Helping adults with disabilities age well in the Philly area
It's a growing reality that
While trusts remain one of the best planning techniques for families with means, many adults with disabilities have more immediate needs, such as finding jobs and places to live, and learning new skills.
Started in 1987 as a residential group home for adults with developmental disabilities, JCHAI now helps clients who live in apartments around
JCHAI serves about 130 adults, ranging in age from 23 to the late 70s. About 80 of its clients live in their own apartments.
"Our residents come and go as they please. They have their own rooms, with doors that lock," Levitan said. The staff assists with paying bills, laundry, grocery shopping, and teaching skills.
Staffers visit apartments
JCHAI charges about
"Clients can get apartments with Section 8 housing. Plus, for our residential services, we do fund-raising and scholarship on a sliding scale. The cost is kind of like paying for college tuition for the rest of your child's life," Levitan said.
Other options include living with parents; in state-licensed boarding and groups homes; at nursing homes for those with severe intellectual disabilities; in shared-living arrangements, similar to foster care; or in housing through such state contractors as Kencrest, JEVS, or ARC in
Leon, 68 and a JCHAI resident, retired from 35 years of working in food service at
"I never missed a day of work and I had six months of vacation unused when I left," he said. He's also a Phillies season ticket holder: Three seats behind home place, Section 122, Row 33. "I go to almost every game."
Phyllis, 70, lives in a nearby apartment, and JCHAI staff helped her learn to cook. "Now I make enough for each day, and I have leftovers," she said, showing off her spotless living space, which she cleans. Her neighbor
For more on JCHAI, call 610-922-2480 or visit www.jchai.org.
For those adults with disabilities living into old age, there are special estate planning options, said
This population is living longer, partly due to the end of warehousing in institutions and better care, "but they also experience medical issues at an earlier age," said Johnson. Many with Down syndrome are now expected to develop Alzheimer's.
The kids who were beneficiaries of these special-needs trusts are now turning 30, 40, and even older, Johnson added. He has helped clients with disabilities who lived well into their 80s, and urges parents of adult children with disabilities to set up a special-needs trust as soon as possible. Before the age of 65, people with disabilities can set up their own trust.
"Federal law doesn't allow you to create a special-needs trust for yourself after the age of 65, because at that point you receive
For more, see http://specialneedsanswers.com.
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