<p>Most low- and middle-income Americans qualify for free online tax preparation software, but do not take advantage of it. And anyone over age 60 can use the IRS’s Tax Counseling for the Elderly program.</p>
<p>As baby boomers age, more and more millennials are becoming caregivers. Many are taking on this role while just getting started in their own lives, leading to difficult decisions about priorities. Proper planning can help them navigate this terrain. </p>
<p>A spending bill signed into law by the President contains major changes to retirement plans. The bipartisan legislation is designed to provide more incentives to save for retirement, but it may require workers to rethink some of their planning. </p>
<p>This year's cost-of-living increase for Supplemental Security Income and Social Security Disability Insurance recipients is just 1.6 percent, a sharp drop from last year's 2.8 percent increase. </p>
Medicaid Planning in Simsbury CTWhen you need help with the Medicaid Planning process in Simsbury CT, call Weatherby & Associates, PC. If you and your spouse are facing a debilitating condition for which you are financially unprepared to handle, you don’t know where to turn. Experienced in elder law issues, you want a local firm […]
Connecticut Probate Services.In the greater Hartford CT area, rely on the experienced probate lawyers at Weatherby & Associates to protect your interests in probate court. Weatherby & Associates is a law firm that has served clients in Connecticut for over 20 years. When you need probate services, turn to a local firm with skill and […]
<p>The federal government has released the 2020 federal guidelines for how much money the spouses of Medicaid recipients may keep, as well as related Medicaid figures.</p>
<p>Advocates are warning that a little-noticed proposed rule change could result in hundreds of thousands of Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) recipients, many of them children, losing benefits.</p>
<p>If an ABLE account has been set up for a person with special needs, what happens to the account if the beneficiary no longer qualifies as “disabled” according to IRS regulations due to medical improvement or inaccurate diagnosis?</p>
