Follow
Share

My mom is fragile physically, but very competent mentally. She lives at home, manages her own medications and takes care of all her bills. However, with her declining health, my sister and I want to make sure she is protected from anything that could happen to change her ability to take care of herself. She would like to designate us as her joint Durable Power of Attorneys. If we take this step, will she still be allowed to write her own checks? We all want to ensure her independence for as long as possible.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
Yes of coarse she can, it is her call on everything until she becomes incompetent or no longer wants to handle these functions.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

We find on this forum that alot of people really don't understand the responsibility of POA. First, the person who lives the closest and will probably be giving the care needs to be the POA for financial and Medical. Both of u should not be the POA. One can be secondary in case #1 can't follow thru. For me, I will be giving one daughter financial and the other Medical because she is the RN. With each being secondary to the other.

Financial is you carry out Moms wishes. You handle her money when she can't. Same with Medical, you're carrying out Moms wishes.

There is "immediate" which starts as soon as its signed and witnessed. "Springing" only becomes in effect when its found the person is incompetent to handle their affairs.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

It would be good to check the terms of the POA. Sometimes they are only activated when the donor loses competence, in which case your mother shouldn’t be writing checks. Just read the terms – it should be clear.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Worried is correct. Having financial POA simply gives you the ABILITY to manage your mom's affairs; it doesn't negate her own powers. She can still pay her bills, buy and sell property, etc.

I might also suggest setting up auto-pay for the bulk of her bills. I did this for my mom when she was still in a mild stage of dementia, and she loved it. She could still log into her bank account or look at her paper statement and see the bills being paid. She still felt independent while not having to remember to physically sign checks each month.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Yes of course she can write her own checks. POA doesn’t take powers away from her while she is still competent.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter