Wessels & Liebau Elder Law Blog
The Father I Lost
I write this on June 21, 2015. Today is Father’s Day. It is also the day that the Team I created in memory of my mother, Velma ,is taking part in The Longest Day, a fundraiser for the Alzheimer’s Association.
What’s Really Wrong with Family Care
I’ll tell you what’s really wrong with Family Care, in my opinion. The Budget proposals don’t fix the problems I am going to talk about.
The Mom I Knew
My mother Velma was complex and our relationship was complicated. Like many women of her generation, she took a job during World War II. As a chemistry major in college, she worked in a plant that developed therapeutic uses for penicillin.
Home for the Holidays
As the rest of you are getting ready to slow down for the holiday season, at Wessels Law Office we are gearing up to be busy. Many non-retail businesses experience a slowdown over the holidays, and retailers feel a January slump. In elder law, on the other hand, we invariably see an uptick in our intake calls between Thanksgiving and New Year’s, and especially just afterward.
Timing is everything…
In understanding the ins and outs of Medicaid and divestment, timing is everything.
10 important points about irrevocable Medicaid trusts
With the State’s drastic changes to estate recovery, there has been a corresponding increase in the number of clients for whom an irrevocable trust becomes an attractive option for Medicaid planning.
Do Spousal Impoverishment Protections Apply to Same-sex Married Couples?
In a decision dated June 6, 2014, Judge Barbara Crabb struck down Wisconsin’s constitutional amendment prohibiting same-sex marriage in Wisconsin. You can read her full decision here. As a result, many same-sex couples are happily marrying in Wisconsin.
Medicaid Myths Part Three: Estate Recovery
Myth: “I heard I have to turn over my home to the state in order to get Medicaid.”
Medicaid Myths Part Two: Divestment and Millionaires
This article will delve into the second major area of misunderstanding in Medicaid: Divestment.
Medicaid Misinformation – Clearing up eligibility myths
A fair amount of my work with clients and even other professionals involves clearing up misconceptions they have about how Medicaid works.
Is the End of “Spousal Refusal” Really Anything to be Upset About?
The Wisconsin Legislature has changed the way Medicaid works for married people. And one of the changes was intended to attack a Medicaid Planning method used successfully by many elder law attorneys, including myself (although, I have to say I never had reason to use it much.)
A well-kept secret may allow couples to keep more assets and still qualify for Medicaid
This article will explain a little-used technique that allows a married couple who has income below a certain amount to be able to keep more assets than are typically allowable for married couples in Medicaid cases.
New Wisconsin Estate Recovery Laws Create High Hurdles for Trustees
There is a section of Wisconsin’s new Estate Recovery law that is not found in the statutes dealing with Medicaid (Chapter 49). Instead, it is in the statutes that deal with trusts.
Wisconsin’s New Estate Recovery Laws for Community-based Care Discriminate Against People Who Only Need a Little Care, and Will Force People into Nursing Homes Sooner
One of the hidden changes in Wisconsin’s Estate Recovery law has to do with the formula for how the State will recover the costs of care for people who are able to receive long-term care in the community.
Why Wisconsin’s Family Care Program May Force Some People into Nursing Homes
Today’s blog goes past the recent budget changes, to talk about an issue that is concerning to the families of Alzheimer’s patients, and that is not commonly known.
Does Wisconsin’s New Medicaid Law Mean the End of the Family Farm and Business?
This is the third in a series of articles looking at the changes made to Medicaid for nursing homes and the Family Care program in Wisconsin. These changes are in the latest Biennial Budget passed on June 30, 2013.