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Dis­ability Planning

Last Updated: 4÷16÷2008

Sup­ple­mental Secu­rity Income (SSI)

SSI is the basic fed­eral safety net pro­gram for the elderly, blind and dis­abled, pro­viding them with a min­imum guar­an­teed income. Effec­tive Jan­uary 1, 2008, the max­imum fed­eral SSI ben­efit is $637 a month for an indi­vidual and $956 a month for a couple (the amounts go up every Jan­uary 1). These amounts are sup­ple­mented in most states.

Although the Social Secu­rity Admin­is­tra­tion (SSA) admin­is­ters the pro­gram, eli­gi­bility for SSI ben­e­fits is based on finan­cial need, not on how long you have worked or how much you have paid into the Social Secu­rity system. How­ever, the finan­cial eli­gi­bility rules are quite strin­gent. If you are seeking SSI ben­e­fits because you are dis­abled, the program’s cri­teria for deter­mining dis­ability are the same as those out­lined in the Social Secu­rity dis­ability section.

About 6.6 mil­lion per­sons were receiving SSI pay­ments in December 2000. Fifty-seven per­cent of these recip­i­ents were between the ages of 18 and 64, 30 per­cent were aged 65 or older, and 13 per­cent were under age 18. Many older per­sons who are not eli­gible for Social Secu­rity retire­ment ben­e­fits because they have not accu­mu­lated enough work credits may nev­er­the­less be eli­gible for SSI, and even many of those receiving Social Secu­rity retire­ment ben­e­fits may be able to sup­ple­ment their ben­e­fits with SSI pay­ments. It is esti­mated that 1.5 mil­lion elderly who are poten­tially eli­gible for ben­e­fits never apply for them.

SSI Ben­e­fits

Most states sup­ple­ment the fed­eral SSI pay­ment with pay­ments of their own. The states that do not pay a sup­ple­ment are Arkansas, Georgia, Kansas, Mis­sis­sippi, Ten­nessee, Texas and West Vir­ginia. In some states that do pay a sup­ple­ment, you may qualify for the state pay­ment even if you don’t meet the fed­eral SSI eli­gi­bility cri­teria. But even in those states that sup­ple­ment the fed­eral pay­ment, the total SSI ben­efit usu­ally falls below the poverty level. (For more infor­ma­tion on state sup­ple­ments, visit the SSA Web site.)

The idea of the SSI pro­gram is to pro­vide a floor income level. If you are receiving income from another source, your SSI ben­efit will be cut dollar for dollar. In addi­tion, the SSA deems food and shelter you receive from another source to be “in kind” income. As a result, actual pay­ment amounts vary depending on your income, living arrange­ments, and other factors.

While the SSI program’s ben­e­fits are meager, in most states SSI recip­i­ents are also auto­mat­i­cally eli­gible to receive Med­icaid, which can pay for hos­pital stays, doctor bills, pre­scrip­tion drugs, nursing home care, and other health costs. SSI recip­i­ents may also be eli­gible for food stamps in every state except Cal­i­fornia and in some cases for spe­cial pro­grams for the devel­op­men­tally delayed.

Who Is Eli­gible for SSI?

To be eli­gible for SSI:

  • You must be either age 65 or older, blind or disabled;
  • You must be a cit­izen of the U.S., or be a long-time res­i­dent who meets cer­tain strict requirements;
  • Your monthly income must be less than a min­imum threshold estab­lished by your state; and
  • You must have less than $2,000 in assets ($3,000 for a couple), although cer­tain resources are excluded in the eli­gi­bility deter­mi­na­tion (see below).

Income Limits

The amount of income you can earn and still qualify for SSI dif­fers from state to state. (For the income limits in your state, call 800−772−1213 or check with your local SSA office.) In many states, the income limit for eli­gi­bility is the same as the max­imum fed­eral ben­efit — $637 a month for an indi­vidual and $956 in 2008. If your income falls below these thresh­olds, you are eli­gible for ben­e­fits. Your ben­efit will be the dif­fer­ence between your income and the SSI ben­efit in your state. For instance, if your own income is $400 a month, and the SSI ben­efit for a single indi­vidual in your state is $637 a month, you will receive an SSI check of $237 a month.

At some level, it may not seem worth the trouble to apply and stay eli­gible for SSI, but as is men­tioned above, the ancil­lary ben­e­fits, espe­cially Med­icaid, may make it worth­while to main­tain SSI even if the finan­cial pay­ment is only a few dol­lars a month. If you are unsure whether your income is low enough, apply anyway. Cer­tain sources of income and sup­port are not counted in deter­mining eli­gi­bility, and what may appear to you to be income may not be counted as such by your local Social Secu­rity or wel­fare office. There­fore, if you are living on a small fixed income and you have few resources (assets), it’s worth applying for benefits.

In deter­mining whether your income is low enough to qualify you for ben­e­fits, the SSA counts the money you earn in wages or from self-employment, as well as any invest­ment income, pen­sions, annu­ities, gifts, rents and interest. Social Secu­rity and Vet­erans ben­e­fits are also con­sid­ered income. Free housing received from friends or rel­a­tives may be counted as income as well, based on what such housing would cost in your area.

How­ever, in totaling your income the SSA does not count:

  • The first $20 per month you receive from most income;
  • The first $65 a month you earn from wages or self-employment, and only half of the amount you earn above $65;
  • Irreg­ular earned or unearned income of not more than $10 and $20 a month, respectively;
  • Food stamps, home energy assis­tance, and most food, clothing or shelter received from non-profit organizations.

Resource Limits

As noted above, you can have no more than $2,000 in count­able resources ($3,000 for a mar­ried couple living together) to be eli­gible for SSI. Count­able resources (assets) include bank accounts, invest­ments, real estate (other than your res­i­dence), and per­sonal prop­erty. Also included is any money or prop­erty that you hold jointly with someone else. The SSA deter­mines how much your par­tial own­er­ship is worth and counts that as a resource.

How­ever, cer­tain prop­erty of value is not counted in deter­mining eli­gi­bility for SSI, including:

  • Your home and the land it is on, no matter how valu­able it is;
  • Your per­sonal and house­hold goods;
  • One car of any value if it is used for trans­porta­tion for you or a member of your household;
  • Wed­ding and engage­ment rings;
  • Prop­erty for self-support, such as tools, up to $6,000 in value;
  • Burial plots;
  • Life insur­ance and burial funds up to $1,500 for each person.

Trans­fer­ring Resources to Qualify for SSI

If your resources are still above these limits, you may be able to “spend down” to qualify for SSI, sim­ilar to the process to qualify for the Med­icaid pro­gram. After you apply for ben­e­fits, you have a cer­tain time period — six months for real estate and three months for per­sonal prop­erty and liquid assets — to sell or spend your excess resources for fair market value and come under the ben­efit limits.

If you give away a resource or sell it for less than it is worth in order to get under the SSI resource limit, you may be inel­i­gible for SSI for up to 36 months. The SSA looks at whether or not you have trans­ferred a resource within the pre­vious three years. If you have, it com­putes a penalty period by dividing the amount of the transfer by your monthly ben­efit amount.

Thus, if you give your son a $6,000 gift and then apply for a monthly SSI ben­efit of $600 within three years of the gift, you will not be eli­gible for SSI for 10 months (6,000/600=10). That 10-month period will begin on the date of the transfer and end 10 months later. In other words, although you can be inel­i­gible for up to 36 months due to a transfer, that is only a cap. The actual period of inel­i­gi­bility is based on the value of what you trans­ferred divided by the monthly ben­efit in your state.

You should be aware that trans­fers may be “cured” by the person to whom you made a gift returning it to you. And, finally, there are cer­tain excep­tions to the transfer penalty. These include gifts to

  • A spouse (or anyone else for the spouse’s benefit);
  • A blind or dis­abled child;
  • A trust for the ben­efit of a blind or dis­abled child;
  • A trust for the sole ben­efit of a dis­abled indi­vidual under age 65 (even if the trust is for the ben­efit of the appli­cant, under cer­tain circumstances).

In addi­tion, spe­cial excep­tions apply to the transfer of a home. The SSI appli­cant may freely transfer his or her home to the fol­lowing indi­vid­uals without incur­ring a transfer penalty:

  • The applicant’s spouse;
  • A child who is under age 21 or who is blind or disabled;
  • Into a trust for the sole ben­efit of a dis­abled indi­vidual under age 65 (even if the trust is for the ben­efit of the appli­cant, under cer­tain circumstances);
  • A sib­ling who has lived in the home during the year pre­ceding the applicant’s insti­tu­tion­al­iza­tion and who already holds an equity interest in the home; or
  • A “care­taker child,” who is defined as a child of the appli­cant who lived in the house for at least two years prior to the applicant’s insti­tu­tion­al­iza­tion and who during that period pro­vided care that allowed the appli­cant to avoid a nursing home stay.

Trusts

The con­tents of most trusts you create for your­self will be con­sid­ered avail­able to you in deter­mining your eli­gi­bility for SSI. On the other hand, assets of most trusts that someone else cre­ates and names you as a ben­e­fi­ciary of will not be con­sid­ered to belong to you for pur­poses of deter­mining your SSI eli­gi­bility. If you cre­ated and funded an irrev­o­cable trust for your own ben­efit prior to Jan­uary 1, 2000, it will be grand­fa­thered, and in most cases its assets will not be con­sid­ered to belong to you.

When Con­gress cre­ated the rules lim­iting trusts for SSI pur­poses, it cre­ated a “safe harbor” per­mit­ting you to place money into two types of trusts for your own ben­efit. In doing so, it adopted safe har­bors already cre­ated for Med­icaid pur­poses. The safe har­bors apply to “sup­ple­mental needs trusts” estab­lished by a parent, grand­parent or court solely for the ben­efit of a dis­abled person under age 65; “pooled trusts” estab­lished by non-profit asso­ci­a­tions under Sec­tion 1917(d)(4)© of the Social Secu­rity Act; and “Miller Trusts” estab­lished in “income-cap” states under Sec­tion 1917 (d)(4)(B) of the Social Secu­rity Act.

Given the com­plexity of this field, any trust should be drafted by an expe­ri­enced attorney knowl­edge­able about SSI matters.

How to Apply for SSI Benefits

If you think you may qualify for SSI ben­e­fits, you can call or visit your local SSA office and apply. (For online help in finding your local SSA office, click here.) If your state offers pay­ments sup­ple­menting the fed­eral SSI ben­efit, you may have to apply for that sup­ple­ment at your local county social wel­fare office. Some have the fed­eral gov­ern­ment admin­ister their sup­ple­ments, and other states admin­ister the sup­ple­ments them­selves. In these latter states, appli­ca­tion for the sup­ple­ment must be made sep­a­rately with the state agency. For a listing of states with fed­er­ally admin­is­tered sup­ple­ments, click here.

You will need to pro­vide the SSA with proof of age and cit­i­zen­ship or legal res­i­dence, as well as pro­vide detailed infor­ma­tion about your finan­cial sit­u­a­tion. Usu­ally, an SSA claims rep­re­sen­ta­tive inter­views you and com­pletes the forms using the infor­ma­tion you supply.

You should apply as soon as pos­sible so that you do not lose ben­e­fits. If you call SSA to make an appoint­ment to apply, SSA will use the date of your call as your appli­ca­tion filing date.

If your appli­ca­tion is denied, you can appeal. The appeals process is sim­ilar to that for appealing Social Secu­rity claims denials. For that dis­cus­sion, click here.

Once you begin receiving ben­e­fits, the SSA reviews your SSI eli­gi­bility once every one to three years.

For more on SSI, visit the SSA’s “Under­standing SSI Web site.

Sup­ple­mental Needs Trusts and Plan­ning for Dis­abled Children

Plan­ning for Dis­abled Children

Amer­i­cans are living longer than they did in years past, including those with dis­abil­i­ties. According to one count, 480,000 adults with mental retar­da­tion are living with par­ents who are 60 or older. This figure does not include adult chil­dren with other forms of dis­ability nor those who live sep­a­rately, but still depend on their par­ents for vital support.

When these par­ents can no longer care for their chil­dren due to their own dis­ability or death, the respon­si­bility often falls on sib­lings, other family mem­bers, and the com­mu­nity. In many cases, expenses increase dra­mat­i­cally when care and guid­ance pro­vided by par­ents must instead be pro­vided by a pro­fes­sional for a fee.

Plan­ning by par­ents can make all the dif­fer­ence in the life of the child with a dis­ability, as well as that of his or her sib­lings who may be left with the respon­si­bility for care­taking (on top of their own careers and caring for their own fam­i­lies and, pos­sibly, ailing par­ents). Any plan should include the fol­lowing elements:

A Plan of Care

Where is your son going to live when he can no longer live with you? Will he move in with a sib­ling? Or into a group home? Who will make the deci­sion? Who will mon­itor the care he receives? It’s never too soon to begin answering these ques­tions and making sure that the living and sup­port arrange­ments are in place.

In some cases, it can ease the tran­si­tion for all con­cerned if the child moves to the new living arrange­ment while his par­ents can still help with the process. In many parts of the country, non-profit orga­ni­za­tions and pri­vate con­sul­tants can help set up the plan, research avail­able options, and assist in the move.

It will help everyone involved if the par­ents create a written state­ment of their wishes for their child’s care. They know him better than anyone else. They can explain what helps, what hurts, what scares their child (who, of course, is an adult), and what reas­sures him. When the par­ents are gone, their knowl­edge will go with them unless they pass it on.

In almost all cases where a parent will leave funds at death to a dis­abled child, this should be done in the form of a trust. Trusts set up for the care of a dis­abled child gen­er­ally are called “sup­ple­mental” or “spe­cial” needs trusts, which are described in more detail below. (To go directly there, click here.)

Money should not go out­right to the child, both because she may not be able to manage it prop­erly and because receiving the funds directly may cause the child to lose public ben­e­fits, such as Sup­ple­mental Secu­rity Income (SSI) and Med­icaid. Often, these pro­grams also serve as the entry point for receiving vital com­mu­nity sup­port services.

Some par­ents choose to avoid the com­pli­ca­tion of a trust by leaving their estates to one or more of their healthy chil­dren, relying on them to use the funds for the ben­efit of their dis­abled sib­lings. Except in the case of a very small estate, this is gen­er­ally not a good idea. It puts the healthy child in the dif­fi­cult posi­tion of having to decide how much of her money to spend on her sib­ling. Such funds also will be sub­ject to claim by cred­i­tors and at risk in the event of divorce or bank­ruptcy. Finally, the child who receives the funds may die before the dis­abled child without set­ting these funds aside in her estate plan

Life Insur­ance

Finally, a parent with a dis­abled child should con­sider buying life insur­ance to fund the sup­ple­mental needs trust set up for the child’s sup­port. What may look like a sub­stan­tial sum to leave in trust today may run out after sev­eral years of paying for care that the parent had pre­vi­ously pro­vided. The more resources avail­able, the better the sup­port that can be pro­vided the child. And if both par­ents are alive, the cost of “second-to-die” insurance–payable only when the second of the two par­ents passes away–can be sur­pris­ingly low.

The good news is that advance plan­ning for a dis­abled child can make a sig­nif­i­cant dif­fer­ence in his life. You just have to take the first step.

Sup­ple­mental Needs Trusts

Sup­ple­mental needs trusts (also known as “spe­cial needs” trusts) allow a dis­abled ben­e­fi­ciary to receive gifts, law­suit set­tle­ments, or other funds and yet not lose her eli­gi­bility for cer­tain gov­ern­ment pro­grams. Such trusts are drafted so that the funds will not be con­sid­ered to belong to the ben­e­fi­ciary in deter­mining her eli­gi­bility for public ben­e­fits. As their name implies, sup­ple­mental needs trusts are designed not to pro­vide basic sup­port, but instead to pay for com­forts and lux­u­ries that are not avail­able from public assis­tance. These trusts typ­i­cally pay for things like edu­ca­tion, recre­ation, coun­seling, and med­ical atten­tion beyond the simple neces­si­ties of life. (How­ever, the trustee can use trust funds for food, clothing and shelter if the trustee decides doing so is in the beneficiary’s best interest despite a pos­sible loss or reduc­tion in public assistance.)

Very often, sup­ple­mental needs trusts are cre­ated by a parent or other family member for a dis­abled child (even though the child may be an adult by the time the trust is cre­ated or funded). Such trusts also may be set up in a will as a way for an indi­vidual to leave assets to a dis­abled rel­a­tive. In addi­tion, the dis­abled indi­vidual can often create the trust him­self, depending on the pro­gram for which he or she seeks ben­e­fits. These “self-settled” trusts are fre­quently estab­lished by indi­vid­uals who become dis­abled as the result of an acci­dent or med­ical mal­prac­tice and later receive the pro­ceeds of a per­sonal injury award or settlement.

Each public ben­e­fits pro­gram has restric­tions that the sup­ple­mental needs trust must comply with in order not to jeop­ar­dize the beneficiary’s con­tinued eli­gi­bility for public ben­e­fits. Both Med­icaid and SSI are quite restric­tive, making it dif­fi­cult for a ben­e­fi­ciary to create a trust for his or her own ben­efit and still retain eli­gi­bility for Med­icaid ben­e­fits. But both pro­grams allow two “safe har­bors” per­mit­ting the cre­ation of sup­ple­mental needs trusts with a beneficiary’s own money if the trust meets cer­tain requirements.

The first of these is called a “pay­back” or “(d)(4)(A)” trust, refer­ring to the autho­rizing statute. “Pay­back” trusts are cre­ated with the assets of a dis­abled indi­vidual under age 65 and are estab­lished by his or her parent, grand­parent or legal guardian or by a court. They also must pro­vide that at the beneficiary’s death any remaining trust funds will first be used to reim­burse the state for Med­icaid paid on the beneficiary’s behalf.

Med­icaid and SSI law also per­mits “(d)(4)©” or “pooled trusts.” Such trusts pool the resources of many dis­abled ben­e­fi­cia­ries, and those resources are man­aged by a non-profit asso­ci­a­tion. Unlike indi­vidual dis­ability trusts, which may be cre­ated only for those under age 65, pooled trusts may be for ben­e­fi­cia­ries of any age and may be cre­ated by the ben­e­fi­ciary her­self. In addi­tion, at the beneficiary’s death the state does not have to be repaid for its Med­icaid expenses on her behalf as long as the funds are retained in the trust for the ben­efit of other dis­abled ben­e­fi­cia­ries. (At least, that’s what the fed­eral law says; some states require reim­burse­ment under all cir­cum­stances.) Although a pooled trust is an option for a dis­abled indi­vidual over age 65 who is receiving Med­icaid or SSI, those over age 65 who make trans­fers to the trust will incur a transfer penalty. (See Med­icaid: The Transfer Penalty.)

Income paid from a sup­ple­mental needs trust to a ben­e­fi­ciary is another issue, par­tic­u­larly with regard to SSI ben­e­fits. In the case of SSI, the trust ben­e­fi­ciary would lose a dollar of SSI ben­e­fits for every dollar paid to him directly. In addi­tion, pay­ments by the trust to the ben­e­fi­ciary for food, clothing or housing are con­sid­ered “in kind” income and, again, the SSI ben­efit will be cut by one dollar for every dollar of value of such “in kind” income. Some attor­neys draft the trusts to limit the trustee’s dis­cre­tion to make such pay­ments. Others do not limit the trustee’s dis­cre­tion, but instead counsel the trustee on how the trust funds may be spent, per­mit­ting more flex­i­bility for unfore­seen events or changes in cir­cum­stances in the future. The dif­fer­ence has to do with phi­los­ophy, the sit­u­a­tion of the client, and the amount of money in the trust.

Choosing a trustee is also an impor­tant issue in sup­ple­mental needs trusts. Most people do not have the exper­tise to manage a trust. An alter­na­tive is retaining the ser­vices of a pro­fes­sional trustee. For those who may be uncom­fort­able with the idea of an out­sider man­aging a loved one’s affairs, it is pos­sible to simul­ta­ne­ously appoint a trust “pro­tector,” who has the powers to review accounts and to hire and fire trustees, and a trust “advisor,” who instructs the trustee on the beneficiary’s needs. How­ever, if the trust fund is small, a pro­fes­sional trustee may not be inter­ested. This can be an argu­ment for pooled trusts.

For more on sup­ple­mental needs trusts and spe­cial needs plan­ning, visit our Spe­cial­Need­sAn­swers Web site at www.specialneedsanswers.com While some Elder­LawAn­swers attor­neys prac­tice in this area of the law, all attor­neys listed on Spe­cial­Need­sAn­swers devote a sig­nif­i­cant part of their prac­tices to working with indi­vid­uals with spe­cial needs and with their fam­i­lies to plan for the future.