State needs
to get informed consent before grabbing vets’ estates
By Cynthia
Owens in UpRiseRI
Residents at the state
veterans’ home in Bristol, Rhode Island could unwittingly have their estate
assets pass to the home at their death instead of to their family members.
State laws – including
Rhode Island’s – all provide for the passing of decedents’ estates to
beneficiaries named in their wills or to their closest relatives if no valid
wills exist.
Rhode Island law,
however, carves out an exception for estates belonging to its veterans’ home
residents who die without wills.
Instead of their
estates passing to family members, those assets become the property of the
state, which can be used for payment of the home’s high operating expenses.
Label me a stickler
for propriety, but I think that such an exception should be explicitly and
conspicuously disclosed to all veterans applying for admission to the home,
with handwritten confirmation of their understanding and acknowledgment of
same.
Mere mention of the exclusion while elderly and infirm veterans and/or their family members are presented with a multitude of documents to sign during the admissions process should not be deemed adequate disclosure.
Another step in the
right direction would be for the home to provide veterans with a list of
resources for pro bono legal services to obtain wills.
In the wake of local
news media coverage that the state home has been millions of dollars over
budget since the opening of its new facility in 2017, state officials have been
scrambling to lower the deficit through various means – some of which affects
the quality of care for the residents there.
Among the reported
deficit-reducing efforts are:
- switching to an acuity model of nurse staffing (to reduce the number of staff in an already-deficient nursing pool), the efficacy of which is not readily verifiable;
- requiring insurance coverage and/or out-of-pocket payments for in-house physical and occupational therapy services, which some residents in need of ongoing therapy have complained they cannot afford and whose medical conditions make traveling to, and spending hours at, the VA medical center for free therapy so arduous as to be counterproductive; and
- a plan to shave $75,000 off the home’s janitorial services contract, which tripled from $400,000 in the previous 2017-18 fiscal year to $1.2 million for the 2018-19 fiscal year.
But after all the
chipping away, the last news report I checked said the home was still about $2
million in the red.
No worries, though.
Governor Gina Raimondo has
asked the head of the Rhode Island
National Guard, Brigadier General Christopher Callahan – photographed and videoed with the
Governor and Director Kasim Yarn of
the state’s Office of Veterans
Affairs (which oversees the veterans home) on its website home page
– to conduct a review of the home’s operations and financial management.
Why bother to have a third-party audit team, unconnected to veterans affairs matters, handling the review? Transparency is so pesky and overrated.
Why bother to have a third-party audit team, unconnected to veterans affairs matters, handling the review? Transparency is so pesky and overrated.
If officials succeed
in acquiring the home’s deceased war veterans’ estate assets, not only will the
state continue to owe a debt of gratitude to these individuals for their
military service, but it will also be beholden to them for their estates being
used to reduce the home’s unruly deficit spending.
Cynthia
Owens was born and raised in
Bristol, Rhode Island (where her family members still reside), and graduated
from the University of Virginia School of Law. She began her law practice
straight out of law school with Hunton & Williams, a Richmond, Virginia law
firm, then moved to Virginia Beach and worked at another large firm. Married to
a military veteran, today Owens runs a pro bono law practice for military
veterans.