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Miller Trust
Paying
for nursing home care is difficult for many Arkansans. Many are
forced to seek Medicaid eligibility. There are several
requirements to qualify for long-term care Medicaid. The major
Medicaid eligibility requirements are that the individual:
-
requires nursing home
level of care;
-
has resources that total
no more than $2000, with some being excluded; and
-
has income less than the
income cap.
This article
addresses one of the major problems of having too much
income to qualify yet too little to pay for nursing home care..
Individuals in this situation are “trapped in the gap.”
Arkansas is
one of 20 or so states that have a strict income limit on
Medicaid eligibility for long-term care services. These
services are not part of the medically needy program, so, no
spend-down of income is allowed. States like Arkansas have
various names like “income cap’ states or my favorite, “Utah
Gap” states. Utah, by the way, is not an income cap state. My
friend, Virginia Fraiser former Colorado State Ombudsman, is
credited with the term. She described the difference between
the income cap and the ability to pay for nursing home care as
being as wide as a gap in the Utah canyons. The term stuck.
The present
income cap in Arkansas is $1656.00 a month. The average monthly
cost for nursing home care is somewhere between $3500 and $4000
a month. Obtaining nursing home care, if your income falls
between “the gap”, is difficult if not impossible. Your spouse,
should you have one, can suffer. They can be left with a choice
of taking care of you or having no money to live on. Nursing
home care is no option at all in some cases.
John and Mary
Smith provide an example. They are retired and have a modest
income. John receives $1700 a month from Social Security and a
pension. Mary receives $300 a month in Social Security. Their
combined total income is $2000 a month. John recently suffered
a stroke and is presently hospitalized. Complications require
him to need skilled nursing home care once he leaves the
hospital. The cost of nursing home care will be at least $3500
a month. John’s income is too high to qualify for Medicaid and
their combined income will barely pay for John’s care, if at
all. John cannot afford to go into a nursing home and Mary is
unable to care for him at home. John and Mary are “trapped in
the gap.”
The Smiths
are caught in a situation that is all too common. They
are neither wealthy enough to pay for care nor poor enough to
qualify for Medicaid. There is, however, a way for John
to become income eligible. This can be accomplished by using an
income only trust also called a Miller Trust. It
does not require any advanced planning and is typically used in
a crisis situation like the Smiths. Once he is eligible for
Medicaid, the cost of John’s nursing home care would be
covered. It would also allow Mary to benefit from the Medicaid
spousal impoverishment provisions.
A
Miller Trust is an irrevocable trust that permits the individual
to become income eligible under Medicaid. All of the John’s income would go
into the trust. Funds from the Miller Trust would pay the
nursing home. Medicaid, if John is eligible in all other
respects, would pay what the trust did not cover.
The spousal
impoverishment provisions could be used to help Mary. Should
they apply, Mary would not be required to contribute any of
her own income to John’s care. Some of John's income could be
contributed to Mary. This is called the Community Spouse
Monthly Maintenance Needs Allowance. This is a combination of a
basic income allowance and a shelter allowance. The basic
income allowance equals a percentage of the poverty level. The
excess shelter allowance equals the amount of shelter costs
(rent, mortgage, taxes, insurance, and utilities) which exceeds
30% of the basic income allowance. The total needs allowance is
set to a specific amount which is linked to the consumer price
index.
Then Mary can
receive a contribution from John to bring her income up to the
amount of the needs allowance. If Mary’s income was greater
than the needs allowance, she would get no contribution. This
contribution is referred to as the Community Spouse Monthly
Income Allowance. In the example, Mary’s income is so low that
she would be able to receive part of John’s income. This is the
kind of positive outcome the spousal impoverishment provisions
were meant to produce.
A Miller
Trust will not help everyone in this situation. The individual
can still have too much income for the trust to work. The Trust
is also considered a last resort with no other options
available. An elder law attorney or an attorney experienced in
Medicaid can answer any questions you have and determined if
this type of trust is an option.
This article
is for informational purposes only. Nothing contained therein
is intended to be, nor should be, taken for legal advice. |