podgerodge
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No experience of your circumstances, but that appears to be what they are saying and makes sense in your case, I think you need to ask the HSE to clarify.Am I correct in saying that we are covered under Fair Deal, but actually will pay LESS than the Fair Deal contribution ..............
My understanding is any time spent in a nursing home paying privately or under Fair Deal qualifies towards the 3 year cap on the family home. Again ask the HSE to clarify.So the 3 year period has not yet commenced. While this does not affect us financially (as per point 1), it does affect how quickly the 3 years will be up, and hence we will be paying the €1,600 for longer.
You might qualify for some state support before the house is disregarded. To be cautious I say might as circumstances can change.@Des Pondent what do you mean by we might qualify for State support in next year or 2?
And If you apply for it, the €200,000 savings will no longer be assessed either because you won’t have it anymore, having spent it on nursing home fees. Would your annual contribution not drop to nearer €20k after 3 years ? or am I missing something ?I'm going on basis that, yes, unavoidably, we're paying over €80k a year because of the financial assessment, but after year 3 that will drop to about €35k because the house will no longer be assessed.
That’s true, there will be some money coming in, I was not taking that into account.I assume the nursing home resident receives a pension which is also being used. So not all of the fees are coming from savings. The savings will reduce over time, but not by the full €80k a year
What they are saying is you can afford to pay €1700 per week. If the NTPF rate is above €1700 the Fair Deal covers the difference.Hi all. I set up this separate thread to a previous one, as it relates specifically to the financial assessment of Fair Deal.
We have had the "financial assessment" completed by the HSE. We have been told that we now have to wait for "funding to be allocated". The letter notes that "should the assessed weekly contribution equal or exceed the agreed cost of care, then no State support will be payable". Makes sense.
My questions for anyone that has experience of this:
1. The HSE website states "The amount your nursing home charges does not matter. Your contribution will stay the same and we'll pay the balance." "As part of the Financial Assessment, the following safeguards are in place: You will not pay more than the actual cost of care." Our HSE calculated weekly contribution EXCEEDS the current cost we are paying to the nursing home. Let's say the HSE Fair Deal contribution amount is €1,700 and we are currently privately paying €1,600. So, this sounds we continue to pay €1,600 in line with the safeguard of not paying more than the cost of care. Indeed, the letter states that if the assessed weekly contribution equals or exceeds the agreed cost of care, then no State support will be payable.
Question: Am I correct in saying that we are covered under Fair Deal, but actually will pay LESS than the Fair Deal contribution - or is the €100 weekly saving somehow owed to the HSE. (One might ask why join the Fair Deal at all, and the answer in our case is that we think this will likely exceed 3 years, so the cost after year 3 when property taken out of equation will make this financially worthwhile.)
2. The HSE letter states "This letter is not an approval for funding under the scheme.....applicant has been placed on the placement list for funding. So the 3 year period has not yet commenced. While this does not affect us financially (as per point 1), it does affect how quickly the 3 years will be up, and hence we will be paying the €1,600 for longer.
Question - why do we need to wait for "State Funding" to be allocated, in a situation where the financial assessment shows that there is no HSE funding required (until after year 3). Surely we should be approved immediately for the scheme.
Thanks.
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