People with disabilities finally get a way to save money

pacificnorthwestdoodles:

NEW YORK — Justin Bainbridge is 27 and works two jobs, but he wasn’t
allowed to start saving money for his future until a few months ago.

Bainbridge
has Down syndrome, and like other people with disabilities who receive
government benefits, he can’t have more than $2,000 in savings. If he
does, he would start to lose those much-needed benefits. But a new type
of savings vehicle is giving Bainbridge, and others, a chance to save
more cash.

Known as ABLE accounts, they let people with
disabilities and their families save up to $14,000 a year without losing
benefits. The accounts, which were made possible by a law signed two
years ago, are operated by individual states and are similar to 529
college savings plans. So far, 16 states offer the plans and about 10
more are expected to do so this year. Most of the states let
non-residents sign up. Each state has different rules or maintenance
fees, with some charging as much as $15 every three months.

Disability
advocates say the accounts are badly needed, since people with
disabilities were forced to spend extra money to avoid losing benefits.
With ABLE accounts, money saved can be used to buy anything that helps
the life of the person with a disability, such as rent payments, school
tuition or groceries.

“I’m saving for a new couch,” says Bainbridge, who shares a two-bedroom apartment in Omaha, Nebraska, with a friend.

Since
June, he has put away more than $1,800 in an Enable account, the ABLE
program run by Nebraska. He makes about $5,200 a year from his part-time
jobs, one folding towels at a gym and another collecting movie tickets
at a theater. But he still needs his monthly Supplemental Security
Income cash benefit to help pay his rent and live independently, says
his mother, Kim Bainbridge, who also stashes away money for him in the
ABLE account.

For
years, disability advocates have tried unsuccessfully to increase the
$2,000 savings limit, which hasn’t been changed in nearly three decades.

“It
kind of shackles you to a life of poverty,” says Christopher Rodriguez,
a senior public policy adviser at the National Disability Institute in
Washington.

The idea for ABLE accounts came about a decade ago
from parents of kids with disabilities who were frustrated that they
could not easily save money for their children. One of those parents,
Stephen Beck Jr., spent years advocating and lobbying for a law. Beck
unexpectedly passed away in 2014, just a few weeks before President
Barack Obama signed it into law. To honor Beck, the law was named The
Stephen Beck Jr. Achieving a Better Life Experience Act.

His
widow, Catherine Beck, is using an ABLE account to put away money for
their 17-year-old daughter Natalie, who has Down syndrome and wants to
go to cosmetology school to work at a nail salon. The Becks were able to
easily save money for their eldest daughter, who does not have a
disability. But for Natalie, they had to create a special-needs trust
that required hiring a pricey lawyer to set up.

“Her savings has not grown like her sister’s has,” says Catherine Beck, who lives in Burke, Virginia.

To
qualify for an ABLE account, the account owner must have had a
disability before their 26th birthday. Anyone can put money in it, such
as family or friends. If the account goes above $100,000, the person
with the disability will lose monthly government cash benefits until it
drops below that level again. Medicaid health benefits are never
affected, no matter how much money is saved. Money can be invested in
index funds and earnings are not taxed.

“For the first time a lot
of individuals will be able to work, save money and get some growth out
of it,” says Adam Beck, director of MassMutual Center For Special Needs
at The American College in Bryn Mawr, Pa.

When
the person with a disability dies, Medicaid can claim any leftover
money as payback for health care paid after the ABLE account was opened.
Since each state has different rules and fees, the ABLE National
Resource website has a tool that compares the programs.

Matthew
Shapiro, who lives in Richmond, Va., and works to promote the state’s
ABLE program called ABLEnow, says finally being able to have some
savings helped reduce his money worries. The 26-year-old, who has
cerebral palsy, uses a power wheelchair to get around and unexpected
repairs can be costly. He travels sometimes for his business, 6 Wheels
Consulting, which helps educate companies and organizations on
disability issues.

“Being a person with a disability is expensive,” says Shapiro. “These accounts are so much needed.”

People with disabilities finally get a way to save money

ABLE Accounts and Projected Usage – ABLE National Resource Center

In order to get a better idea of how many individuals might be eligible for ABLE accounts and how a potential beneficiary may use the account to save for disability related expenses, we ask you to take a moment to fill out this survey. In order to better understand if you or your family member might be qualified for the program and to better understand what a qualified beneficiary can use the fund in the ABLE account for, we encourage you to watch this “ABLE Basics” informative short video prior to taking the survey: https://youtu.be/Tv8kIdAovOQ