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Shawn Weera on How to Interpret Medicaid Estate Recovery Laws

Several new bills are dramatically changing the nature of estate recovery.

Grand Rapids, MI – March 23, 2018 /MarketersMedia/

Michigan-based elder law attorney Shawn Weera hopes to advise adults reaching their elder years on recent Medicaid Estate Recovery laws that may put some finances in jeopardy if not protected properly from the potential grasp of the state. Michigan law, however, has just changed with regards to how long-term care costs are going to be recoverable by the state government. Weera recently discussed the details of the new legislation and the profound impact it will have on families currently relying on Living Trusts or other planning tools that do not have asset protection features in them.

Shawn Weera began by explaining that with major losses in state tax revenue from individuals who are facing unemployment and foreclosure, the State of Michigan is seeking additional ways to fill that void. Several new bills, introduced by Senator Kahn of Saginaw, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee, are dramatically changing the nature of estate recovery. The laws would convert Michigan to a lien state, subjecting the property of Medicaid beneficiaries to liens, remove most or all of the exclusions that were created by the 2007 estate recovery law, and eliminate the viability of ladybird deeds or any other planning tool. In laymen’s terms, Weera clarified that this means that the state government would have the power to possess the property of individuals in order to compensate long-term care expenses, even those who had been previously protected.

Another way Medicaid Estate Recovery is affecting Michigan residents is through the government acting as a remainder beneficiary of certain annuities, or special financial products that retirees use to create an additional stream of income or as an investment tool. For all of these established after February 8, 2006, the State of Michigan requires that it be named a remainder beneficiary before it will pay for any long-term care. As a result, the State’s remainder interest could be enforced to an amount equal to the Medicaid benefits provided. However, if the annuity has a community spouse, minor or disabled child named as its remainder beneficiary, then the State’s interest may be secondary.

Shawn Weera, JD, MFP is a nationally recognized asset protection expert and the President of the Law Offices of Shawn Weera. As a licensed elder law attorney in private practice for over a decade, he has been helping retirees preserve their estates through efficient and wise planning for over 15 years. Weera received his Bachelors Degree in Accounting from California State University, Los Angeles, and his Juris Doctor from Thomas M. Cooley Law School in Lansing, Michigan. He is a member of the State Bar of Michigan, the Grand Rapids Bar Association, and the National Association of Elder Law Attorneys. Each month, Weera holds frequent free seminars in the greater Grand Rapids area, wherein he educates retirees about a wide range of elder law, Medicaid, Medicare, and estate planning issues affecting Michigan citizens.

Shawn Weera – Michigan Elder Law Attorney: http://shawnweeranews.com

The Elder Law Firm P.C. – Home – Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MichiganElderLaw/

Shawn Weera – On New Medicaid Estate Recovery Laws: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/shawn-weera-medicaid-estate-recovery-203800822.html

Contact Info:
Name: SWN
Email: contact@shawnweeranews.com
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Source URL: https://marketersmedia.com/shawn-weera-on-how-to-interpret-medicaid-estate-recovery-laws/319500

For more information, please visit http://shawnweeranews.com

Source: MarketersMedia

Release ID: 319500

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