Special Needs Planning

Analyzing Alternatives to Special Needs Planning

All parents of children with disabilities worry about the day when they will no longer be able to care for them. While many parents have figured out ways to make life more comfortable for a child with disabilities while they are around, thinking about a time when they can no longer be personally responsible for their child’s well-being can be stressful.

Corporate & Securities

FINRA Provides Guidance on Social Media Web Sites

In September 2009, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (“FINRA”) organized a Social Networking Task Force to discuss how social media sites can be used for legitimate business purposes by firms and their registered representatives in a manner that ensures investor protection. In January 2010, FINRA issued Regulatory Notice 10-06 to guide firms on applying…

Corporate & Securities

The Advantages of Convertible Debt in Seed Financing

Simply put, convertible debt is debt you can covert to equity.  Convertible debt financing is much like a traditional loan in that a company borrows money from angel investors, friends, and family or even venture capitalists, and promises to repay it with interest by the end of the term of the loan. Convertible debt financing…

Elder Law & Estate Planning

G.I. Bill Has More Vets in College

More Veterans of the Iraq War are Pursuing Educational Opportunities A more generous version of the G.I. Bill that Congress passed in 2008 is allowing more veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars to avail themselves of educational opportunities. In fact, more than 300,000 veterans and their dependents are enrolled in American institutions of higher…

Uncategorized

Medicaid Spousal Impoverishment Standards (2010)

No Change in Medicaid Spousal Impoverishment Standards for 2010 For the first time since 1989, when a law was enacted protecting the spouses of institutionalized Medicaid recipients from impoverishment, the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is not raising its guidelines for how much money the husbands or wives of institutionalized Medicaid recipients may…

Uncategorized

Proposed Bill Bans Restraint and Seclusion Practices

Protecting Students with Disabilities January 2010 – According to the House Committee on Education and Labor website, a U.S. Government Accountability Office report released last spring detailed hundreds of cases of students being abused “as a result of inappropriate uses of restraint and seclusion, often involving untrained staff. In some cases, children died. A disproportionate…

Elder Law & Estate Planning

Plan for the Care of Parents

According to the Pew Research Center, currently around 30% of adult children in America contribute financially to the care of parents. Expenses range from medical care to assisted living care to simply making sure the household contains enough food. As a result, plans for one’s own future care may need to include plans for the care of parents.

Elder Law & Estate Planning

Name Alternate Beneficiaries

When drafting a Will or trust document it is always important to consider multiple contingencies. One such contingency is the possibility that the primary beneficiary of your estate will not survive you. If a new beneficiary is not named, by default the state will decide how assets and property are to be distributed, according to state law. And the law may not correspond with your wishes.

Elder Law & Estate Planning

Restrictions on IRA Conversions to Change in 2010

Starting January 1, 2010, the rules governing conversion of traditional IRA or 401(K) accounts to a Roth IRA will change. Through the end of 2009, only people with a modified adjusted gross income of less than $100,000 are eligible to convert traditional accounts to a Roth IRA. The income restriction will be lifted in 2010, and all investors will be able to convert funds.

Elder Law & Estate Planning

Tax and Estate Planning: The Fate of the 2010 Estate Tax Remains in Question

Until the end of 2009, the inheritance tax, also referred to as the estate tax, stands at 45 percent for estates over $3.5 million. The tax will sunset at the end of the year, for one year only. It will then be reinstated in 2011 at the rate of 55% with an exemption of $1 million.

It is still unclear whether the tax will be repealed in 2010. Earlier this month, the House passed a one-year extension of the tax, essentially freezing it at current levels until 2011. The House has also passed smaller extensions, from one to three months, in an attempt to give the Senate time to come up with a more permanent solution.