Planning for Special Needs: Taking Back Control

How would you react if an accident left you physically incapacitated and unable to work?

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Consider what you would do to rebuild your life if you were suddenly incapable of doing your job. Jeffrey Smith had been very athletic and was a well-paid rising star at a hedge fund. All that changed one day when he dove into a pool without realizing the water was too shallow. Jeffrey became paralyzed from the waist down and could no longer work. He first came to Grimaldi & Yeung for help because his insurance would not cover all of the physical therapy and equipment he needed. Our work with Jeffrey quickly expanded far beyond looking for funding from government benefit programs. Working together we:

  • Created a Special Needs Trust to receive money Jeffrey’s friends were raising for him, as well as any regular income.
  • Qualified Jeffrey for SSDI so he would have a regular income (this automatically put him on track for Medicaid).
  • Implemented Advanced Directives to document Jeffrey’s wishes.
  • Created a second trust to receive any lump sum payments — including an anticipated insurance settlement.

Thanks to the financial stability Grimaldi & Yeung was able to help Jeffrey achieve, he has started enjoying his life again. In the near future he is looking forward to getting married — and perhaps to starting a small business.

Special Needs Planning: Asset Management

Persons with special needs or disabilities can be especially vulnerable to financial adversity. Often their ability to earn income for themselves is limited and they must rely on support from loved ones and from government benefit programs. Grimaldi & Yeung can help your disabled family members manage financial affairs and protect assets through:

  • Durable Powers of Attorney — allow individuals who have the capacity to designate an agent to manage their financial affairs. This can avoid the need for a formal guardianship.
  • Trusts that allow you to set aside assets for the specific purpose of providing for care, support, maintenance and special needs. For a person with a disability, the most common types of trusts include:
    • - Living trusts.
    • - Pooled/corporate trusts.
    • - Supplemental needs trusts.