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January 2015

When many local families take their parents financial information and meet with a caseworker, they are told their parents do not qualify for public benefits because their income is too high. Their parents may have worked for an employer that provided their parents with a pension like the Navy, the State of Connecticut, or Electric Boat.  Because their income exceeds poverty levels, their parents can’t get Title 19 (Medicaid), Veterans Aid & Attendance or the Medicare Savings Program.  Their parents own nothing other than a home and a beat up Buick and yet they do not qualify for benefits?  It leaves those families scratching their heads.

Families want Title 19 because it pays for medical assistance.  Veterans Aid & Attendance can provide a monthly check that helps the veteran and his spouse remain safely at home.  The Medicare Savings Program, sometime referred to as the Qualified Medicare Beneficiary Program, helps a parent pay for Medicare Part B health insurance premiums.

Our message to families is don’t give up.  There is a trust that can reduce your parents income to the level that parents will qualify for Medicaid, Veterans Aid & Attendance or the Medicare Savings Program (QMB).  It is called a Pooled Trust and it is administered by a non-profit corporation in Hartford, CT, called Planned Lifetime Assistance Network (PLAN) of CT.

Let’s take an example.  Dad is 80 and lives at home. He wants to get Medicaid on the Connecticut Home Care Program for Elders.  This program has an asset limit of $1,600 and a monthly income limit of $2,163. Dad has monthly income of $3,200 from his years in the Navy.  He initially was told that he could not get Medicaid because his income was too high.  His daughter set up an appointment with an elder law attorney.  The attorney recommends that Dad create a Pooled Trust and place Dad’s excess income into the Trust on a monthly basis.  Dad places his excess $1,000 into the trust monthly and PLAN as Trustee pays any unreimbursed medical expenses, additional caregiver services, and other living expenses such as his mortgage (if any), property taxes, utilities, etc.  Dad now gets approximately 72 hours of assistance a week through the Program, which includes companion care, homemaker services, and home health aides.  This Medicaid program also covers co-pays, deductibles, and prescription drugs. Problem solved.

If your parent’s income is too high to qualify for public benefits, call Jack Reardon or Joseph Cipparone.  They can help you create a Pooled Trust.

 

Happy New Year!  Some of you may wonder how much you can give this year without having to file a gift tax return and whether you need to do some estate tax planning.  Here are the key figures to keep in mind for 2015:

Estate Tax Exclusion.     This year, the federal estate tax exclusion is $5,430,000.  Thus, if an estate is worth less than that amount, no federal estate tax will be due.  The estate tax rate is 40% of the amount above estate tax exclusion.  Each spouse has his or her own estate tax exemption and can use a predeceased spouse’s unused estate tax exemption.  This principle is known as the “portability of unused exemption between spouses.”  With portability, couples can now have assets of $10,860,000 without owing any federal estate tax.  A surviving spouse who remarries will lose the prior deceased spouse’s exemption. 

The Connecticut estate tax exclusion remains at $2,000,000.  If an estate is worth less than that amount, no Connecticut estate tax will be due.  The estate tax rate ranges from 7% to 12% depending on the amount above the Connecticut estate tax exclusion.  Like the federal estate tax, each spouse has his or her own estate tax exemption.  Unlike the federal estate tax, however, there is no portability in Connecticut.  The only way for a couple to use their entire $4,000,000 estate tax exclusion is by having a credit shelter trust.

Gift Tax Exclusion.     The annual federal gift tax exclusion is $14,000 for 2015. If a person makes gifts of $14,000 each to 4 different individuals, none of the gifts are considered taxable and none of them have to be reported on Form 709, the federal gift tax return.  In 2015, a taxpayer can split gifts with his or her spouse so that $28,000 can be given to each donee.   A taxpayer, however, must report split gifts on Form 709.  The annual exclusion for gifts to non-citizen spouses is not the same as the annual exclusion for gifts to U.S. citizen spouses.  That is because gifts to non-citizen spouses can be subject to federal gift tax.  Gifts to citizen spouses are not subject to gift tax because of the unlimited gift tax marital deduction.  The annual exclusion for gifts to non-citizen spouses in 2015 is $147,000.

Besides the annual exclusion, each taxpayer also has a lifetime gift tax exclusion.  In 2014, the lifetime gift tax exclusion is $5,430,000.  By applying some of your lifetime gift tax exclusion, a gift with a value in excess of the $14,000 annual exclusion will result in no gift tax owed, but you must file a Form 709 with the IRS.  When you die, your estate tax exclusion will be reduced by the amount of the gift over the annual exclusion.  The lifetime gift tax exclusion is the same for U.S. resident non-citizens and U.S. citizens.  The federal gift tax rate is 40% for the amount above the lifetime gift tax exclusion.

In 2015, the Connecticut lifetime gift tax exclusion is $2,000,000.  Connecticut and the U.S. government have the same annual gift tax exclusion of $14,000.   You have to file a Connecticut gift tax return if you make any taxable gifts.   For example, if you are not married, and you give $50,000 to each of your 2 children, you will have to file a Connecticut gift tax return, even though no gift tax is payable.

Federal and Connecticut gift tax returns are due by April 15 of the year following the gift.