Elder Law Report Podcast By Greg McIntyre J.D. M.B.A. cover art

Elder Law Report

Elder Law Report

By: Greg McIntyre J.D. M.B.A.
Listen for free

Keeping seniors and their families informed and up to date on estate planning, elder law and other matters. We help seniors navigate the legal maze of aging in America.© 2026 Elder Law Report Personal Development Personal Success Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Spousal Protections For Long-Term Care
    Mar 25 2026

    The scariest sentence we hear from families facing a spouse’s nursing home placement is simple: “We’re going to lose everything.” That fear is understandable, but it often ignores the spousal protections built into long-term care Medicaid rules. We sit down to map the real picture of how benefits can work when one spouse becomes the “applicant spouse” and the other remains the “community spouse” trying to keep the household afloat.

    We start with the foundation that makes every plan possible: legal authority. Being married does not automatically mean you can sign contracts, manage accounts, or make the moves needed to qualify for long-term care benefits. We explain why a healthcare power of attorney and a general durable power of attorney matter so much, from getting the right level-of-care paperwork to executing facility admissions documents. We also dig into a surprise for many couples: even if you share a bank account, you cannot simply access or control assets like an IRA, 401(k), or life insurance policy without the right authority, and real estate can require careful handling too.

    Next we break down the money rules that decide whether the healthy spouse can keep paying the bills. We explain patient liability, how Medicaid covers the gap between income and the cost of care, and how the Minimum Monthly Maintenance Needs Allowance (MMMNA) may allow shifting income to the community spouse up to an allowed limit. We also touch on asset protection planning, including the Community Spouse Resource Allowance (CSRA) and why working with an elder law attorney who actually handles Medicaid benefits can save time, stress, and hard-earned assets.

    If this helped you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend caring for a spouse, and leave a review so more families can find practical guidance when long-term care decisions hit fast.

    Show more Show less
    10 mins
  • Probate: The Court Invite Nobody Wants
    18 mins
  • Paper Burns, Pixels Don’t: Estate Planning In 2026
    Mar 10 2026

    A quiet revolution just reshaped estate planning in North Carolina: a properly certified, attorney‑stored electronic copy of your will can now be probated like the original. We unpack what that means in real life—fewer frantic searches for paper, fewer hearings over missing originals, and a smoother path for families when they need clarity most. With all 100 counties live on e‑courts, the shift from pen and ink to secure digital storage isn’t a trend; it’s the new backbone of reliable probate.

    We walk through the essential safeguards that make e‑wills work. A North Carolina attorney must certify that the digital file is a full and complete copy of your attested will, confirm that you authorized electronic storage, and advise you that tearing up paper no longer revokes a converted will. Revocation still belongs to you—but it now happens in writing, often via a new will that expressly revokes prior wills and codicils, or a written revocation filed alongside the stored record. This paper trail removes guesswork and helps courts honor intent without costly detours.

    You’ll also hear how our secure “vault” system protects documents with bank‑level encryption and strict access controls, why this reduces the risk of “slip‑sheet” tampering, and how families benefit from a simple “click, click, file” experience when it’s time to open probate. Have an older will? You don’t need to start from scratch. Bring it to a North Carolina attorney to certify, convert, and store, so the court can rely on a secure digital copy if the original is lost or destroyed. We also touch on updating plans over time with new wills and codicils and keeping a clean history that’s easy for executors to follow.

    Ready to future‑proof your estate plan with less stress and more certainty? Subscribe, share this episode with someone who handles family documents, and leave a review with your top question about going digital—what would give you the most peace of mind?

    Show more Show less
    16 mins
All stars
Most relevant
loved it! very informational and entertaining!
I will listen to all of them. Great job

great job!

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.