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Distributions from Special Needs Trusts In Kind Distributions, Credit Cards, Gift Cards, or Debit Cards
October 21st, 2015
The Voice is the e-mail newsletter of The Special Needs Alliance. This installment was written by Special Needs Alliance member Laurie Hanson, a shareholder in the Minneapolis, Minnesota, elder law firm of Long, Reher & Hanson, P.A. The firm's focus is to provide to individuals who are aging or living with disabilities positive strategies to live as independently as possible for as long as possible. Laurie concentrates her practice exclusively in the areas of government benefit eligibility, special needs trusts, trust and public benefit litigation, estate planning, and planning for incapacity. She is the past president of the Elder Law Section of the Minnesota State Bar Association and is repeatedly named a super lawyer in the field of elder law by her peers. Distributions from Special Needs Trusts: In Kind Distributions, Credit Cards, Gift Cards, or Debit Cards You are the trustee of a special needs trust. Your beneficiary (Beth) lives in public housing, receives SSI (Supplemental Security Income) and MA (Medical Assistance), and has just asked you for a $200 gift card to Target so that she can buy headphones, clothes, toiletries, and some food. Remember, a special needs trust (SNT) is a trust that is exempt for purposes of eligibility for SSI and MA even if the trust holds assets that came from the individual getting SSI or MA. "Exempt" means that the assets in the trust are not counted when determining eligibility for those means-tested programs. The assets themselves are also not counted for purposes of public housing (including Section 8) rent calculation, although the creation of the trust may affect rent. Distributions can, however, affect eligibility for all of these programs, so when you make a distribution from the trust, you need to make sure that the distribution does not affect your beneficiary's public benefit eligibility. Determining the most cost-efficient way to make these sorts of distributions is a dilemma most trustees face:
About this Newsletter: We hope you find this newsletter useful and informative, but it is not the same as legal counsel. A free newsletter is ultimately worth everything it costs you; you rely on it at your own risk. Good legal advice includes a review of all of the facts of your situation, including many that may at first blush seem to you not to matter. The plan it generates is sensitive to your goals and wishes while taking into account a whole panoply of laws, rules and practices, many not published. That is what The Special Needs Alliance is all about. Contact information for a member in your state may be obtained by calling toll-free (877) 572-8472, or by visiting the Special Needs Alliance online. Reprinted with permission of the Special Needs Alliance - www.specialneedsalliance.org.
- Should you give Beth the gift card?
- What about giving Beth cash to pay for the items?
- Should you just go to Target and purchase the items - or purchase them online and have them delivered? This is called "in-kind" income - goods or services purchased for the beneficiary.
- If Beth purchases the item with a Target credit card, can you pay the bill?
- What about giving Beth a debit card?
- It is almost never a good idea to give the beneficiary cash, with some exceptions.
- Gift cards should also be avoided unless it is clear the card cannot be transferred to another person. Some trustees make the beneficiary sign an agreement acknowledging that the beneficiary cannot sell the gift card, requiring the beneficiary to provide receipts of how it was used and treating any unauthorized use as a loan that must be repaid from the beneficiary's own income.
- If you pay off a credit card, make sure you get receipts for each purchase to make sure you are making payments only for the beneficiary and also not for the beneficiary's food or shelter).
- Each public housing authority may have different rules, and you may need to meet with someone from the agency to understand how distributions will be treated.
- If you give a debit card that draws on one small trust account, make sure it is not linked to a bigger account so that when the small one overdraws there is no access to the trust's funds.
About this Newsletter: We hope you find this newsletter useful and informative, but it is not the same as legal counsel. A free newsletter is ultimately worth everything it costs you; you rely on it at your own risk. Good legal advice includes a review of all of the facts of your situation, including many that may at first blush seem to you not to matter. The plan it generates is sensitive to your goals and wishes while taking into account a whole panoply of laws, rules and practices, many not published. That is what The Special Needs Alliance is all about. Contact information for a member in your state may be obtained by calling toll-free (877) 572-8472, or by visiting the Special Needs Alliance online. Reprinted with permission of the Special Needs Alliance - www.specialneedsalliance.org.
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