5620 Trust Funds - A revocable or irrevocable trust shall be regarded as an available asset and/or income if the following conditions are met.
For revocable trusts established
by a client, the value of the trust shall be considered a resource
available to the client. Payments from the trust to or for the benefit
of the client shall be considered as income. Payments made from the
trust for any other purpose shall be considered under the transfer
provisions of 5720.
For irrevocable trusts established
by a client after August 10, 1993:
if there are any circumstances
under which payment can be made to or for the benefit of the client,
the portion of the trust from which payments can be made shall
be considered an available resource. Payments made from the trust
to or for the benefit of the client shall be considered as income.
Payments made from the trust for any other purpose shall be considered
under the transfer provisions of 5720.
if payment to the client cannot
be made under any circumstances, the creation of the trust shall
be considered as a transfer for less than fair market value under
the provisions of 5720 based
on the date of establishment of the trust or, if later, the date
payment to the client was restricted or foreclosed. If only a
portion of the trust is made unavailable in this way, that portion
shall be regarded as a transfer.
For purposes of subsections (1) and (2) above, a client
shall be considered to have established a trust if assets of the client
were used to form all or part of the trust and if established, other
than by will, by the individual, the client's spouse, or any other
person or entity, including a court or administrative body, with the
legal authority to act for or on behalf of the client or spouse or
acting at the direction or upon request of such person. In addition,
the provisions of this subsection apply without regard to the purposes
for which the trust was established, whether the trustees have or
exercise any discretion under the trust, any restrictions on when
or whether distributions may be made from the trust, or any restrictions
on the use of distributions from the trust.
If the trust includes assets of any other person or
persons, these provisions shall apply only to the portion of the trust
attributable to the assets of the individual.
For irrevocable trusts established with the client's own assets on or prior to August 10, 1993, the trust shall be considered available up to the maximum value of the funds which may be made available under the terms of the trust on behalf of the client if: (1) that client is a beneficiary; and (2) the trustees are permitted to exercise any discretion with respect to distribution to the client. The trust may be established by the client, the client's spouse, a legal guardian (including a parent), or a legal representative who is acting on behalf of the client.
The amount from the trust that
shall be considered as an available resource is the amount that could
be distributed but was not within a base period (e.g., within a month
for AM purposes or over a 6-month base period for MS cases). Any amount
actually distributed shall be regarded as income. Any portion of the trust
which is unavailable to the individual or which is not used for the benefit
of the individual shall be considered a transfer of property for less
than fair market value under the provisions of 5720.
NOTE: This provision shall not be applicable to
trusts established prior to April 7, 1986 if the applicant/recipient is
an individual with intellectual disabilities who is residing in an intermediate
care facility for individuals with intellectual disabilities and the trust
is solely for the benefit of the individual.
4. For all other
trusts, including those established with assets of someone other than
the client, the trust is considered available to the client only if he/she
has the ability to revoke or terminate the trust or to direct the use
of the trust assets for his/her own support and maintenance.
Mandatory periodic payments received from a trust by the client are considered
an available resource equal to the present value of the anticipated string
of payments unless there is a valid spendthrift clause or other language
in the trust which specifically prohibits anticipation of payments. Where
a valid spendthrift clause or other restrictive language exists, the periodic
payments are considered countable unearned income.