The Benefits of Life Care Funding
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by corestis
5/9/2012
Alliance
will provide one-stop access to the best senior living and long term care
communities and funding options to help families pay for the costs
Life
Care Funding Group and LivingSenior announced today the launch of a strategic partnership between the two
companies. The goal of the two companies
is to provide education and access to seniors and their families about the best
Senior Living and Long Term Care communities in the United States and tools to help families pay for the
costs.
Millions
of people every day are going online looking for two things for themselves
and/or a loved one: where to find the best possible long term care options and how to pay for it. Everyone knows someone who needs information
about these two critical factors, but most people are unsure of where to find
it. LivingSenior’s vast database and
easy to use search capability for independent and assisted living communities,
nursing homes, memory care and home health providers, combined with Life Care
Funding Group’s financial information and resources to help families pay for
the costs makes for a “one-stop” solution for everyone.
“Families
are constantly faced with the double dilemma of not knowing how to find the
most appropriate form of care and what options are available to help them with
the costs”, said Life Care Funding Group President, Chris Orestis, “now
families can find answers to both on the websites of Life Care Funding Group
and LivingSenior”.
For
example, Life Care Funding Group works with thousands of Senior Living and Long
Term Care providers across the country to help educate families about private
pay funding options, and access to programs such as converting a life insurance
policy into a long term care “Assurance Benefit” plan, the Veteran’s Aide &
Attendance Pension, and other financial solutions.
“We
believe strongly it isn’t enough to just provide families with information
about how to access senior living and long term care providers”, said Daniel
Dormer, Co-Founder of LivingSenior, “but they also need to understand their
options to pay for care-- or else how will they be able to afford it?”
LivingSenior’s
website allows families to search at no cost for the exact type of senior
living or long term care that best suits their needs based on numerous criteria
such as: zip-code and geographic location, preferred form of senior housing or
home based services, most appropriate type/level of long term care, and the
availability of funding options to help cover the costs.
Life
Care Funding Group and LivingSenior will be launching a national awareness
campaign to educate the consumer as well as senior care providers/advisors
about how to find and pay for the best possible forms of senior living and long
term care.
by corestis
4/7/2012
FL, CT, and HI look to long term care benefit plans to offset Medicaid costs
Joining Connecticut and Florida, Hawaii is the latest state to pass a study bill establishing a task force and timeframe to examine the conversion of life insurance policies into Long Term Care Benefit Plans. With states facing enormous fiscal pressures and ballooning Medicaid budgets, they are all looking for private market solutions to help extend peoples’ ability to remain private pay in long term care for as long as possible. Millions of seniors will allow a life insurance policy to be abandoned because they do not understand their legal rights of ownership and the options available to them to use the policy for something other than a death benefit. To read the entire article published on Producers E Source.com, click here.
In 2011, the state of Connecticut introduced study bill SB-1153, as “an act establishing a task force to study life insurance policy and annuity conversions and the provision of certain notifications by life insurance companies”.
In 2012, the state of Florida passed HB 5001, to “establish a technical advisory workgroup by August 1, 2012, to examine methods to allow an insured under a life insurance policy or the contract holder of an annuity, to convert the policy or annuity to a long term care benefit".
In 2012, the state of Hawaii passed study bill, SB-2455 to “establish a task force to assess and make recommendations regarding the use of viatical settlements and accelerated death benefits as means of funding long-term care”.
by corestis
3/31/2012
In essence, the arguments for and against PPACA boil down to which side of one simple question you are on: Do the needs of the many outweigh those of the individual or do the rights of the individual outweigh the needs of the many?
The Supreme Court of the United States wrapped up three days of intense deliberation about the constitutionality of President Obama’s Affordable Care Act passed two years ago. Much of the debate centers around the mandate that individuals must purchase health insurance and that companies must make insurance available without exception.
Proponents say the individual mandate will make health insurance more affordable if everyone buys it. Opponents say the exact opposite will occur. Proponents say that for the good of everyone, we need as many people as possible covered by private insurance. Opponents say it is unconstitutional to mandate anyone purchases insurance against their will.
But one only needs look to car insurance mandates across the country requiring that the driver of a vehicle also be insured as an example of forcing people to buy insurance. In essence, the arguments boil down to which side of one simple question you are on: Do the needs of the many outweigh those of the individual or do the rights of the individual outweigh the needs of the many?
One of the opinions expressed during the SCOTUS deliberations is that we already have a safety net funded by everyone to cover those without insurance whenever someone who cannot afford to pay for health care walks into an emergency room. We also have Medicaid to cover the disabled, children, the indigent and seniors requiring long term care.
Unfortunately, Medicaid budgets in every state are at their limit and many are underwater. In 2011, the United States spent over $2 trillion on health care, and Medicaid covered over $420 billion in payments for long term care services. This massive growth in spending necessitated an 11.1 percent across the board cut by CMS for all long term care related expenses reimbursed by Medicare and Medicaid in 2012.
In the 21st century economic reality we now all live in, it is an unsustainable proposition that we can provide massive amounts of health care through the government and our tax payer dollars. Government subsidized health care is an important safety net for millions of people, but we are in the midst of a national re-set when it comes to how people will qualify for subsidized care.
More and more people are going to be pushed towards private pay in health care and long term care, and although there will be plenty of screaming and shouting, the shift is already underway.
Whether it is a person who relies on the emergency room to receive health care or a person who spends down their assets to qualify for Medicaid to cover their long term care costs, they are limiting their choices and options to receive the best possible care, in the best possible environments and in the best possible timeframes.
Private insurance for health care and long term care provides more choice and better quality of care for the individual than government/tax payer subsidized care. Use of resources such as employer based or individually purchased health insurance, long term care insurance, and conversion of life insurance policies into long term care assurance benefit accounts, are private market solutions that are in the best interest of the individual as well as in the best interest of the many.
Regardless of the SCOTUS decision scheduled to be issued in June, this is a debate that is more at the beginning than the end.
This article by Chris Orestis originally ran on www.ProducersWeb.com
by corestis
3/25/2012
Too
often seniors who have owned a life insurance policy for many years, which is
about to lapse or be surrendered for minimal value, will have contacted their
life insurance company to ask about their options. The life insurance company will inform them
that they really only have two options if they don’t pay their premium:
surrender the policy for its cash value (if it has any) or let it lapse. Most people that receive a lapse notice have
no cash value because it has already been drained by the carrier to cover any
unpaid premium payments. That typically
leaves the final option of “pay or go away”.
The number of seniors that allow this to happen to a policy after paying
premiums, sometimes for decades, is scandalously high.
Fast Fact: A policy can be converted to
a private market long term care benefit account locking up the funds to only be
spent on long term care services with the funds being issued monthly by a
benefit administrator to the provider of long term care.
On
November 19, 2010, during testimony at NCOIL’s annual meeting to consider
passing the Consumer Disclosure Model Law, Life Care Funding Group offered the
following observation:
“The
intersection of a growing senior and Baby Boomer population and economic bust
is creating a crisis for how seniors will fund their retirements and eventually
long term care expenses. Our case
workers hear from seniors and their families every day who have been paying
premiums for years and are getting ready to abandon their policy. These are middle class Americans without
insurance expertise and the typical size of their policy is well under
$500,000. This disclosure law will help
consumers understand they have a number of options to consider before
discarding a policy, including converting their policy into a long term care
benefit plan that holds the potential to address their financial shortfalls.”
Families with the need to pay for long term care that are unable or
unwilling to keep their life insurance policy in-force by maintaining premium
payments, or are planning to abandon as part of a Medicaid spend down regimen,
the Assurance Benefit conversion option is a much better choice.
To read more, click here
by Chris Orestis
3/15/2012
Worker confidence in having enough money to pay for long-term care (LTC) expenses in retirement seems to be rising and falling along with the overall health of the economy.
The U.S. economy seemed a little stronger in 2011 than in 2010, and a little weaker earlier this year than around the same time last year. LTC confidence levels have been moving roughly in sync with overall economic confidence levels.
The survey team polled 1,262 U.S. adults over the telephone in January. The sample included 1,003 workers and 259 retirees. All participants were ages 25 and older.
Only 9% of the workers surveyed said they were very confident that they would have enough money to pay for LTC expenses in retirement. The percentage was unchanged from last year, and the level of firm LTC funding confidence is at the lowest level that it has been since 1998.
To read more, click here
by corestis
3/12/2012
A Study Bill passed in
March, 2012 by the Florida Legislature will examine tax dollar savings from
converting life insurance policies into long term care benefit plans for
Medicaid eligibility. The legislative
action establishes a taskforce and timeframe to examine the cost savings for
Florida tax payers derived through the conversion of existing life insurance
policies into long term care benefit plans as part of a required Medicaid
spend-down eligibility regimen. An earlier bi-cameral bill about life insurance
policy conversions, HB 1055/S 1756,
was introduced in January by Rep. Burgin in the state House and Sen. Negron in
the state Senate. Because of the importance and complexities of this critical
subject area, the Legislature chose to conduct a study in 2012 which shall
report back to the Legislature with proposed legislation for the 2013 session.
HB 5001, the Florida state budget, contains the
following in Section 224: “establish a
technical advisory workgroup by August 1, 2012, to examine methods to allow an
insured under a life insurance policy or the contract holder of an annuity, to
convert the policy or annuity to a long term care benefit. The agency
shall submit a report of findings and activities of the workgroup, including
recommendations and proposed legislation, no later than January 15, 2013.”
The
Center for Economic Forecasting and Analysis (CEFA) of Florida State University
analyzed the tax savings impact of converting life insurance policies into long
term care benefit plans on the Florida Medicaid budget. In their analysis
released in January, CEFA “scored” the annual savings for Florida’s tax payers
at approximately $150 million. The savings come from extending the time
Medicaid applicants with a life insurance policy can remain private pay,
delaying entry onto Medicaid by first converting their policy to a private,
long term care benefit account.
In
addition to Rep. Burgin and Sen. Negron, Life Care Funding Group applauds the
Florida Health Care Association and its members for their tireless efforts in
support of this bill and the financial relief it can bring to the state of
Florida. “Following on the heels of the National Conference of Insurance Legislators’ (NCOIL)
unanimous passage of The Life
Insurance Consumer Disclosure Model Law in November, 2010”, said Chris Orestis, Co-Founder and President of Life
Care Funding Group, “this is another positive step forward to bring consumer
protection and education to the owners of life insurance searching for the
financial means to pay for the expensive costs of long term care”. Conversion
of a life insurance policy into a long term care benefit plan is the legal
right of every policy owner in the United States. NCOIL Past-President Rep. Rob
Damron (KY) said of the model law “it is intended to be a strong stand for life
insurance policy owners and would empower consumers through education about
their options"; and numerous states have passed or are now considering
similar consumer protection and disclosure measures.
by corestis
2/22/2012
The Assurance
Benefit is not a long term care insurance policy, annuity, any form of hybrid life/LTCi policies, or an accelerated death benefit--
it is actually
the exchange of a life insurance policy for a long term care benefit plan at
the time that care needs to be paid.
The Assurance Benefit is a unique financial option for seniors because there
are no wait periods, no care limitations, no costs to apply, no requirement to
be terminally ill, and there are no premium payments. Policy owners use their
legal right to convert an in-force life insurance policy to enroll in the
benefit plan and are able to immediately direct payments to cover their senior
housing and long term care costs.
It is in the better
interest of seniors and their family to convert a death benefit into a long
term care benefit and then apply the maximum private market value of the policy
towards their health care needs. If a policy can be converted into the means to
cover the costs of long term care for an extended period, and keep the insured
off of Medicaid that much longer, it is in their best interest and that of the
state’s tax payers. The Assurance Benefit policy conversion is a private sector
solution that addresses the financial needs of the senior and can also help
stressed state budgets by extending the spend down period for a senior before
they would go onto Medicaid.
Introduction:
The Medicaid Problem Grows
Medicaid was created on July 30th, 1965 as a part
of President Lyndon Johnson’s “Great Society”. At that time the entire GDP of
the United States was $791.1 billion, and no one could have predicted that by
2009 the U.S. would spend over $2 trillion on health care in a single year.
Ironically, the last of the baby boom generation had been born by the time
Medicare and Medicaid was first enacted, and on January 1, 2011, 10,000 Baby
Boomers started turning 65 every day
at a pace that will continue uninterrupted for twenty straight years. The
combination of this demographic “Silver Tsunami” and a fractured U.S. economy
could not have come at a worse time for the big three entitlement programs.
Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are all in the red and creating havoc
for government budgets at the federal and state levels. According to Chairman
Ben Bernanke, this has become the number one concern of the Federal Reserve
about the U.S. economy.
To read and download the Complete WHITE PAPER, click here
by corestis
2/16/2012
Issue Brief
The
United States Supreme Court codified as law the legal right of property
ownership for life insurance policies in 1911.
The owner of a policy has the legally protected right to convert their
asset from a life insurance policy into a long care benefit plan by accessing
the private, secondary market. There is
almost $30 trillion of in-force life insurance today in the United States. Comparatively, there is less than $10
trillion of home equity today in the United States and the amount of in-force
long term care insurance is only in the billions. At a time when LTCi sales should have been
exploding, the market instead has been suffering from significant disruption
with rate increases on existing policies and major carriers such as MetLife
ceasing to sell policies. Additionally,
the economy’s impact on the housing market has seriously dampened the ability
of seniors to access home equity to pay for long term care which for years was
the primary source to fund long term care, and part of a Medicaid spend down
regimen, but that has not been the case since 2008. As for owners of life insurance; the middle
class, “small face” policy owner with under $500,000 of death benefit cannot
access the life settlement market as an option either.
With
10,000 Baby Boomers turning 65 every day, the United States has officially
reached the “long term care funding crisis” era. New approaches to fund long term care must be
encouraged, and converting life insurance policies is an option quickly gaining
ground. Unfortunately, owners of life
insurance policies are not aware of their legal rights and options and millions
of seniors are stranded with polices that have outlived their insurable
interest, they can no longer afford, and are counted against them as a
dis-qualifying asset for Medicaid eligibility.
But, legislative leaders across the country are taking action with
consumer protection disclosure laws and legislation to encourage consumers to
convert their life insurance to pay for long term care as an alternative to
abandoning their policies.
Life
insurance is an unqualified asset for Medicaid eligibility, and billions worth
of policies are regularly abandoned by uninformed seniors as they enter their
“long term care years”. Converting a
life insurance policy into a long term care “Assurance Benefit” plan is a
Medicaid qualified spend down of the policy, and it extends the time a person
remains “private pay” before going onto Medicaid. States are under tremendous budget pressure
to keep pace with exploding demand to cover long term care needs with tax payer
money, and they are quickly realizing the savings that can be found for their
beleaguered budgets by delaying entry onto Medicaid through the use of Medicaid
qualified policy conversions.
by corestis
1/24/2012
Center
for Economic Forecasting and Analysis (CEFA) estimates annual savings from
policy conversions over $150 million to Florida Medicaid and Tax Payers
Since the National Conference of Insurance Legislators
(NCOIL) unanimously passed the Life
Insurance Consumer Disclosure Model Law in 2010, states all across the
country have been looking at the cost savings impact on stressed Medicaid
budgets by converting life insurance policies into long term care benefit
plans. The policy conversion option was
one of the consumer protection disclosure requirements included in NCOIL’s
model law, and the nursing home and assisted living industries have been quick
to adopt this funding option to help beleaguered families struggling with the
costs of long term care across the United States. Life Insurance is an unqualified asset for
Medicaid eligibility and it has been standard practice to lapse or surrender a
policy as part of a Medicaid spend down plan.
With billions in face value being abandoned, NCOIL and state law makers
have come to realize that a better option for seniors, the long term care
industry, and tax payers would be to convert these policies instead.
According
to The Center for Economic Forecasting and Analysis (CEFA): In Florida, all Medicaid applicants are specifically
asked if they own life-insurance policies, and if so, they have to disclose the
full policy details. A failure to disclose and comply is fraud. A life-insurance policy is legally recognized as an asset of the
policy owner (with all rights of personal property ownership) and it counts
against the owner when qualifying for Medicaid. If a policy has more than
a minimal amount of cash value (usually in the range of $2,000) it must be
liquidated and that money is to be spent towards cost of care before the owner
will qualify for Medicaid.
According
to the Florida Legislature’s Office of Program Policy Analyses and Government
Accountability: A life-insurance policy
can be surrendered for its cash value to be spent down on care, or a policy can be converted for its
fair market value and the full benefit of that conversion can be used to pay
for long-term care as a qualified spend down. The owner of one or more policies
has a variety of options to consider:
- A
policy with more than a minimal amount of cash value must be surrendered
back to the insurance company with the proceeds spent down on care.
- A
policy with no cash value does not need to be liquidated but the death
benefit will be subject to federally required Medicaid recovery efforts to
return the amount of money spent on care.
- Many
states will exempt a small “final expense” policy if the full death
benefit value is assigned to a funeral home.
With
the introduction of HB1055 in 2012, the Florida legislature has taken the consumer
disclosure protections first introduced by NCOIL a little over a year ago to
its next logical steps. According to
CEFA, the bill introduced in both the Florida House and Senate, would require: a) use of an accelerated death benefit (ADB) rider, if
present, to pay for nursing home care, b) required disclosure to the consumer
of the National Conference of Insurance Legislators (NCOIL) Model Law, (which deals amongst
others with unclaimed property policies), and c) would allow policy conversions as an extended spend down
Medicaid eligibility requirement. The
objectives of the sponsors of the bill are twofold, namely;
·
To
protect consumers by giving policy owners as much information as possible about
their legal rights on life-insurance policy ownership; and
·
To
save taxpayers money by utilizing the value of life-insurance policies and to
delay the need for a citizen becoming dependent on Medicaid.
CEFA’s economic impact study released in January, 2012,
measures the cost saving implications of private market policy conversions for
Florida tax payers and the state Medicaid budget through passage of HB1055. According to the CEFA study entitled, Conversion
of Life Insurance Policies to Long Term Care Benefit Plans in Florida: The objective of this research project is to
examine the impacts of the objective of House Bill 1055, specifically the
opportunities for utilizing life-insurance policy assets as an available means
whereby private funding may pay for long-term health care needs. Medicaid expenses on long-term health care
services for residents may be offset by…
$157.4 million on conversion of their life-insurance policies into
long-term health care benefit plans per year.
Pressure on the Medicare and Medicaid safety nets are
growing daily (literally by 10,000 people per day) and it is imperative that
private market alternatives are embraced as quickly as possible. The primary champion for this consumer
protection disclosure law has been the Florida Health Care Association
representing nursing homes and assisted living communities throughout the
state. They recognize that it is in the
better interest of the consumer to be fully informed of their options to use a
life insurance policy to help pay for long term care as an alternative to
abandoning the policy. It is also in the
best interest of tax payers to extend the spend down period of a life insurance
policy by converting it to its fair market value, allowing someone to remain
private pay for as long as possible.
To read the entire article, click here.
by corestis
12/30/2011
2011 was a
benchmark year for the Baby Boom generation.
By the time the clock strikes mid-night and we welcome 2012, almost 4
million Baby Boomers will have turned 65 years of age. During the 365 days of 2011, ten thousand
Americans turned 65 each and every day.
2012 is only the second of a twenty year journey where that pace
continues annually until it ends with almost 80 million Baby Boomers crossing
the threshold of age 65. What other
benchmarks occurred in 2011?
·
MetLife
exited the long term care insurance market, and additional departures from the
market are anticipated this year;
·
The
CLASS Act was enacted and then killed in the midst of a Medicaid funding crisis
to pay for costs of long term care across the United States;
·
Medicaid
spent $427 billion prompting CMS to summarily cut all long term care funding by
Medicare and Medicaid across the board 11.1%;
·
We
saw equity in American homes drop to under 50% for the first time in our
nation’s history to just under $10 trillion, and by comparison, in-force life
insurance now stands at almost $30 trillion;
·
NCOIL
passed the Life Insurance Consumer
Disclosure Model Law to attack the massive problem of seniors abandoning
life insurance policies because they are unaware of alternative options;
·
State
legislatures started looking at how converting life insurance policies into
long term care benefit plans could save tax payers money by extending the spend
down period before Medicaid eligibility;
·
The Florida Legislature introduced a first in the
Nation consumer protection bill (HB 1055) that provides for conversion of a
life insurance policy into a long term care benefit plan as a Medicaid
eligibility requirement, use of accelerated death benefits to pay for nursing
home (SNF) costs, and mandates the NCOIL Life
Insurance Consumer Disclosure Model Law.
What we are
seeing as we enter 2012, is a growing awareness that this $30 trillion pool of
in-force life insurance policies is an asset base of immense proportions and a
source for long term care funding solutions.
But, the policies are in the hands of owners that for the most part have
no understanding of their legal ownership rights and the variety of options
available to use their property while still alive. Seniors in particular have been the most
vulnerable to lack of information, and therefor disproportionately abandon life
insurance policies in their final years.
This lack of information coupled with difficulty affording premium
payments, disappearance of the original insurable interest when the policy was
initiated (the children have grown up and/or lack of spouse), and life
insurance ownership counting against Medicaid eligibility all conspire to push
seniors to needlessly abandon policies.
Consumer protection measures such as the NCOIL Model Law and Florida
legislation, long term care funding options such as policy conversions, and
education efforts spear headed by the assisted living and nursing home industry
will have a major impact in 2012.
This is the
year when policy owners will start to come out of the dark in large
numbers. As they become better informed
about their legal rights of ownership and alternatives to policy abandonment,
they will realize that a life insurance policy they are about to discard can be
put to much better use helping them pay for long term care. And based on the growing demographic tide,
ongoing economic malaise, cuts by the government in Medicare and Medicaid (as
well as elimination of programs like CLASS act), and the very challenging
marketplace for long term care insurance-- the emergence of another private
market funding solution for long term care services comes not a moment too
soon.
If 2011 was
the year of challenges and a search for solutions; 2012 will be the year of
awareness and implementing solutions.
Contact us today for a
free, no-obligation consultation.
Call 1-888-670-7773 to learn more.
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