I spent Wednesday through Friday last week in Arizona, because issues had arisen around my sister’s fiduciary. Since she went into an assisted living facility late last year, we’ve been kind of unlucky with the people entrusted to manage her money.
The first one might have been
okay, but he came as a package with his wife, who decidedly was not. We had
high hopes for the second one, but he and his minions have sadly not worked
out. I would ascribe the problems to lack of transparency, coupled with really
poor communication. And, tbh, my sister’s hearing loss means that trying to
talk with her via her mobile phone means she comprehends about 35% of what you
say, on a good call. But whatever—her medical power of attorney friends had hit
a wall and here we are.
So I printed out months of fiduciary
and bank statements and spent Wednesday flying to Phoenix and then driving to
Cottonwood (with a stop at one of the groadiest McDonalds on the face of the
planet, so I could get on a conference call). I have to say that finances are
not my thing—I stopped balancing a checkbook in the 1980s, and even just
looking at balance sheets spikes my heart rate. But my sister needed me, so I
did my best.
I spoke at length with her, sat
in on her conversation with a prospective new fiduciary, talked with her
lawyer, and then backed my sister in her chat with the soon-to-be-ex fiduciary,
as she told him she likes the new one, and will transfer to that woman’s
service.
I held my tongue (a gargantuan
effort, if you know me) with this guy—except to ask him, “Tell me about the NSF
check.” (Yes, he wrote a check on my sister’s account—to pay one of his
invoices—without sufficient funds to cover it. In June. And has not as yet
refunded the $35 service charge. If you’re looking for a fiduciary in Northern
Arizona, I know whom to steer you away from.) He professed himself astonished
to find that he’d done that (even though he moved money from her trust account
to cover it the day after; either he writes them so often he couldn’t recall
this particular one, or he was lying).
Well, anyway, the situation is
resolved, and my sister is going to be looked after by someone who will make
the full effort to communicate. (And my sister is going to make the effort to
stand up for herself.)
And I am massively relieved, and
immensely grateful that her MPOAs have been doing such an amazing job in advocating
for her. And I’m grateful I was able to go out there and do my part. It's her birthday today, and I am deeply grateful for having her in my life.
Also—I got to see some northern Arizona dawns, and look at these clouds.
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