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Moore elder law

Moore Elder Law Attorney

Long-term care planning, SoonerCare qualification, caregiver agreements, guardianship, and decision-making documents for Moore seniors and the families helping them.

Aaron Budd meeting with Moore clients

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Moore elder law often involves multi-generational family situations: parents aging in place with adult children living nearby and helping out. The legal documents need to catch up to what's already happening so the local caregiver child has authority to act, the senior is protected, and the other siblings know what the arrangement is.

Aging in place at the Moore home

Many Moore seniors plan to stay in homes they've owned for decades, including homes rebuilt after the 1999 or 2013 tornadoes. Making that work usually involves the basic decision-making documents, arrangements for in-home care when needed, a caregiver agreement if a relative is providing care, and clear communication across the family.

Caregiver agreements for multi-generational households

When an adult child is providing meaningful care to a Moore parent, a written caregiver agreement protects everyone. It establishes the caregiver is being compensated (not gifted money), documents the scope of care, and structures payments to avoid disqualifying the parent from SoonerCare if long-term care becomes necessary down the road.

Long-term care and SoonerCare

When private-pay nursing care reaches $7,000 to $9,000 per month, family finances erode quickly. SoonerCare covers long-term care for seniors who meet medical and financial eligibility tests. Planning ahead allows for legitimate asset protection strategies that aren't available in a crisis.

What we draft for Moore elder law clients

  • Durable power of attorney for finances.
  • Health care power of attorney and advance directive paired with HIPAA.
  • Caregiver agreements documenting and structuring family caregiving relationships.
  • Revocable living trusts integrated with Medicaid planning.
  • Irrevocable Medicaid asset protection trusts where the timing supports them.
  • Guardianship petitions when there's no avoiding the courthouse.

Need Moore elder law guidance?

Aaron personally responds to every inbound message.

Moore elder law FAQs

What does an elder law attorney handle for Moore families?

Three categories. Planning ahead while a senior still has capacity (powers of attorney, advance directives, trust planning, long-term care preparation). Reacting to a crisis (SoonerCare qualification when a parent enters a Moore or Norman nursing facility, an emergency guardianship). And protecting a senior from financial exploitation. Many Moore families involve adult children helping locally, which is different from out-of-state caregiving and worth structuring formally.

How does Oklahoma SoonerCare work for long-term care?

SoonerCare is Oklahoma's Medicaid program. It covers nursing-home care for residents who meet medical and financial eligibility tests. Strict resource limits, an income test, and a five-year look-back on transfers. Asset protection planning needs to happen well in advance for the look-back to favor you.

Can my Moore parent give me power of attorney without seeing a doctor?

Yes, as long as they have capacity to understand what they're signing. Capacity is a legal threshold, not a medical diagnosis. Plenty of Moore seniors with mild cognitive issues still have capacity to sign decision-making documents.

When does a Moore family need guardianship?

When a senior has lost capacity and didn't sign powers of attorney while they could. Guardianship is filed at Cleveland County District Court in Norman. The better answer is always to sign durable powers of attorney earlier so guardianship never becomes necessary.

What about caregiver agreements for adult children helping a Moore parent?

Often appropriate. A caregiver agreement documents that the family caregiver is providing services for compensation. It protects everybody: the caregiver against future claims that the help was a gift, the family against claims of unfair compensation, and the senior's SoonerCare eligibility if compensation is structured carefully.

What if I suspect a Moore parent is being financially exploited?

Move quickly but carefully. Common signs: a new caregiver controlling money decisions, sudden changes to deeds or beneficiary designations, unexplained withdrawals. Oklahoma has Adult Protective Services, Moore police investigate financial crimes against seniors, and civil remedies exist.

Are there community resources in Moore for seniors?

Yes. Cleveland County's Area Agency on Aging coordinates senior services that reach Moore. Local churches and community organizations support aging-in-place arrangements. The Moore senior center offers programming.

Moore seniors deserve a calm, capable plan

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