of attorney, and within the next two months her mind began leaving her at a rapid rate. I was finding unpaid bills and credit cards from even before she made me POA, and it was worse at the end of 2013. She could not be trusted to take her own medicines, and so we were handling that as a family - mainly just me, and I live 80 miles away from her. In February of 2014 she was diagnosed with mid stage Alzheimer's. She could no longer be trusted to take medicine on her own, and me living so far away (and others unwillingness to step in) made it a requirement that we get someone to do her medicine twice a day as required by the Rx. The expense was $5,587.99 per month via Northland PACE... insane for the service rendered, but what can you do. They also took her to Dr. appointments and what-not, and it allowed me to be the grandson rather than the caregiver - although I was still the life and financial manager.
In order to pay for this, I began having to sell off assets. I sold some land, surrendered a life insurance policy, and an annuity. Most of the life insurance policy, which was around $20,000, and the land sale, which was around $22,000, will go to her care and to some much needed repairs on her house. The annuity came to $39,000, and it was decided I should take that. Grandma had no knowledge of this, but her daughter, my mother, thought I should have this for all I had done, and would do. I agreed that would be enough to cover anything I do forever, regardless of how long, as I felt it was more than generous.
So as time has gone on, I have paid her bills out of her account, and given on two occassions, $1,000 to grandmas cousin, who lives near her, for the purpose of a kitty fund to go and get groceries as needed and what-not.
We are to a point now though, where making the app for Medicaid may be coming down the pike. I have come to educate myself in the meantime somewhat about how that system works, and I have 3 major concerns.
1. What about the money given to me from the annuity? How does this work with the agreement we had for my compensation - which was written before the POA, but the compensation for me was not included within the POA document itself.
2. What about the money given to the cousin to tend to groceries and things?
3. I have my monies in 4 places. Grandma's generation had money in like 30 places. I have seen savings bonds for small amounts, life insurances for $2,000 or less, etc. I think I have it all accounted for, but Grandma is a pack-rat. What happens if after I file the medicaid app, I find something else in her house from a company that has changed ownership 3 times in the last 50 years for a policy or savings that I did not know about now? Is that fraud? Will I go to jail?
I feel like I would have helped Grandma regardless of money, and money was never my idea. But I took it, and used it when my wife and I bought our house. I thought this was OK. I also confess that I feel a little bit justified in this since I have multiple aunts and two sisters who live in the same city as Grandma but don't do anything to help her, ever. Nor does my dad, who is her former son in law (parents are divorced) but who also got loads of free child care from Grandma in the past when my one sister got pregnant 3 times. He's retired now, and doesn't even take those kids to see her anymore, even though he's two miles away from her.
So, apart from the questions above, the other comment I wanted to make is this; I am filled with hate and disgust at my family members who do nothing to help, nor even make an effort to visit. It is consuming me to the point I want to sever ties with them completely. Has anyone else experienced this, and what did you do?
We are in the state of ND, FYI.
She trusted the wrong person because you have broken the legal boundaries of being her POA! That is one time that you should not have listened to your mother.
Did you file the amount above the legal gift tax level to the IRS on her tax return and make sure she paid a gifting tax for that year. If not, then she is liable for breaking the law.
You feel justified for doing this because of what the other relatives were not doing? Give me a break, you wanted to the money to help you and your wife buy your house.
When you file for medicaid for your grandmother, they are going to look back over five years of her banks statements and anything not documented as for her care, they will want an explanation for, and large gifts like the $39,000 they will want paid back before she can qualify for medicaid.
What your relatives have and have not done as well as your feelings about that are nothing compared to the legal and financial trouble that you have created by your actions with her money!
And yes, everything was included in the tax filing / returns.
What a joke. You have no right to be critical or judgmental about a situation to which you have extremely limited knowledge. The agreement was written well over a year and a half before the house situation, which we just bought 3 months ago, FYI.
Legal and financial trouble?! LOL. The only issue here is how Medicaid will see the agreement she made with me when she was still coherent to do so. If they need it paid back, or we have to cover care costs for a penalty period, big deal. I'm not going away to starve or anything. If we need to handle that, we will.
I'm sitting here with my Grandma's cousin and her CNA. None of us can believe how indignant and self righteous your post was.
Then use some of grandma's money to consult an attorney who specializes in Elder Law, and get advice about how best to deal with the financial mess. I doubt very much that your intentions were evil. Too bad you didn't consult an attorney when you accepted POA. Now you need help in minimizing the impact on Grandmother.
And continue loving your grandmother and doing your best to take care of her.
Good luck. Please let us know how this all works out for you.
Please don't come here calling people fools. They know what they are talking about. It looks like your grandmother had many assets that were not used to her best advantage. I am sorry she couldn't get someone closer to help her. It probably would have saved much money.
I don't think the $39K or money written to cousins will fly with Medicaid, but you can try. Is there a way you can return it? You have to start at the point where you are now, because the past can't be undone most likely. If you find other money that your grandmother has put away, you can report to to Medicaid if she has been able to qualify. The discovered money will most likely have to go through spend-down, with what you need to do depending on the amount.
Medicaid uses a cost of care average (per month) to determine this period. So if the average cost of care in your county or whatever is $9,000 per month, then she would have 4 or 5 months where you would have to pay out of pocket. It's not that big of a deal. And that's only if they don't recognize your caregiver agreement.
As far as the taxes, I would ask a CPA or someone. If it's an agreement, it's not a gift, so you may want to go back and look at that again.
If you find other stuff that you didn't know about, I would think if you submit it when you find it, it should not be that big of a problem either. I think the app says "to the best of my knowledge" on the sig block.
Due to PACE's cost, and the fact that from Aug-Dec 2014 she didn't use anything except the medicine administration and dr. apt transport services, we disenrolled and hired a private CNA for much less just to do the medicine daily. We will handle DR. appointments ourselves.
As far as the "fool" thing. I did not come here to be barked at by strangers. I did not at all appreciate the tone of the initial replying individual. I came to navigate the situation better by exchanging info with others. As I said already, $39,000 is not that much money in today's world. If we endure a penalty period or whatever, and I have to cover that, it's a non-issue.
I'm guessing I am a thief too because I am going to have the entire exterior of her house reworked for around that same amount, out of her money. Her roof leaks and needs complete redoing, her slate siding is cracked and also leaks, her window are single pane and she is spending about $300 a month is heating. So I think that should be legit from medicaids standpoint.
I am not sure what your post is really asking. If the potential penalties for the way things were handled are "no big deal," and you already have plans for going forward, what are you expecting/wanting from us?
Lots of times people come here to vent. "I worked so hard to help, and now I have to deal with a difficult Medicaid application! My family has never helped! Life is not fair!" Pretty much all the regulars here do that now and then, and sometimes that is how people start here.
If you just want to vent, I sympathize. Life is not fair. No good deed goes unpunished. Family can suck sometimes.
For your information, cmagnum has been on these forums for years, and he is no fool.
And using Grandmother's money on her care or to maintain her property is perfectly OK. That is what, as a POA, you are supposed to be doing.
If you want our comments on a specific thing, perhaps starting a new post with that specific topic would get the best results. But if you just wanted to vent, vent away!
Welcome to the forums.
https://www.agingcare.com/aboutus
I too came into violation of that etiquette, but it was after his response. There was no excuse for it. I opened up. I'm not trying to lie about anything. I simply stated what took place. I don't deserve to get barked at like that. When no one else will give her the time of the day, and I spend my time, my fuel, my absence from work, my answering calls at 2 am because she is sad and doesn't remember that I was there just the day before, and she - before she was this way, but knowing it was probably coming - decides she wants me to have something.... I mean, christ. I'm at a loss for words.
You read all the time about people using POA to essentially steal tens and hundreds of thousands deceptively. This money was based on an agreement with her, coherent, and has been the only thing I have received ever, or ever will, and it was not even my F*@#ing idea in the first place. Then I post about it, and the rest, just looking for some commentary on what the impact would be and the best way to go forward, or if it will result in a penalty period, or how that is normally handled, as well as the two $1,000 amounts that her cousin Helen got to hold onto to buy Grandma groceries. Right away, captain finger-pointer charges in with how he thinks I'm a complete piece of S##t. Just like the other family members, worthless to the last, but always ready to find any fault and try to hang me for it.
I handled the tax part of it of course, but I never thought about what may happen with medicaid 3 to 5 years in the future from when I accepted POA, which by the way, I didn't jump up and down or beg for. Either I would do it or they would have stuck her in a home right away to get rid of her. Something she pleaded with me to not let happen until it was absolutely necessary because she feels a nursing home is her death warrant.
I just can't believe it on this site.
Can a mod or admin just delete my account? I don't want any part of this community. I thought I did, I thought I needed to talk to people, but as always, people turn out to suck.
When I first read that you were getting $1,750 a month, I first thought you were living with your Grandmother doing hands on care. I know I was surprised to read you lived almost 2 hours away from her. Then she had to pay $5,500/month to have someone manage her meds and take her to her doctor appointments. There are folks on these forums who don't get a dime who do hands-on care of a relative, quitting their jobs to move in, to manage their meds, get their groceries and actually feed the relative, and take them to the doctor appointments.
It's all trial and error. A lesson learned by others who read this particular forum to get the advice of a Elder Law Attorney as to what monies belong where.
You don't have to cancel an account. Just don't come back.
If things settle down for you a bit and you are feeling more up to the give and take of candid discussions among caregivers, feel free to come back anytime.
You can't hide it, the feds are very thorough, they know all, see all and tax all.
The # of days aspect of the transfer penalty makes a big wallet difference because you likely will find that you have to pay private pay rates over that period of time & NOT the lower Medicaid rates. So 40K transfer penalty for TX is about 258 days in which they are ineligible for Medicaid payment. All the states have the equation & regs for penalty within their Medicaid regulations.
Often family brings the elder back home for the # of days ineligible. As the $ been spent and they cannot afford months on end of higher private pay rates.
Also if the application gets red-flagged, you can likely expect that SSA will require you to become a representative payee as they will get a notification of inquiry into the SS recipients finances.
Delete - also once the first transfer is found, what likely will happen is that the application will go to higher level of review. Medicaid can ask for more details, which you have a specific time-frame to response to with the required documentation. You might as well start to get all that together now and meet with & pay for an elder law firm to be as prepared as possible. Legal you will need to pay for yourself and not from her funds as it may be disallowed with penalty if she already has her POA, will, codicils, etc. done.