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Not a fair deal

2

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,847 ✭✭✭✭elperello


    It can be an upsetting subject if it is personalised so what I'm posting doesn't refer to anyone's personal circumstances.

    I'm not judging anyone. There are many reasons that a person may not work.

    The thing about someone who doesn't work and is supported for life by the state is that they cost a lot to support.

    Say they collect social welfare from age 18 to 58 plus other ancillary payments. They have a medical card. They are housed by the state.

    If as you suggest they get sick due to lifestyle issues the treatment required may be very expensive.

    If they then pass on and as you say don't make it to the nursing home have they not already drawn down a considerable amount over a lifetime?

    Perhaps that amount would be more than someone who worked from 18 to 58 who not alone paid their way but also paid their taxes.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    Lower category? Hmmm…

    Ok. What’s the answer then?

    You don’t think that people should have to pay in any way for nursing home care.

    You think that their home and their savings should sit untouched while they are being looked after around the clock in the nursing home.

    And that after they have died that their beneficiaries, who didn’t contribute anything monetary to their benefactors care either, should collect their inheritance and continue on their merry way. Fine.

    But nursing homes cost money. Nurses, care assistants, food, electricity, laundry, heat etc

    So, who should pay?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 75 ✭✭Drog79


    Fair deal should be the same for everyone. So hand over 100% pension. None, small or little, that at least recognises what you have done to help yourself in your lifetime.

    Taking more from those who have worked more and harder and then admonishing them for estate planning is bollox.

    My Child is as good as the (old) man in the street, and deserves the same support. It's ok that I choose not to use the state distribution system and use my own distribution method, once legal.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,482 ✭✭✭Deeec


    Yes I don't believe those that worked hard all their lives to have a little wealth should have that robbed off them. Remember as I said earlier it's the people with small income, have a modest home and savings that have to use fair deal - it's not used by the wealthy. Those that worked, paid taxes and contributed all their lives should be looked after for free when they need care. Instead we have a system that once again rewards the people that contributed nothing over their lifetime with free care. ( and I exclude the disabled and long term sick from this for clarity)

    I don't agree with an elderly person having to transfer their assets and savings to someone else in order to have a 'better deal' in fair deal if they need it. They are leaving themselves very vulnerable. They shouldn't need to do this - it is actually a form of elder abuse but the government are forcing people to go down this road.

    Do you think it's right that the unfairness of fair deal sheme actually discourages elderly people from entering homes. My husband has an elderly aunt who is not able to care for herself but refuses to go into a home because she can't bear to see her family home having to be sold after her death to pay off fair deal. The house is basic she never spent any money on it over the years. She feels she is failing her parents who worked hard to buy that house in the 1930s - she sees it as giving away a chunk of her happy family home. It's very emotive and sad to see but it's the reality.

    Fair deal does need to be evaluated - not every case is fair at all



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,394 ✭✭✭✭Cyrus


    Are you sure about that? What do you categorise as wealthy and how do they pay for nursing homes? A lot of people's wealth is tied up in property they don't have 2k a week to pay for a nursing home



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    For free? You mean the taxpayer should pay for your parent to be looked after around the clock so that you can claim your full inheritance after they’ve died.

    In your case you and your husband want to inherit his aunts property after she dies and at the same time you want the man in the street to pay for her full time care.

    Why did you type all this when I can sum it up in one sentence for you?



  • Registered Users Posts: 475 ✭✭delusiondestroyer


    Sorry to hear that OP, horrible situation to be in.

    From my own experience of it with my father the "Fair deal" is not so fair and they did there best to overly encourage this deal...

    My father refused and told em he would "die on the side of the road" before he'd pay them a cent, he worked all his life and the extortionate money they were looking for to give him a decent death was ridiculous.

    He stayed true to his word but it was tough tough going, its our shame the way the country is set up and treats the elderly they shouldn't have to worry about that bullshit in there last days but alas the country is rife with scum that are lining there own pockets and funding bullshit rather than our own.

    If its possible i would say avoid the "fair deal" as much as you can but be warned it is tough going and the person has to want to do it themselves.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,482 ✭✭✭Deeec


    I couldn't care less about inheritance - we are not going to inherit his aunt's property - another niece will. It's about fairness - those who have nothing ( whether by lifestyle or by transfer of assets) get care for free why shouldn't everybody. The stay in a nursing home is unfortunately relatively short for many elderly - leaving elderly stressing about fair deal in their final days is unfair.

    You mentioned your mother earlier who I'm sure worked hard to have a house worth 125k. She ended up on a small pension - I think it's very unfair she should have a portion of that taken for her care while others pay nothing for the exact same care.

    That's not fair at all.



  • Registered Users Posts: 475 ✭✭delusiondestroyer


    Look at all the bullshit we prioritize before giving our elderly the respectful end of life care they deserve people that lived and worked here all there life.

    We are more concerned about pandering to be the goodie two shoes of Europe taking in wave after wave of refugees, We give people that land into the country and deliberately exploit our systems 1000s every month, nothing against any of em but we should be looking after our own.

    We have 64bn of a surplus in the budget fuckin spend some of it on giving the elderly the respect they deserve! It should be a fuckin right in this country to get proper end of life care, a thank you if you will for contributing to the country your entire life!

    Instead we have nursing homes fleecing people in there last days putting un needed stress on them.

    Its nothing short of a disgrace i dont care what anyone says.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    My mother and her children are very glad that she’s being looked after so well in her nursing home. Because we all live in the real world we understand that if none of us can care for her either in her own home or our homes that someone else needs to be paid to look after her.

    Strangely enough we nor she don’t expect the man in the street to pay for that. She’s our mother. No need to involve anyone else.

    Your suggestion that the tax payer can foot the bill for every single resident in a nursing home in Ireland, while their beneficiaries get to walk away with their inheritance after they die is ludicrous.



  • Registered Users Posts: 234 ✭✭headtheball14


    stays in a nursing home average about 2 years, at average cost of 1500 a week that's over 150 000.

    Fair deal was brought in about twenty years ago , prior to that you had the situation of people having to sell not only the persons home but also remortgage their own homes to pay for quality care.

    Our social system has always provided for those with no means to pay for themselves.

    Fair deal was an attempt to also provide care for everyone. it is already increasing costs at a likely unsustainable pace but I'm sure that magic money tree can be shaken so that noone has to contribute anything for their lives again.

    Waters free too right?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,718 ✭✭✭✭Donald Trump


    In fair deal, nothing is stolen from the person. They are looked after, and after they die, a contribution is taken from their estate. A dead person cannot own something legally or in reality.


    I would hazard a guess that a portion of the population would be much quicker to steer elderly parents and relatives prematurely into nursing homes if there was zero impact to their expected inheritance



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,718 ✭✭✭✭Donald Trump



    The person she will leave the house to can either help her or pay for that help. If she is leaving it to multiple people then it will be sold anyway so the story does not make any logical sense



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    What would happen in the following situation:

    An elderly person- a widower, with just the full contributory pension and no savings- gets so fragile that he needs to go into a nursing home. Suppose his son- his only child- is living with him in the family home as well. The son is disabled and on DA. Does the son have to fork out any money as well or pay out of his inheritance- which will be the family home? How is the son supposed to pay if he has no income other than DA? Is he supposed to sell the house after the death of his father and join the homeless people crowd? Where is the fair deal in that one?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    In that case the son will not have to pay anything on the occasion of the death of his father. The debt will carry over until he himself dies. His beneficiary will then incur the debt.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    What you have on this thread is an assortment of folk who have had their eye on their inheritance for a long time and are totally thwarted when they’ve realised that some of it is going to be used to pay for their elderly relatives care.

    I’ve come across situations recently where relatives, on looking into the fair deal, have persuaded the old person to stay at home instead of going into a safe place, on the promise that they will take care of them.

    They terrorise them with tales of all their possessions having to be sold and all kinds of bullshit hardship.

    Just to preserve their own entitlement.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    You mean that the son is having to carry the debt along for the rest of his life? What about the psychological implications for the son about this? The son could very well live for another 30. I would be very upset if I would know that I owe the state a large amount of money- regardless if I have to pay or not. I am sure a depressive person would not handle such a situation very well. Death is obviously not the end of things if you are a pauper!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,746 ✭✭✭pawrick


    One thing to consider is the additional costs outside of the fair deal scheme which can be substantial esp. when you dont live near a hospital so make sure you are aware of these. Weekly activities (bingo etc), prescriptions, travel costs for hospital appointments, general charges, hairdressing, nails etc. All these together actully add up to a tidy sum per month on top of other fees and arent considered when doing the calculations.

    Post edited by pawrick on


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,718 ✭✭✭✭Donald Trump



    What are you on about "debt". It isn't a debt. He'll never have to pay it.

    The State has equity in the house where he lives and it allows him to use that for free.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    He doesn’t owe the state anything. The debt has been lifted off him. He can then leave the house he inherited to anyone he likes, but that person will have to allow the original debt to go out of the estate before he or she benefits from it. Why would anyone worry about something that’s going to happen after they’re dead?!? Dead people don’t own anything.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    It is still money the son of the house owes the state. No talk can change that. A depressive person would have difficulties to cope with that. A normal person would be able to see the difference and live with it.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    Depressive people have a different view of the world. Your point is rationally correct- but those folks are not rational.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,718 ✭✭✭✭Donald Trump



    Well what if that depressive persons parent has sizeable savings. And yet they won't die and keep spending them on frivolous things like food and heating?

    Why doesn't the State step in and pay for all of the parent's needs so that he depressive person can inherit 100% of those savings? It's so unfair!



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    My mother enjoys all of these things and the only bill she’s had to pay so far is €25 each time she has the chiropodist. We’ve actually made a few voluntary donations to the home to be passed on to the groups who come to entertain, apparently out of the goodness of their hearts.

    When you’re scoping out a home with/for your parent don’t be afraid to ask them what the fair deal does and doesn’t cover. If they’re going to be charging extra for entertainment and laundry and toiletries then have a discussion about that before you decide.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    Well it can’t be helped. The fact of the matter is that the debt has been taken away from him or her and skipped on to their beneficiary.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    “But it’s not fair” is the cri de couer of the believer in the Magic Money Tree.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,318 ✭✭✭893bet


    What’s stands out here really is people trying to use spurious what if cases to prove a point.


    e.g the disabled son example or the relatives terrorising an elder relative to try keep them at home, what if the roof needs repair and you divested all assets etc


    hard cases cases make bad laws.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    There should be a limit of what the state can take. Take the JA or non contributory pension. Every means test DISREGARDS the family home. There is sizable amount of the population who think there should be no property tax on the family home. Why is this thing different? The situation of the family members are not properly taken care of. This Fair Deal is deeply flawed in that way.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    As I said- depressive people think or feel different. Your point is valid from a purely rational view. However, it completely ignores the specific situation of the surviving son. It is all about money, isn't it?



  • Registered Users Posts: 234 ✭✭headtheball14


    There is limit on what the state takes, that's the whole point of fair deal, it's a percentage of the value of the assets of the claimant. other benefits like ja disregard the family home as they need somewhere to live.

    Fair deal is for people who by definition no longer live in the family home.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    But what part of the sons “situation” are you concerned about specifically? He gets to live in his home as he ever did. Nothing has changed. He can make his will and when he dies the debt will be sorted out. What’s the problem? You’re being very vague? It’s you who’s making it all about the money, btw.

    The taxpayer (the state) had to be made whole at some stage after stepping in to cover the costs of an old persons end of days care.

    You’re suggesting that even if someone who should have been responsible for paying for the care (this depressed son) is excused paying for the care, for his entire life, that the debt should never have to be paid, even after he’s died, just because he has mental health issues?!? Why??



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    That makes very little sense. If we use the same criteria on JA as on FD, folks on JA can still live in their houses. They only accumulate some debt- which they can repay when they are back in a job. Was the talk here not about paying our dues to society? Not getting everything "for free"?



  • Registered Users Posts: 895 ✭✭✭doc22


    No it sounds like the the state paid 1400 a week and under the fair deal she had to make a contribution of 400 be that pension/SW, (land, house 7.5%) and rather than wait till death the family paid.

    Prior to Fair deal the state would have took everything for nursing care with no caps etc so when people are criticizing fair deal I hope they know what the alternative was.(familys tended to take more active role in provisions in past less home helps too)



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    I think you don't understand how the mind of depressive people works. In his mind the son will worry about the debt for the rest of his life.He will keep thinking that people can come and throw him out of the house because of the unpaid debt. It does not matter what you tell him. But it does matter what he thinks or feels himself. And he might do very stupid things normal people would not do. I still think that the very specific situation of the family members should be taken into proper consideration. A one for all rule is not fair.



  • Registered Users Posts: 895 ✭✭✭doc22


    So when the fair deal bill comes due move into parents house, say you're depressed and happy days debt is forgiven....



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    I am not talking about avoiding payments where people clearly have no issues to stop them from paying. I am talking about a son who lives in the family home together with the father. It is HIS home as well. He is not living anywhere else.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    But if he’s suffering from depression then his totally irrational unfounded concern about the house is one of the many symptoms and consequences of a terrible disease.

    If we were to suggest that suffering from a disease, illness accident etc cancels every single debt we’ve incurred, even the ones that have skipped us totally, then how would could our society cope?

    I assume that you agree then that because he’s possibly worried about his electricity supplier disconnecting him if he can’t pay his bill, that he should no longer have to pay his bill? Likewise he may be worried that his bins won’t be collected if he’s short of money so he shouldn’t get a waste bill etc etc

    Basically what you’re saying is that people shouldn’t have to pay for anything if the thought of having to pay for it upsets them. Well, I guess that’s pretty much the position of the left now for many years. But as proven yet again in this thread, none of you are ever able to explain where the money will come from. Are you?





  • I don’t think that is what was meant here… such people are not imprudent, idol etc, carers are very hard working and deserve to be cared for well when they need it.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 616 ✭✭✭hawthorne


    You have some good points there. You and I might not have any irrational fears- but some other folks clearly have. We will never understand them because we don't have - thankfully- those irrational problems. But that does not eliminate those problems for those who have them. And it does not mean that we should ignore their needs if we can do something to help those folks.

    Explain to me again why houses owned by folks on DA,JA or NC Pension are excempt from a means test. Those folks can still live in their houses- but can pay off their dues at a later stage. And if they cannot- the folks who inherit their places- will have to. What about a fair deal in this matter? You mentioned the money tree- can you explain why the money does not come from those folks?

    Direct question to you: You are- as far as I know- on DA. I do not know if you own your place. But if you do, would you consider living by what you preach and accept a fair deal in regards to your payment ? Means: The DoSP will own a certain percentage of your place after a while!



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    I’m a civil servant.

    I’ve no idea why you think I’m on DA.

    People on working age SW payments don’t include their homes in the means test because they need somewhere to live. People in nursing homes have found somewhere else to live and if they decide to return home they can, no problem and their contract with fair deal is paused until they’ve died.

    Your theory as to how people on means tested payments should be entered into a fair deal type program wherein the state should recoup whatever they were paid in their lifetime after their death falls at the first hurdle.

    The basic premise of SW allowances is that claimants are means tested and found to be so poor that they need a weekly payment in order to be kept alive.

    In the vast majority of cases they are in state funded housing or otherwise not living in a house they own. They will have less than €20000 savings and pretty much no income at all. They are disabled, sick or injured, they are parenting alone they are caring full time for someone and they are unemployable. So what exactly are you hoping to recoup from their estate after they die?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,392 ✭✭✭✭Furze99


    The 'Fair Deal' is Mary Harney's legacy to us. You are quite right, when it comes to nursing home care an individual family is better off to have no assets or to be wealthy enough to afford private care. The ones that have their assets stripped are the majority in the middle.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    Assets stripped?!? You describe this as stripping of someone’s assets?!?




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,392 ✭✭✭✭Furze99


    Yes - if you are the sort of person who has sought to support yourself after retirement.

    That's 80% of all income - state pension but also any pension scheme that you've paid into, plus portions of other income.

    7.5% of assets per annum - for three years. Property, land, business. That's 22.5% of all your assets if you live in the nursing home for three years. I've been in nursing homes and some are there for only a few months, others are there year after year.

    That is asset stripping.

    In fairness, I can see some logic in the idea but it should not be called the 'Fair Deal'. A fair deal would treat everyone equally as regards contributions regardless of income or assets.



  • Registered Users Posts: 591 ✭✭✭CrookedJack


    But they don't have to use the fair deal scheme. They can keep all their assets and just pay for their own care if they think "the state" is trying to "asset strip" them. Or their kids can look after their care.

    What you're talking about is wanting taxpayers to pay for the elderly person's care but not touch their assets solely so they can be inherited.

    Why the hell should I pay for your parent's care just so you can get a nice inheritance?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,482 ✭✭✭Deeec


    Why should you have to pay for the care of someone who lived on the dole for life and lived in a council house?

    Why should you pay for the care of someone who despite earning good money never bothered to save or buy assets?

    Why should you pay for the care of a wealthy person who was clever and transferred all their assets long before they needed care?

    You do realise that you are already paying for the care in full for people that fall within the categories of all the above.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,392 ✭✭✭✭Furze99


    "Why the hell should I pay for your parent's care just so you can get a nice inheritance?"

    Why the hell should you pay for your neighbours parents care, who never saved a penny or bought any assets?

    It's a question of fairness, that all elderly people are treated the same as regards cost of nursing home care, if needed.

    As it is, you have one group subsidising the others.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,972 ✭✭✭Cherry Blossom


    No the state contribution was something like €293, fair deal covered the rest with the exception of €400 due to my mums assets being assessed in full but fair deal could not have their interest attached to part of the estate due to other parties having a legal interest in it which they refused to sign away. If my mum had stayed much longer in nursing home care we would have had to sell her house to pay the difference as this was the only asset wholly in her name. We are still not out of the woods. She may live decades more and she still has cognitive impairment due to alcohol misuse.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,232 ✭✭✭TooTired123


    Here’s a really good idea. Take your elderly person into your own home and look after them. Or move in with them and take care of them.

    You can pay home helps to come and give some professional care every day.

    Or find them a nice nursing home and pay for it weekly.

    You don’t have to apply for the fair deal at all.

    How does that sound?



  • Registered Users Posts: 591 ✭✭✭CrookedJack


    Just whataboutery here really. If people can't pay, we as a society should pay for them. If the reason they can't pay is that you want a good inheritance, then you're morally repugnant - absolutely equivalent to the feckless dole-lifer everyone looks down on.


    I should pay for that neighbour's care because they need it, plain and simple.

    The parents who can afford their care are not subsidising the ones who can't, the tax payers are. You are speaking as if the ones who can afford to pay are morally superior to those who can't, while also saying they should not pay and instead hide their assets so their children can have more inheritance.

    This is some real hard-scrabble rationalising your own selfishness.

    It is about fairness. How is it fair for someone who can afford to pay for their care to force the taxpayer to pay for it, all so that they can give an inheritance to someone who does not want to pay for their care?



  • Registered Users Posts: 475 ✭✭delusiondestroyer


    **** the state we pay plenty of taxes into it and they will throw money to handouts for every sort they can find and if they can't find em they ll import em.

    But the dying tax payer they ll give a "fair deal" to and squeeze every last bit of money out of em they can.

    We should stop paying healthy employable young people the dole and allocate that money to look after the elderly.

    It's up there with inheritance tax, Taxing money that's already been taxed...



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