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QC10092014

58 The QUEE NS Courier • business • october 9, 2014 for breaking news visit www.queenscourier.com ▶business The Elder Law Minute TM Special Needs Planning and Retirement Assets By Ronald A. Fatoullah, Esq. and Debby Rosenfeld, Esq. Traditional IRAs and other retirement accounts are often comprised of funds that individuals have worked hard to build up over a significant period of time. These vehicles provide for tax deferment which means that the participants have not paid any taxes on monies initially contributed. The assumption is that when the account holder begins to take out distributions when he reaches retirement age (70 ½), he will be in a lower tax bracket at such time thereby maximizing his savings. Owners of IRAs are commonly advised to designate specific individuals such as their spouses and/or children or other relatives as beneficiaries, and not trusts or other entities. The reason is that when a person dies, the specific beneficiary has his own definable age and life expectancy so that the value of the IRA and the distributions can be stretched out over the beneficiary’s own life expectancy. It is for this reason that one’s estate should not be a designated beneficiary. An estate is an entity and does not have a life expectancy. People who have a disabled child or relative often feel it is helpful to name such child as a beneficiary on their IRAs. This designation ensures that there will be money set aside for the disabled person to live on. Unfortunately, this thinking is usually erroneous, because many disabled individuals rely on governmental entitlements such as Supplemental Security Income (“SSI”) and Medicaid which are both need-based benefits. A person is allowed to have only a limited amount of assets and income in order to be eligible for these benefits. A disabled individual cannot have more than $2,000 in non-exempt assets in order to qualify for SSI, which, in turn, makes him automatically eligible for Medicaid. If a disabled individual who is receiving any of these benefits is designated as a beneficiary on an IRA, he will most likely lose his ability to qualify. In order to avoid imperiling a disabled person’s benefits, people often resort to supplemental needs or special needs trusts (“SNTs”) as a means by which to provide for the disabled beneficiary. Assets are transferred to a trust which is governed by an agreement ensuring that the trust funds will be used for all of the extras the person needs during his lifetime. When a third party’s assets are properly transferred to an SNT, the disabled beneficiary can continue receiving all governmental entitlements while the trust funds are available, at the full discretion of the trustee, for all of the beneficiary’s additional needs. Because a trust is similar to an estate in many ways, one would think that it would not be prudent to designate a trust as a beneficiary of an IRA. Like an estate, a trust is an entity with no life expectancy. Nonetheless, the IRS has carved out certain exceptions so that a trust can be designated as an IRA beneficiary if certain conditions are met. Accordingly, an SNT can be named as a beneficiary of an IRA, but the designation should be done with extreme caution. The ultimate goal would be to maintain the tax treatment (stretch of distributions) of the IRA while not disqualifying the beneficiary from governmental entitlements. The IRS has ruled that if the trust is a “look through” or “see through” entity, the stretch income tax treatment of the IRA will be available. In other words, if we are able to ‘see through’ the trust and identify the beneficiaries, then a life expectancy can be determined by using the life expectancy of the specific individual beneficiary and the trust can get the favorable stretched income tax treatment. The only type of trust that can work in this scenario is an ‘accumulation trust.’ With an accumulation trust, the trustee has the choice either to pay out or retain in trust any IRA distributions the trustee receives. In an accumulation trust, if there is more than one beneficiary, the beneficiary with the shortest life expectancy will be used in measuring the payout. Accordingly, naming an elderly relative as a successor beneficiary (if the current disabled beneficiary dies) would not be prudent because the IRS rules require that such elderly beneficiary’s life expectancy be used. In addition, it is problematic to name charity as one of the trust beneficiaries (in addition to the disabled person), because the IRS considers charities to have a zero life expectancy. Where there are multiple beneficiaries including a charity, the charity will always have the shortest life expectancy and will nullify any opportunity to stretch out IRA distributions. If any planning is involved where one wishes to designate a disabled person as a beneficiary of an IRA, it is prudent and advisable to seek the advice and counsel of an attorney who specializes in this field. Ronald A. Fatoullah, Esq. is the principal of Ronald Fatoullah & Associates, a law firm that exclusively concentrates in elder law, estate planning, Medicaid planning, guardianships, estate administration, trusts, wills, and real estate. Debby Rosenfeld, Esq. is a senior staff attorney at the firm. The law firm can be reached at 718-261-1700, 516-466-4422, or toll free at 1-877-ELDER-LAW or 1-877-ESTATES. Mr. Fatoullah is also the co-founder of JR Wealth Advisors, LLC. The wealth management firm can be reached at 516- 466-3300 or 800-353-3775. elder law ROnald Fatoullah ESQ, CELA* NEW ‘WELCOME TO HOWARD BEACH’ SIGN DONATED BY LOCAL ORGANIZATION BY SALVATORE LICATA [email protected] @Sal_Licata1 It’s a welcoming message. The old and beaten up Howard Beach welcome sign, located in the welcome triangle on Cross Bay Boulevard and 155th Avenue, will soon be replaced by a brand-new one, thanks to a donation by the Howard Beach Memorial Services. “We put the original sign up and realized that now it needs replacing,” said Ray York, a founder of the Howard Beach Memorial Services. The original sign has seen its better days. The paint is chipped, the bricks around it are out of place and there is a large hole in the bottom corner of it. The new sign will have a different look to it. Instead of being green with gold letters, it will have a white trim with a blue body and gold lettering along with the picture of a seagull on the top. The sign has been completed as of Oct. 7 and was created by ADP USA, located at 190 Beach 116th St. It will be installed within the next two weeks. The project for the new sign was part of the Howard Beach/Lindenwood Civic Association’s summer beautification list. The association was originally just looking for a person to come in and paint the sign, but York and the organization went a step further. The Howard Beach Memorial Services was set up by York and Ed Murray about two decades ago. The service has donated signs and flag poles all around the neighborhood, such as the ones in the welcome triangle, Wetzel Square and Charles Park. Replacing the beaten up welcome sign was something that just made sense for York and the organization. “The sign needed to be replaced,” York said. “People ask us if we can help them out and if we can do it, we do it.” Photo courtesy of Paul Ohana The new sign that will be installed at the welcome triangle in Howard Beach


QC10092014
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