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This is an experiment--maybe a good one, maybe a bad one. We'll see. It was born from ruminations about whether there wasn't a better way to keep in touch with far-flung family and friends than relying on occasional phone calls and chance meetings.

I hope you'll post your comments, responses and original thoughts here, too. That way, this monologue will quickly turn into a conversation!

Monday, March 4, 2019

Pay It Forward - Name A Charity As One of Your IRA or 401(k) Beneficiaries


My mother was a frugal woman. That’s not surprising. She was born in the depths of the Great Depression, to first generation Americans, people whose lives were governed by a fierce yearning for security. Mom dropped out of high school, but she inherited her parents’ talent for making a penny do the work of a dime. When she died last March, she left a small estate, a portion of which was held in a well-diversified IRA.

Because of the rules that govern inherited IRAs, we kids had the choice of paying taxes on all the money at once or paying taxes on small annual distributions spread out over our lifetimes. For me, the choice was simple—leave the nest egg to grow and pay a small amount of tax each year.

What was also simple was choosing a beneficiary for the account. 

Mom struggled to make ends meet. When she was laid up after knee surgery, we survived on disability insurance, the school hot lunch program, and help from relatives. When she couldn’t afford a car, we walked. When out-sized bills came due, Mom made draperies. Her second shift happened in the dining room, at night and on weekends, on the portable sewing machine she’d given me for Christmas.  

Who helps people like Mom? Who connects people to basic services like food pantries and infant health care? Who saves struggling families hundreds or thousands of dollars through the Earned Income Tax Credit? Who provides supportive, one-stop centers where people get credit counseling, improve job skills, and build assets?  United Way Bay Area

Mom sent a son and two daughters to college, bought a house in late middle age, and avoided being a financial drain on her children in retirement. That last thing was important to her—in fact, it was far more important to her than it was to us. Naming United Way Bay Area as the beneficiary of the inherited IRA is how I help my mother give back--tax free! Now that she’s finished worrying about the catastrophes that tomorrow might bring, I think she’d be pleased to invest in other families living on the edge. I know I am. 

Whether you are making estate plans for the first time or re-evaluating, I hope you’ll join me, Kenneth Edlin, Peter Noon, Barbara Joan Deepe, and many others. Together, we guarantee that United Way Bay Area will always be here to help. For more information on making UWBA a part of your life’s legacy, please contact Neil Muller (nmuller@uwba.org). He’s looking forward to hearing from you, as am I.  From simple bequests to sophisticated charitable annuities, we have lots to offer.
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For details on leaving retirement assets to charity see: https://www.fidelitycharitable.org/philanthropy/donating-retirement-assets-to-charity.shtml

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