Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No harm in doing a durable POA and medical proxy. You should each be named beneficiaries on all accounts (bank, retirement, investments). You can do it online, print for notary, sign. It’s easy. If kids, get things in order.
Yes we’re already beneficiaries. The question is what happens if the spouse doesn’t actually die but is just hospitalized for some time. Without a death certificate we couldn’t get access to all funds.
Anonymous wrote:No harm in doing a durable POA and medical proxy. You should each be named beneficiaries on all accounts (bank, retirement, investments). You can do it online, print for notary, sign. It’s easy. If kids, get things in order.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't need POA for a spouse. That's the whole point of getting legally married and why legalizing gay marriage was so important.
It seems like you don’t need POA for medical decisions. But imagine that the spouse (especially breadwinner who usually pays bills) is in hospital for several months and prognosis is uncertain. Should the other spouse get access to bank accounts etc to pay bills, especially if kids are involved? We would need POA for this, right?
Anonymous wrote:I have durable power of attorney for my spouse as he is in poor health. When setting it up our lawyer said not to do the kind that requires a certain circumstance to initiate the POA because banks and such are less likely to accept that kind. They don’t want to get involved in figuring out if the circumstance has been triggered.
Anonymous wrote:You don't need POA for a spouse. That's the whole point of getting legally married and why legalizing gay marriage was so important.
Anonymous wrote:I had the POA for my mom as she declined, but I did not invoke it until it was required. There are also different POAs such as financial or health. You can invoke the health one and not the financial one.