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Financial 101 From Poverty to Prosperity Presented by: Katherine Carol The Shining Beautiful Series www.TheShiningBeautifulSeries.com Email: [email protected] PH: 720-771-6535

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Page 1: Financial 101.2012

Financial 101 From Poverty to Prosperity

Presented by:

Katherine Carol

The Shining Beautiful Series www.TheShiningBeautifulSeries.com

Email: [email protected]

PH: 720-771-6535

Page 2: Financial 101.2012

Overview

The Problem

– Poverty should not be a life goal.

– Where is that on the IEP or IP, etc?

– The median family income for families who

experience disability is less than half of the

national average.

Page 3: Financial 101.2012

Is a Crisis Brewing?

Increased need for caregiving and general support as population ages.

Demographics are working against us as workers retire from the workforce and young people choose other professions.

Aging boomers can afford to pay top dollar for help…and most likely will.

Page 4: Financial 101.2012

Financial Impact

According to www.caregiving.org the average caregiver will lose over $700,000 of income during their lifetime.

The longer the caregiving the higher the loss.

Single parents and older women fare the worst.

Page 5: Financial 101.2012

Four Steps to Financial Self-Determination

Discovery

Plan

Resource Development

Long Term Advocacy

Strategies

Page 6: Financial 101.2012

Discovery

What is the dream/vision?

Short term goals?

Long term goals?

Needed tools and strategies?

Support network?

Guiding principles?

What is everyone’s job?

Page 7: Financial 101.2012

Discovery

Trends/Wildcards

New Options in Self-

Determination

The Science of Possibilities

Life Creation/Co-creating a New

Future

Self-Discovery

Page 8: Financial 101.2012

Financial Self-Determination-The Plan

Life Phases

Time Assessment

Current Support Fact Sheet

Current Available Resources

Needs Assessment

Organizational Strategies

Page 9: Financial 101.2012

Brother

6%

Father

24%

Mother

38%

Personal

Care

18%Camp

1%

School

13%

Mother

Father

School

Camp

Personal Care

Brother

From Years 1994-1999

Page 10: Financial 101.2012

Brother

0%

Father

21%

Mother

58%

Personal

Care

8%

Camp

1%

School

12%Mother

Father

School

Camp

Personal Care

Brother

From 1999-April 2002

Page 11: Financial 101.2012

Father

0%

Mother

80%

Personal

Care

8%

Camp

2%School

12%

Mother

Father

School

Camp

Personal Care

From April 2002

Page 12: Financial 101.2012

Father

0%

Mother

50%

Personal

Care

47%

School

0%

Mother

Father

School

Camp

Personal Care

Camp

3%

From May 2005

Page 13: Financial 101.2012

Funding Source Amount Received

per Year (Since

age 18)

Source Services Provided Amount

Needed Projected Needs

$ 6,540 SSI Food/Rent $900

$ 6,420 Father PASS Plan $6420

$ 20,000 Denver Options/ Child/Adult Care

$ 1,536 EBD Waiver Helps pay for care

Total $36,496

$86,600 In Kind/Financial

Contributions by Mother

In-home personal care/laundry/ meal preparation/ cleaning and

repairing equipment/scheduling & transporting to medical and

dental appointments/School Activities/Meetings and Staffings

with Rehabilitation Personnel, Special Educators,

Coordinators Therapists/Casemanagers (up to 15 different

agencies to obtain necessary resources)/Fundraising

&Resource Development/Personal

Shopping/Telephoning/Meeting Family and

Friends/Housing/Utilities/Food/Clothing/

Medical Copay/Benefits Management/Camp Fees

$27,000-$50,000 Medicaid Personal Care/Medical Equipment/Dental/Medical

Issues/Therapy(new policy in Colorado will terminate

therapy after the age of 20)

Page 14: Financial 101.2012

Short Term

Funding

$20,000 Consumer Directed

Assistance

Easter Seal Camp Fees/Talk with Technology Camp

$10,000 VR Assistive Technology Training and Support, New

Computer and Software

More if

work hours

are

extended

Grand Total

Ranges from

$153,620 to

$177,920

The range includes years when there is a need to

purchase all new durable medical equipment (Power

wheelchair costs $25,000, Augmentative

Communication Costs $8,500 and Manual Wheelchair

costs $3000)

Page 15: Financial 101.2012

Category of Service Provided/Funded by Need Comments

Household Maintenance Family-Mikelle’s rent $400.

SSI requires this fee

Ongoing Involves frequently house cleaning, house hold repair and repainting due to damage from

wheelchair to doors and walls.

Food/Clothing $300 per month-Funded by SSI,

CS

Ongoing Includes meal preparation 5-6 Xs per day, laundry

Personal Assist Mother, Patricia Hampton-Maxim

Healthcare-Medicaid and out of

pocket

Nina Petteway-overnights-out of

pocket $300-$500 per month-

funded by Mom and Family

Support-$750 per year

Ongoing Weekly scheduling for both personal care assistance and overnight help average of 6 times

per week. Average length of stay for personal care assistants is 2 years for week day care.

No consistent care has been available on weekends for over two years, no care for the

last 6 months as of 9/15/02. Frequent turnover in overnight care usually every 3-6 months.

Recruitment of help in this area goes on continually.

Transportation 1989 Dodge Caravan -152,000

miles – provided by mother

Ongoing Maintenance, gas, tires, replacement Annual Cost- $2200 per year

Assistive Technology Family, Medicaid, possibly

vocational rehabilitation

1 time &

ongoing

Communication device sent back and reprogrammed by Mom ($548 for extended warranty

and & countless hours of programming and returns for repairs)

Talking with Technology Camp. Cell phone-paid by mother $150 for speaker phone and $33

per month for calling program-phone used for independent grocery shopping, calling friends

and asking for help from mom

Environmental

Engineering/Home

modifications

Primarily Mother/ Father

contributes some materials

Every few

years-not

completed-

Mikelle has some Infrared capabilities with her computer but lacks other helpful devices to

assist her with emergency calls in the home, appliances and heating controls. There is a need

for time, programming and training, for all available equipment to be functional. Cost is $75

per hour-possibly funded by Vocational Rehabilitation Home Modification costs were

$3500-not complete for kitchen.

Supported Employment Marge Chavez/Community

Options/Mother

6-weeks in

the summer

Mikelle is currently attending East High School in the Denver Public Schools System doing

some career exploration. She will be able to attend school until age 21. Mikelle has had 4

supported employment opportunities. Most are short projects but pay. She has had two part

time summer jobs and one summer where she was home all summer due to lack of

employment opportunities. Summer of 2000, job coaching expenses paid by mother $1200

for 6 weeks @ $25 per hour.

Fact Sheet on Supports and Services

for Mikelle

Page 16: Financial 101.2012

Fact Sheet on Supports and Services for Mikelle

Community Accessibility Mother, OT every other week Mikelle goes to the grocery store independently but still requires assistance for most

activities. She has gone to two Nsync concerts with friends other recreation

opportunities are provided by mother.

Medical Supplies Medicaid Ongoing

DME Medicaid Ongoing Seating clinics, wheelchair procurement procedures for both power and manual

wheelchairs, cleaning, repair appointments (4-6Xs per year) communication mounts,

scoliosis brace etc.

RX Medicaid/Mother Ongoing On-going prescription now paid for by Medicaid-previously co-pay by mother.

Medical/School and

Benefits Management

Mother Ongoing Application processes for Talk with Technology Camp, Denver Social Services, Social

Security, Vocational Rehabilitation, appeals processes, and program design and delivery

for Individual Education Plan & Transition Planning (6X-10X per year). Scheduling and

meeting with Physical Therapist, Occupational Therapist and Nurse Supervisor weekly,

Case Managers quarterly, Assistive Technology 6Xs per year. Annual Doctor’s

appointment, sick child appointments, emergency room (rarely), dentist appointments

and dental surgery, orthopedic surgeries and follow-up appointments 2Xs per year

Handling any financial disputes, fundraising (nearly $50,000 in therapy and equipment

prior to Medicaid eligibility)

Respite Rare or non-existent at this point.

No funding source.

Ongoing $275 per weekend for respite if available. Hourly rate ranges from $20 per hour.

Page 17: Financial 101.2012

Resource Development

Government Programs – CDAS

– PASS Plans

– VR

– Home of Your Own

– Individual Development Accounts

Private Resources – Foundations

– Family

– Micro-enterprises

– Community Foundations

Grants – Scholarships

– Business grants

Page 18: Financial 101.2012

Exit and Succession Strategies

Key Person Inventory

Long-Term Financial/Investment

Planning

Benefits Management

Special Needs Trusts

Individual Board of Directors

More Management &

Organizational Strategies

Page 19: Financial 101.2012

Resource Information

Social Security Administration

– www.ssa.gov

– www.passplans.org

Vocational Rehabilitation

– www.cdhs.state.co.us/ods/dvr/

Individual Training Accounts

Individual Development Accounts

– Savings Plus Program

– http://www.savingspluscolorado.org/faq.htm

Home of Your Own

– http://www.delnortendc.org/homeownership.html

– www.fanniemae.com or by calling the Consumer Resource Center at 1-800-7FANNIE (1-800-732-6643).

Presenters

– Tracy Kovach [email protected]

– Katherine Carol

[email protected] ph. 303-861-5256

Page 20: Financial 101.2012

For People Who Dream and Need a Plan

Available from Tango

Publishing, LLC

888-706-0176

or

On amazon.com