Maybe you know someone who has been in a car accident, hurt as a pedestrian, or injured playing sports, while ATVing or snowmobiling. Accidents happen all the time. They can disable victims and prove the point that disability is not strictly a condition of the elderly. Can you help the victims create an income during their convalescence? Can you help find a way to pay the bills?
Knowing how to help—the programs available and their benefits—is one way to help and, coincidentally, distinguish yourself in an advisory capacity. If you are ready to step up, you have almost a quarter of the population in your market-area waiting for your insight.
Includes a Don’t Trip Up checklist for your senior clients and, for every single client, the Checklist for Pedestrian Safety.
BONUS! Includes Succession Planning for Families with Disabled Dependents by John Poyser, a partner with Tradition Law LLP Estates and Trusts and the principal of the Wealth and Estate Law Group in Calgary.
- Disability is not just a condition of the elderly. Consider how every single day Canadians are disabled in common everyday activities: crossing the street, snowmobiling, bicycling, and the simple activities of daily living;
- Learn about the financial programs and benefits available to Canadians of all ages living with disabilities;
- Gain the knowledge you need to help clients plan with for their future financial needs and/or those of any disabled dependents.