Planning For All The Seasons of Life
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Blogging the Seasons of Life

Thoughts on The Seasons of Life

Posts tagged Power of Attorney
What Is Your COVID19 Plan?

Given all of the dire warnings about COVID19, what should you be doing to prepare? Here is what I am recommending to my clients, family and friends:

1.       WHO depends on you?

Make a contingency plan and line up a back-up individual to care for those persons - and animals - if you become ill and need to isolate yourself, or if you become ill enough that you are hospitalized.

2.       WHAT are your day to day responsibilities?

Do you have another person who has the ability and the tools to fill in for you? This could be work-related cross-training, educating someone on the home-front about pet care, home alarm codes, appliance operation, etc.

Do you have the proper tools in place? By this I mean Powers of Attorney – both financial and healthcare. These are essential tools.

3.       WHEN are critical upcoming or ongoing due-dates?

Create a list of when ongoing bills are due, so your agent knows when things need to be paid or when deadlines are for things like prescription refills, college deposits, camp registration, etc.

4.       WHERE are your important papers?

Create a roadmap for whoever may step in for you: where do you bank? what pharmacy are the family prescriptions refilled? where is your original POA? where is your will? where are passwords stored?

I am an advocate of planning. It’s what I do for a living, but even if I didn’t, I would still recommend reviewing this list, if only to put your mind at ease.

Why Do I Need an Estate Plan if I Don't Have an Estate?

I get this question all the time!

An Estate is what you own, however much or little it may be. It includes your “real” property (real estate), personal property (your stuff: cars, jewelry, collections, grandma’s china boxed up in the attic), and intangible property (bank accounts, investments, royalties).

An Estate Plan is your instructions for how your Estate will be managed and distributed. Your instructions may be in the form of a Last Will & Testament, a Trust, Powers of Attorney, Advance Directives or some combination of those documents. An Estate Plan can be simple or complex, depending upon what you want to accomplish with it – which might have much more to do with your family structure than the size of your bank account.

One of the most important parts of the Estate Plan for families with one or more children is deciding who will care for your children if something happens to both parents. It’s a scary thought, but it’s a choice you will want to make for yourself, not leave to a probate judge.

Many people incorrectly think that an Estate Plan is only used once you have passed away. Actually, a well drafted plan is flexible enough to manage multiple possible situations, such as,

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  • While you are living but temporarily unavailable or unable to manage your affairs;

  • While you are living but permanently unable to manage your affairs;

  • When you and your spouse are both unable to manage your affairs;

  • Immediately after you pass away; and

  • Many years after you pass away.

A good Estate Plan will include documents that deal with concerns other than money and property, such as medical directives, guardianship designations, final disposition instructions and organ donation instructions.

Working with an attorney who has experience in estate planning will ensure that you have the tools you need to manage during your lifetime, and for your family to manage after you are no longer able to manage on your own, and after you are gone.  You will sleep better once you have a plan in place!