| Casual Articles |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
Casual Articles - Medicaid Overview
Advice On Dealing With Stress In Job Interviews .An interview process can often be one of the most stressful times you can go through. You have to sell yourself and your experiences to a person or group of people that you don't know in an environment completely new to you. They can ask you all sorts of questions and you don't know if you will be able to answer them. You feel vulnerable and this is a stressful sensation.After all that bad news there is some good tidings. You can reduce the stress of a job interview significantly by following the simple guidelines below.First off, adhere to the old adage : if you fail to prepare, prepare to fail. You must prepare for the interview thoroughly.This includes some basic research of the company. Things like their history, the CEO, topical news items about the company and the people that will be interviewing you and their relationship to the job. The chances are that you may not need all this information. But it would make a great impression if you could make a comment about the latest piece of news on the company. This will allow you to converse with the interviewers about non-interview topics and develop a relationship with them. This can relieve the stress of talking to strangers.You should think about the likely questions that you will be asked and formulate answers to them. You can practise answering these questions aloud or write notes about the answer to study. This will give you confidence that you will be able to answer some of the questions satisfactorily.Be sure that your suit or attire is dry cleaned and ready to wear a week before the interview. It can take a few days to get clothing cleaned and you don't want to be thinking about it. That includes a haircut, don't wait until the day before, get it done a week before. You want as little stress inducing activities as possible for the days before the interview.Work out how you In addition, special exceptions apply to the transfer of a home. The Medicaid applicant may freely transfer his or her home to the following individuals without incurring a transfer penalty: (1) The applicant's spouse; (2) A child who is under age 21 or who is blind or disabled; (3) Into a trust for the sole benefit of a disabled individual under age 65 (even if the trust is for the benefit of the Medicaid applicant, under certain circumstances); (4) 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 (5) 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. Congress has created a very important escape hatch from the transfer penalty: the penalty will be "cured" if the transferred asset is returned in its entirety, or it will be reduced if the transferred asset is partially returned. Is Transferring Assets Against the Law? You may have heard that transferring assets, or helping someone to transfer assets, to achieve Medicaid eligibility is a crime. Is this true? The short answer is that for a brief period it was, and it's possible, although unlikely under current law, that it will be in the future. As part of a 1996 Kennedy-Kassebaum health care bill, Congress made it a crime to transfer assets for purposes of achieving Medicaid eligibility. Congress repealed the law as part of the 1997 Balanced Budget bill, but replaced it with a statute that made it a crime to advise or counsel someone for a fee regarding transferring assets for purposes o Heavy Equipment Operators Medicaid, also known as medical assistance is a joint federal-state program that provides health insurance coverage to low-income children, seniors and people with disabilities. In addition, it covers care in a nursing home for those who qualify. Medicaid is a state administered program and provides more comprehensive coverage than Medicare, particularly with regard to nursing home care. However, not all nursing homes participate in the Medicaid program. There are no limits on the maximum length of a Medicaid recipient’s stay at a facility.
The Federal government pays roughly one-half of the costs, while the State covers the remainder. In Illinois, the agency that administers Medicaid is the Illinois Department of Public Aid (IDPA). In the absence of any other public program covering long-term nursing home care, Medicaid has become the default nursing home insurance of the middle class.Heavy Equipment Training, Behind the Wheel and YouEach and every day, long before the average individual awakens from their deep rest, long before an alarm clock beeps, and before tea across our country begins to simmer, an event happens that a few select men and women dream of. They aren't of the typical breed. They are driven, from deep within. They were born to drive extreme machines: Grades, Backhoes, Dump Trucks, Loaders, Semi's, Excavators and giant equipment made to do one task, things you already know about and stuff you’ve never even heard of or knew existed. We're talking about tasks that have 1 vital thing in common: it requires a seriously huge machine to get the job done.Ordinary, common persons get up, attempt to fully wake up with the help of a hot shower, grab their fast food, drive-through breakfast, sit in traffic for what seems like a lifetime or more, to do the exact same thing hundreds of thousands of men and women are destined to do: be chained behind a desk, questioning their career choice.That’s the glimpse of what you may be, but you know deep in your gut, that "ain't" for you.That’s the glimpse of what you may be, but you know deep in your gut, that "ain't" for you.The rest of that pathetic job force aren’t too far off from that, but add a clip-on tie, a brightly colored blazer, a tool of their trade: a mop or broom, a spatula, and / or the inevitable frustrating feeling that the choice they made is a dead wringer for years on end of boredom, and the degree of humiliation that results in them having a reason to legitimately bang their head against the wall.Before that single ignition is turned on and you pump that beast's pedals, releasing a surge of thunderous power to vibrate from your heel to to the end of your hairs, like you’ve just dangled a Easter ham in front of a shark, ever happens, the rest of the worl While Congress and the federal Health Care Financing Administration set out the main rules under which Medicaid operates, each state runs its own program. As a result, the rules are somewhat different in every state, although the framework is the same throughout the country. The following describes some of the basic rules regarding Medicaid in Illinois. Resource (Asset) Rules In order to be eligible for Medicaid benefits in Illinois a nursing home resident may have no more than $2,000 in "countable" assets. While a Medicaid applicant may be eligible even if these assets exceed the limits, the applicant will be required to “spend down” these assets. This means that the cost of care must be paid for by the Medicaid applicant to the extent that the assets exceed the $2,000 limit. The spouse of a nursing home resident--called the 'community spouse'-- is limited to one half of the couple's joint assets up to $84,120 (in 2000) in "countable" assets (see Medicaid, Protections for the Healthy Spouse). The $84,120 figure changes each year to reflect inflation. In addition, the community spouse may keep the first $17,400, even if that is more than half of the couple's assets. These figures change annually and are found in the Department of Human Services policy manual. Basic Medicaid information is also available at http://www.state.il.us/dpa/mednews.htm. All assets are counted against these limits unless the assets fall within the short list of "non countable" assets. These include: (1) Personal possessions, such as clothing, furniture, and jewelry with an equity value of no more than $2000. However, wedding rings, engagement rings and items required because of an individual’s medical or physical condition are exempt regardless of value. (2) One motor vehicle if it meets any one of the following criteria: A) If it is necessary for employment B) If it is necessary for transportation for medical treatment of a specific or regular medical problem C) If it is modified for operation by or transportation of a handicapped person or D) If it is necessary because of terrain, remoteness or similar factors to provide necessary transportation to perform essential daily activities. A motor vehicle owned by a nursing home resident is also exempt if transferred to a spouse. In all other cases the exemption is limited to $4,500. (3) The applicant's principal residence, provided it is in the same state in which the individual is applying for coverage although some limitations, discussed below, exist. (4) In Illinois, up to $1,500 of revocable burial expenses are exempt and up to $4,120 in irrevocable prepaid expenses are exempt. However, the amount of the revocable expense exemption is reduced by the amount of irrevocable expenses. In all cases, expenses for burial space or plots and other customary items such as a casket or headstone are completely exempt. (5) Assets that are considered "inaccessible" for one reason or another. These assets often come in the form of specific types of trusts. The Home Nursing home residents do not have to sell their homes in order to qualify for Medicaid. In Illinois, the home will not be considered a countable asset for Medicaid eligibility purposes as long as the nursing home resident intends to return home. The home may also be kept if the Medicaid applicant's spouse, sibling, minor or disabled child lives there. However, if the applicant leaves the home with no intention of returning, the property must be counted as an asset. The Transfer Penalty The second major rule of Medicaid eligibility is the penalty for transferring assets. Congress does not want you to move into a nursing home on Monday, give all your money to your children (or whomever) on Tuesday, and qualify for Medicaid on Wednesday. So it has imposed a penalty on people who transfer assets without receiving fair value in return. This penalty is a period of time during which the person transferring the assets will be ineligible for Medicaid. The penalty period is determined by dividing the amount transferred by what Medicaid determines to be the average private pay cost of a nursing home in Illinois. The period of ineligibility starts on the first day of the month of the transfer. Example: If a Medicaid applicant made gifts totaling $90,000 in a state where the average nursing home bill is $5,000 a month, he or she would be ineligible for Medicaid for 18 months ($90,000 ? $5,000 = 18). Another way to look at the above example is that for every $5,000 transferred, an applicant would be ineligible for Medicaid nursing home benefits for one month. In theory, there is no limit on the number of months a person can be ineligible. Example: The period of ineligibility for the transfer of property worth $400,000 would be 80 months ($400,000 ? $5,000 = 80). However, the IDPA may look only at transfers made during the 36 months preceding an application for Medicaid (or 60 months if the transfer was made to certain trusts). This is called the "look-back period." Effectively, then, there is now a 36-month limit on periods of ineligibility resulting from transfers. This means that people who make large transfers must be careful not to apply for Medicaid before the 36-month look-back period passes. Example: To use the above example of the $400,000 transfers, if the individual made the transfer on January 1, 1998, and waited until February 1, 2001, to apply for Medicaid -- 37 months later -- the transfer would not affect his or her Medicaid eligibility. However, if the individual applied for benefits in December 2000, only 35 months after transferring the property, he or she would have to wait the full 80 months before becoming eligible for benefits. Exceptions to the Transfer Penalty Congress has created a very important escape hatch from the transfer penalty: the penalty will be "cured" if the transferred asset is returned in its entirety, or it will be reduced if the transferred asset is partially returned. Is Transferring Assets Against the Law? You may have heard that transferring assets, or helping someone to transfer assets, to achieve Medicaid eligibility is a crime. Is this true? The short answer is that for a brief period it was, and it's possible, although unlikely under current law, that it will be in the future. As part of a 1996 Kennedy-Kassebaum health care bill, Congress made it a crime to transfer assets for purposes of achieving Medicaid eligibility. Congress repealed the law as part of the 1997 Balanced Budget bill, but replaced it with a statute that made it a crime to advise or counsel someone for a fee regarding transferring assets for purposes of The Fundamentals of Venture Capitalism ouple's joint assets up to $84,120 (in 2000) in "countable" assets (see Medicaid, Protections for the Healthy Spouse). The $84,120 figure changes each year to reflect inflation. In addition, the community spouse may keep the first $17,400, even if that is more than half of the couple's assets. These figures change annually and are found in the Department of Human Services policy manual. Basic Medicaid information is also available at http://www.state.il.us/dpa/mednews.htm.
All assets are counted against these limits unless the assets fall within the short list of "non countable" assets. These include:Venture capitalism is a system wherein a venture capitalist invests money in small and fledgling companies to finance its start up or restructuring with the hopes of greater yield in the years to come. Instead of providing a loan, venture capitalists exchange their investments for a stake in the company often in the form of shares, which they will later unload.Often, venture capitalists target companies with innovative products and services, which they feel have the potential to become successful brands in the years to come. Other times, people with ideas for products and services seek venture capitalists with the hope of being provided with start-up funds. These are the people who are just starting in the industry and therefore have no access to other forms of traditional financing like those provided by banks and financial institutions.Often, they will provide the company with about three to seven years’ support. Venture capitalism may seem really fruitful when it comes to generating profits but not all investments that venture capitalists go into pay off.In fact, most of the companies that they invest on will probably fail to return their investments. Remember that investing in new or troubled business is pretty risky. According to statistics, about 20 to 90 percent fail. They, however, recoup their losses with the companies that do go well. The return of their investments can reach from 300 to about a thousand times over.Oftentimes, venture capitalists do not only provide money for the company but also managerial and strategic advice. They will often help the company stand on their own feet when they are just starting. Venture capitalists can also help in terms of providing contacts and in opening doors of opportunities.If you are looking for a venture capitalist, make sure that you have researched the person or the company thoroughl (1) Personal possessions, such as clothing, furniture, and jewelry with an equity value of no more than $2000. However, wedding rings, engagement rings and items required because of an individual’s medical or physical condition are exempt regardless of value. (2) One motor vehicle if it meets any one of the following criteria: A) If it is necessary for employment B) If it is necessary for transportation for medical treatment of a specific or regular medical problem C) If it is modified for operation by or transportation of a handicapped person or D) If it is necessary because of terrain, remoteness or similar factors to provide necessary transportation to perform essential daily activities. A motor vehicle owned by a nursing home resident is also exempt if transferred to a spouse. In all other cases the exemption is limited to $4,500. (3) The applicant's principal residence, provided it is in the same state in which the individual is applying for coverage although some limitations, discussed below, exist. (4) In Illinois, up to $1,500 of revocable burial expenses are exempt and up to $4,120 in irrevocable prepaid expenses are exempt. However, the amount of the revocable expense exemption is reduced by the amount of irrevocable expenses. In all cases, expenses for burial space or plots and other customary items such as a casket or headstone are completely exempt. (5) Assets that are considered "inaccessible" for one reason or another. These assets often come in the form of specific types of trusts. The Home Nursing home residents do not have to sell their homes in order to qualify for Medicaid. In Illinois, the home will not be considered a countable asset for Medicaid eligibility purposes as long as the nursing home resident intends to return home. The home may also be kept if the Medicaid applicant's spouse, sibling, minor or disabled child lives there. However, if the applicant leaves the home with no intention of returning, the property must be counted as an asset. The Transfer Penalty The second major rule of Medicaid eligibility is the penalty for transferring assets. Congress does not want you to move into a nursing home on Monday, give all your money to your children (or whomever) on Tuesday, and qualify for Medicaid on Wednesday. So it has imposed a penalty on people who transfer assets without receiving fair value in return. This penalty is a period of time during which the person transferring the assets will be ineligible for Medicaid. The penalty period is determined by dividing the amount transferred by what Medicaid determines to be the average private pay cost of a nursing home in Illinois. The period of ineligibility starts on the first day of the month of the transfer. Example: If a Medicaid applicant made gifts totaling $90,000 in a state where the average nursing home bill is $5,000 a month, he or she would be ineligible for Medicaid for 18 months ($90,000 ? $5,000 = 18). Another way to look at the above example is that for every $5,000 transferred, an applicant would be ineligible for Medicaid nursing home benefits for one month. In theory, there is no limit on the number of months a person can be ineligible. Example: The period of ineligibility for the transfer of property worth $400,000 would be 80 months ($400,000 ? $5,000 = 80). However, the IDPA may look only at transfers made during the 36 months preceding an application for Medicaid (or 60 months if the transfer was made to certain trusts). This is called the "look-back period." Effectively, then, there is now a 36-month limit on periods of ineligibility resulting from transfers. This means that people who make large transfers must be careful not to apply for Medicaid before the 36-month look-back period passes. Example: To use the above example of the $400,000 transfers, if the individual made the transfer on January 1, 1998, and waited until February 1, 2001, to apply for Medicaid -- 37 months later -- the transfer would not affect his or her Medicaid eligibility. However, if the individual applied for benefits in December 2000, only 35 months after transferring the property, he or she would have to wait the full 80 months before becoming eligible for benefits. Exceptions to the Transfer Penalty Congress has created a very important escape hatch from the transfer penalty: the penalty will be "cured" if the transferred asset is returned in its entirety, or it will be reduced if the transferred asset is partially returned. Is Transferring Assets Against the Law? You may have heard that transferring assets, or helping someone to transfer assets, to achieve Medicaid eligibility is a crime. Is this true? The short answer is that for a brief period it was, and it's possible, although unlikely under current law, that it will be in the future. As part of a 1996 Kennedy-Kassebaum health care bill, Congress made it a crime to transfer assets for purposes of achieving Medicaid eligibility. Congress repealed the law as part of the 1997 Balanced Budget bill, but replaced it with a statute that made it a crime to advise or counsel someone for a fee regarding transferring assets for purposes o Book Review: Google Cash he revocable expense exemption is reduced by the amount of irrevocable expenses. In all cases, expenses for burial space or plots and other customary items such as a casket or headstone are completely exempt.What do you get if you cross a surfer, the Internet and affiliate programs? No, it’s not really a riddle. It’s a true story of what really happened when Chris Carpenter discovered a neat technique for promoting affiliate products through pay-per-click search engines. He explains his entire system in his book, “Google Cash”.The web site for Google Cash sets up some high expectations, but does the book deliver? For example, Carpenter promises to reveal the secrets of how he makes $33,000 in a month and working less than 30 minutes in a week.Now if you are like me, you are probably quite wary of claims like these. But Carpenter got my attention. For a start, he was quite transparent about who he is, and even posted photos of himself and his wife on his web pages. I think he’s changed his site since then. And he showed evidence of some of the payments people have received after reading Google Cash. I decided his claims were worth a closer look… and purchased a copy.The e-book was downloadable immediately - as were the bonuses he promised (plenty of those). I find there’s nothing worse than paying for a product online and having to wait several days for a response. Google Cash was on my computer within seconds of paying for it.At this point everything got interesting. You see, I was trying to read Carpenter’s book from cover to cover, electronically speaking, but he had me so excited with his system that I wanted to put the book aside and try it immediately.The great thing about this system is that Carpenter makes it very simple to understand. He writes in a manner which is down-to-earth, very practical, and very respectful of you, his reader, and what you need to know.I quickly picked up on the system. To give you a bird’s eye view, it involves writing small Google ads. That’s right, the little text ads that appear to the right of you (5) Assets that are considered "inaccessible" for one reason or another. These assets often come in the form of specific types of trusts. The Home Nursing home residents do not have to sell their homes in order to qualify for Medicaid. In Illinois, the home will not be considered a countable asset for Medicaid eligibility purposes as long as the nursing home resident intends to return home. The home may also be kept if the Medicaid applicant's spouse, sibling, minor or disabled child lives there. However, if the applicant leaves the home with no intention of returning, the property must be counted as an asset. The Transfer Penalty The second major rule of Medicaid eligibility is the penalty for transferring assets. Congress does not want you to move into a nursing home on Monday, give all your money to your children (or whomever) on Tuesday, and qualify for Medicaid on Wednesday. So it has imposed a penalty on people who transfer assets without receiving fair value in return. This penalty is a period of time during which the person transferring the assets will be ineligible for Medicaid. The penalty period is determined by dividing the amount transferred by what Medicaid determines to be the average private pay cost of a nursing home in Illinois. The period of ineligibility starts on the first day of the month of the transfer. Example: If a Medicaid applicant made gifts totaling $90,000 in a state where the average nursing home bill is $5,000 a month, he or she would be ineligible for Medicaid for 18 months ($90,000 ? $5,000 = 18). Another way to look at the above example is that for every $5,000 transferred, an applicant would be ineligible for Medicaid nursing home benefits for one month. In theory, there is no limit on the number of months a person can be ineligible. Example: The period of ineligibility for the transfer of property worth $400,000 would be 80 months ($400,000 ? $5,000 = 80). However, the IDPA may look only at transfers made during the 36 months preceding an application for Medicaid (or 60 months if the transfer was made to certain trusts). This is called the "look-back period." Effectively, then, there is now a 36-month limit on periods of ineligibility resulting from transfers. This means that people who make large transfers must be careful not to apply for Medicaid before the 36-month look-back period passes. Example: To use the above example of the $400,000 transfers, if the individual made the transfer on January 1, 1998, and waited until February 1, 2001, to apply for Medicaid -- 37 months later -- the transfer would not affect his or her Medicaid eligibility. However, if the individual applied for benefits in December 2000, only 35 months after transferring the property, he or she would have to wait the full 80 months before becoming eligible for benefits. Exceptions to the Transfer Penalty Congress has created a very important escape hatch from the transfer penalty: the penalty will be "cured" if the transferred asset is returned in its entirety, or it will be reduced if the transferred asset is partially returned. Is Transferring Assets Against the Law? You may have heard that transferring assets, or helping someone to transfer assets, to achieve Medicaid eligibility is a crime. Is this true? The short answer is that for a brief period it was, and it's possible, although unlikely under current law, that it will be in the future. As part of a 1996 Kennedy-Kassebaum health care bill, Congress made it a crime to transfer assets for purposes of achieving Medicaid eligibility. Congress repealed the law as part of the 1997 Balanced Budget bill, but replaced it with a statute that made it a crime to advise or counsel someone for a fee regarding transferring assets for purposes o Medical Health Insurance - Do Not Leave Home Without It to look at the above example is that for every $5,000 transferred, an applicant would be ineligible for Medicaid nursing home benefits for one month.When we are young, we never think about our health, and expect that we will live our days blessed with good health and no illness or accidents. But that is not what the world is like. There is so much uncertainty in this world; you can come down with a bad virus, you can get hit by a car, you just never know what can happen to you and so you have to be prepared for anything to happen. This makes medical insurance a real must for all of us.At one point when I was eighteen, I was offered a health insurance plan. I did not even think about taking advantage of it since I was still covered under my parents policy. But, when the time came and I should have sought out health insurance, at age 25 when I was no longer covered, I still ignored it. I was in the prime of health; what could possibly happen to me to require that I have health insurance? Put it down to dumb youth. Even at that young age, you should be careful about being protected. I was an active person; what if I hurt myself playing football or skiing? There was no way I could afford to pay a hospital bill if I broke a leg. It is a serious question to think about.Just because you do not need medical insurance today does not mean that you will not need it tomorrow. I guess a lot of young people think that since they did not use the insurance, they just threw that money away. Why should they continue to throw it away month after month? That is just being blind to reality. Even if you never got sick, there are always accidents waiting to happen. If you were in a car accident or broke a leg, you would be very happy that you had health insurance. Doctor and hospital bills are astronomical, and very few people can afford to pay them out of pocket. Even if you do have to pay a deductible, it will not compare to the total bill if you go into the hospital after an accident. A bill In theory, there is no limit on the number of months a person can be ineligible. Example: The period of ineligibility for the transfer of property worth $400,000 would be 80 months ($400,000 ? $5,000 = 80). However, the IDPA may look only at transfers made during the 36 months preceding an application for Medicaid (or 60 months if the transfer was made to certain trusts). This is called the "look-back period." Effectively, then, there is now a 36-month limit on periods of ineligibility resulting from transfers. This means that people who make large transfers must be careful not to apply for Medicaid before the 36-month look-back period passes. Example: To use the above example of the $400,000 transfers, if the individual made the transfer on January 1, 1998, and waited until February 1, 2001, to apply for Medicaid -- 37 months later -- the transfer would not affect his or her Medicaid eligibility. However, if the individual applied for benefits in December 2000, only 35 months after transferring the property, he or she would have to wait the full 80 months before becoming eligible for benefits. Exceptions to the Transfer Penalty Congress has created a very important escape hatch from the transfer penalty: the penalty will be "cured" if the transferred asset is returned in its entirety, or it will be reduced if the transferred asset is partially returned. Is Transferring Assets Against the Law? You may have heard that transferring assets, or helping someone to transfer assets, to achieve Medicaid eligibility is a crime. Is this true? The short answer is that for a brief period it was, and it's possible, although unlikely under current law, that it will be in the future. As part of a 1996 Kennedy-Kassebaum health care bill, Congress made it a crime to transfer assets for purposes of achieving Medicaid eligibility. Congress repealed the law as part of the 1997 Balanced Budget bill, but replaced it with a statute that made it a crime to advise or counsel someone for a fee regarding transferring assets for purposes o I'm a Failed Blogger! .I’ve never been popular in my whole life. I think there must be something inside me that didn’t get enough attention as a kid or something because I seem to find myself looking for it all the time. I think about some of the career paths I have walked down: I’ve been a musician, a pastor (who gets to get on a platform and talk to people – getting attention – even if I do have something selfless to say – I like the feeling I get when I feel like people “get it” – anybody else have this in common?), I’ve been a stand-up comedian (here, there’s a real pressure to get people to like you because if they don’t, they let you know fast). I even started “blogging” because a lot of great bloggers are out there and they seem to know how to type just the right things to get lots and lots of feedback. Heck, I figured I’d tried everything else, why not see if I get some feedback, too. And you know what I found out?Blogging is frackin' hard! And what is the whole point of a blog? To get comments. Yes, it is! You know good and well that to write things because you have to simply “get them off your chest,” you could write in a diary or a journal (by journal, I mean, the “book,” not the “webjournal”). You could even type it on your computer and save it away in your “My Documents/Private Diary of 2 am Thoughts.” Nobody would ever have to see it. But, you don’t. Why? Because we have something inside us that wants people to give a crap! We don’t want our thoughts to remain silent. Especially controversial thoughts. Why? Maybe because controversial thoughts gain ATTENTION! And with attention comes what? More feedback. And I am no different. Musician. Artist. Comedian. Pastor (Actually, I should use the word “Preacher” here instead of pastor.). And now, Blogger. The only difference is that nobody reads my blogs. Well, if they do, they rarely comment on them.I got fired because I blo In addition, special exceptions apply to the transfer of a home. The Medicaid applicant may freely transfer his or her home to the following individuals without incurring a transfer penalty: (1) The applicant's spouse; (2) A child who is under age 21 or who is blind or disabled; (3) Into a trust for the sole benefit of a disabled individual under age 65 (even if the trust is for the benefit of the Medicaid applicant, under certain circumstances); (4) 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 (5) 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. Congress has created a very important escape hatch from the transfer penalty: the penalty will be "cured" if the transferred asset is returned in its entirety, or it will be reduced if the transferred asset is partially returned. Is Transferring Assets Against the Law? You may have heard that transferring assets, or helping someone to transfer assets, to achieve Medicaid eligibility is a crime. Is this true? The short answer is that for a brief period it was, and it's possible, although unlikely under current law, that it will be in the future. As part of a 1996 Kennedy-Kassebaum health care bill, Congress made it a crime to transfer assets for purposes of achieving Medicaid eligibility. Congress repealed the law as part of the 1997 Balanced Budget bill, but replaced it with a statute that made it a crime to advise or counsel someone for a fee regarding transferring assets for purposes of obtaining Medicaid. This meant that although transferring assets was again legal, explaining the law to clients could have been a criminal act. In 1998, Attorney General Janet Reno determined that the law was unconstitutional because it violated the First Amendment protection of free speech, and she told Congress that the Justice Department would not enforce the law. Around the same time, a U.S. District Court judge in New York said that the law could not be enforced for the same reason. Accordingly, the law remains on the books, but it will not be enforced. Since it is possible that these rulings may change, you should contact our office before filing a Medicaid application. Treatment of Income The basic Medicaid rule for nursing home residents is that they must pay all of their income, minus certain deductions, to the nursing home. The deductions include a $30-a-month personal needs allowance, a deduction for any uncovered medical costs (including medical insurance premiums), and, in the case of a married applicant, an allowance for the spouse who continues to live at home if he or she needs income support. A deduction may also be allowed for a dependent child living at home. A deduction is also allowed for community spouse maintenance needs. The allowance in 2000 was $2,103 and is adjusted annually. This allows the Medicaid recipient to exempt some of his/her income for the purpose of spouse maintenance. Example: if Mr. X resides in a long term care facility such as a nursing home and has monthly income of $1,600 and his spouse has income of $800 a month (from pension or social security for example) then the difference between the spouse’s $800/mo. Income and the $2,103 allowance (in 2000) may be contributed by Mr. X to his spouse and he may deduct that amount, up to the total allowance, from his income for asset calculation purposes. Under the facts of the example, this would allow Mr. X a $503 community spouse deduction and $30 personal needs deduction. The amount of Mr. X’s income in excess of the deductions ($1,600-$503-$30= $1,067) must be “spent down” or paid to cover the medical expenses each month. A similar deduction exists for dependent family members including dependent adult children, dependent parents or dependent siblings. For Medicaid applicants who are married, the income of the community spouse is not counted in determining the Medicaid applicant's eligibility. Only income in the applicant's name is counted in determining his or her eligibility. Thus, even if the community spouse is still working and earning $5,000 a month, she will not have to contribute to the cost of caring for her spouse in a nursing home if Medicaid covers him. Protections for the Healthy Spouse The Medicaid law provides special protections for the spouse of a nursing home resident to make sure she has the minimum support needed to continue to live in the community. The so-called "spousal protections" work this way: if the Medicaid applicant is married, the countable assets of both the community spouse and the institutionalized spouse are totaled as of the date of "institutionalization," the day on which the ill spouse enters either a hospital or a long-term care facility in which he or she then stays for at least 30 days. In Illinois, the community spouse may keep one half of the couple's total "countable" assets up to a maximum of $84,120 (in 2000). Called the "community spouse resource allowance," this is the most that Illinois allows a community spouse to retain without a hearing or a court order. Example: If a couple has $100,000 in countable assets on the date the applicant enters a nursing home, he or she will be eligible for Medicaid once the couple's assets have been reduced to a combined figure of $52,000 -- $2,000 for the applicant and $50,000 for the community spouse. In all circumstances, the income of the community spouse will continue undisturbed; he or she will not have to use his or her income to support the nursing home spouse receiving Medicaid benefits. But what if most of the couple's income is in the name of the institutionalized spouse, and the community spouse's income is not enough to live on? In such cases, the community spouse is entitled to some or all of the monthly income of the institutionalized spouse as described above in “treatment of income.”.. In exceptional circumstances, community spouses may seek an increase in the income allowance either by appealing to the IDPA or by obtaining a court order of spousal support. Estate Recovery and Liens Under Medicaid law, following the death of the Medicaid recipient a state must attempt to recover from his or her estate whatever benefits it paid for the recipient's care. However, no recovery can take place until the death of the recipient's spouse, or as long as there is a child of the deceased who is under 21 or who is blind or disabled. The IDPA is permitted to seek recovery of paid benefits in all of the benefit recipient’s probate property. Given the rules for Medicaid eligibility, the only probate property of substantial value that a Medicaid recipient is likely to own at death is his or her home. In addition to the right to recover from the estate of the Medicaid beneficiary, IDPA must place a lien on real estate owned by a Medicaid beneficiary during her life unless certain dependent relatives are living in the property. If the property is sold while the Medicaid beneficiary is living, not only will she cease to be eligible for Medicaid due to the cash she would net from the sale, but also she would have to satisfy the lien by paying back the state for its coverage of her care to date. The exceptions to this rule are cases where a spouse, a disabled or blind child, a child under age 21, or a sibling with an equity interest in the house is living there. Whether or not a lien is placed on the house, the lien's purpose should only be for recovery of Medicaid expenses. The IDPA may seek to enforce the lien at any time there is a transfer of the real property, in cases of fraud, or at the time of death of the owner.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Positive Language for a Positive Response Make Money Taking Surveys Online Place Ads Correctly for Maximum Profit
|