A call comes from a hospital in Nassau County. Your mother had a fall. She’s stable, but the doctors are talking about long-term care, and the monthly cost they mention has more zeroes than you expected. You know she has a will, tucked away in a safe deposit box. But a will only speaks after death. It does nothing to answer the immediate, pressing questions: Who has the authority to speak to her doctors? Who can access her funds to pay her bills? And how will the family manage a potential nursing home bill of $15,000 a month without exhausting her life savings in a year?
Too many New York families face this reality. They assume a will is a complete estate plan. It is not. Elder law is the discipline of planning for life—for its contingencies and its costs. It’s about ensuring your final chapters are written on your own terms, with dignity and intention.
The Two Conversations That Define Elder Law
In my practice, a proper elder law plan boils down to two critical conversations. The first is about authority, and the second is about cost. Everything else flows from these two points.
The conversation about authority addresses the question, “Who can act for me when I cannot act for myself?” This isn’t about ceding control; it’s about prudently delegating it. We address this through two primary documents:
- A Health Care Proxy appoints an agent to make medical decisions on your behalf if you become incapacitated. This is the person who will interpret your wishes regarding treatment, care, and end-of-life choices.
- A Durable Power of Attorney appoints an agent to manage your financial affairs. This is the person who will pay your mortgage, manage your investments, and file your taxes. A properly drafted Power of Attorney in New York must comply with General Obligations Law, Article 5, Title 15 to be effective. Choosing this fiduciary is one of the most important decisions you will ever make.
Without these documents, your family’s only recourse is to petition the court for guardianship—a public, expensive, and often emotionally draining process our work is designed to avoid.
Protecting a Lifetime of Work from Long-Term Care Costs
The second conversation is about cost. Specifically, the staggering cost of long-term care. Many families assume Medicare will cover a nursing home stay. It won’t, except for a very limited period of skilled nursing care following a qualifying hospital stay. The burden falls to private funds or, for those who qualify, Medicaid.
Medicaid planning is a core component of elder law. It is the deliberate, legal, and ethical process of structuring your assets to qualify for Medicaid benefits while preserving a legacy for your family. The cornerstone of this strategy is often the Medicaid Asset Protection Trust (MAPT).
To be eligible for long-term care Medicaid in New York, an applicant must have very limited assets. By transferring assets—like a primary residence—into a carefully drafted irrevocable trust, you start a five-year “look-back” clock. Once five years have passed since the assets were transferred, they are no longer countable for Medicaid eligibility. The trust protects the assets from being consumed by nursing home costs, preserving them for your heirs.
This is not a last-minute strategy. It is an act of foresight. Stewardship. It requires planning years in advance of any potential need. For many families on Long Island, protecting the family home—often their single largest asset—is the primary motivation for creating a MAPT.
When There Is No Plan: The Article 81 Guardianship
What happens when a person loses capacity without a Health Care Proxy or Power of Attorney in place? The family must turn to the court system. In New York, this means initiating a proceeding under Article 81 of the Mental Hygiene Law to have a legal guardian appointed.
A guardianship proceeding is a lawsuit. A petition is filed with the court, a judge is assigned, and an attorney is appointed for the person alleged to be incapacitated. Medical evidence must be presented, and the court must be convinced that the person is unable to manage their own affairs. If the judge agrees, they will appoint a guardian—who may or may not be the family member who initiated the proceeding—to take control of the person’s personal and financial life.
This process is the opposite of intentional planning. It is public, it can create conflict within a family, and it strips an individual of their autonomy. While necessary in a crisis, it is a court-imposed solution to a problem that could have been solved with a private, deliberate plan.
Our counsel extends beyond drafting documents. It is about anticipating these difficult scenarios and putting a thoughtful contingency plan in place. It ensures that if a crisis comes, your family is armed with a clear set of instructions and the legal authority to carry them out, rather than a court summons.
If you are the person responsible for your family’s future, the first step is to understand the legal instruments you currently have—and, more importantly, the ones you lack. A prudent next step is a review of your existing power of attorney and health care proxy to determine if they are sufficient to protect you and your family when it matters most.



