Episode Video
Episode Podcast
Tom discusses several changes in the law that might require your estate plan to be updated.
Episode Video
Episode Podcast
Tom discusses several changes in the law that might require your estate plan to be updated.
Episode Video
Episode Podcast
Tom discusses the importance of making sure that if your home is going to go through probate, that there will be adequate cash available in the estate to pay ongoing expenses until the home is sold.
Episode Video
Episode Podcast
Two weeks ago Tom told you why everyone should have a Power of Attorney for Health Care. In today’s show, Tom discusses another document that you need as part of a complete estate plan.
Episode Video
Episode Podcast
Tom talks about taxes related to dying, and how you can use your estate plan to avoid them.
Episode Video
Episode Podcast
Do you have the one estate planning document that everyone should have? Tom tells you what it is, and explains why you need it.
Episode Video
Episode Podcast
Tom discusses how you might be able to use money that you have saved in an IRA to purchase a new home, without incurring the 10% early withdrawal penalty.
Episode Video
Episode Podcast
Tom answers common questions about planning your funeral…including whether you have to use the services of a licensed funeral director, who has the right to plan your funeral if you don’t, do you have to purchase a casket from a funeral home, do you need a vault, is embalming required by law, and much more.
Episode Video
Episode Podcast
In today’s episode Tom discusses the dower rights of married women in Michigan, how recently enacted legislation eliminates those rights, and what the consequence will be for married women in Michigan.
Do you have children in college? Are you a student in college? Let’s talk about FERPA.
FERPA stands for the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. It is a federal law, enacted in 1974, that applies to all schools that receive federal funding from programs administered by the Department of Education. The law is designed to (1) protect the privacy of student education records, (2) establish the right of students to inspect or review their education records, and (3) provide guidelines for the correction of inaccurate or misleading information. When students are minors these rights vest with parents. Rights transfer from parents to students once a student turns 18 or enters a postsecondary institution.
Educational records might include grades, transcripts, class lists, course schedules, financial information, or student discipline files directly related to a student.
Students attending a postsecondary institution have several important rights in relation to their education records. They can inspect or review their records, as well as seek to amend legitimate errors. More importantly, students have some control over the release of information from their education records. For example, a student can give written consent to their university or college to release information to parents, employers, or other third parties.
A student’s consent for disclosure must be made in writing and provided to the postsecondary institution. FERPA doesn’t allow oral consent for disclosure of information from education records. Schools are required to notify students annually of their FERPA rights even though the actual means of notification is left to each school’s discretion.
Schools may also disclose directory information without prior consent in certain situations. Under FERPA, information from education records is considered directory information if it isn’t generally considered harmful or an invasion of privacy if disclosed. Directory information might include a student’s name, address, email address, enrollment status, field of study, degrees pursued, or honors and awards received. But the school must notify students about directory information and allow them a reasonable amount of time to request that their directory information not be disclosed. Again, a student’s request to restrict disclosure of directory information must be made in writing. A request must be honored until the school is notified otherwise.
The Family Policy Compliance Office of the Department of Education handles any alleged FERPA violations. Complaints must be timely filed or submitted to the office within 180 days of the date that the student knew or should’ve known of the violation.
In this week’s “Tuesday with Tom”, Tom and his associate Amanda Bevel discuss many of the common scams that are being run to separate you from your money. They point out a number red flags that should alert you to a possible scam, provide tips on how to avoid becoming a victim, and list a number of resources that you can use to check out an offer that you receive and/or to report a scam.
http://tuesdaywithtom.com/index.php/episode/how-to-avoid-becoming-the-victim-of-a-scam/