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Will and Trust

Last Will

Having a last will in place will make sure your estate goes to whom you want, when you want, the way you want.

Financial POA

A financial power of attorney provides authority for someone to act on your behalf in case you become incapacitated.

Health Care POA

Health care power of attorney allows you to document your wishes regarding medical care if you become disabled.

Living Trust

By planning ahead with a trust, you can shorten the settlement process, and avoid lengthy estate proceedings.

Attention parents who rely on government program payments to help care for your families.

If you missed out on the extra $500 per dependent child coronavirus economic impact payment (EIP), the Internal Revenue Service is giving you one last chance to get this supplemental money this year.

The tax agency announced this afternoon that it is reopening registration for the added COVID-19 stimulus amounts.

The IRS’ online Non-Filers tool , which debuted back in mid-April, again will be available starting tomorrow, Saturday, Aug. 15. It will be open through Sept. 30 to allow affected individuals to enter their qualifying children’s information.

The IRS expects to issue additional child-related coronavirus payments generated by this new data by mid-October.

Beneficiaries with dependents: This renewed IRS EIP initiative is aimed at individuals who receive Social Security retirement, survivor or disability benefits; Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments; Railroad Retirement benefits; or Veterans Affairs Compensation and Pension (C&P) benefits.

Many of those folks didn’t have to file a 2018 or 2019 tax return, which were used to calculate the EIP amount authorized by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act earlier this year. However, they automatically got their $1,200-per-taxpayer stimulus amounts because they were in Uncle Sam’s delivery system.

However, if they also care for youngsters, but didn’t let the IRS know, then they didn’t get the added $500 for each minor dependent stimulus amount.

Family update redux: In the spring, the IRS essentially issued the same call to these individuals, encouraging them then to use the Non-Filer online tool to update their family situations.

The IRS is repeating that May message now.

Go to the Non-Filer tool and let the IRS know of the youngsters age 16 or younger for whom you are caring. That’s the only way to get the money this year, a time when many are facing added financial concerns because of the pandemic.

These extraordinary circumstances were noted by IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig in announcing his agency’s latest dependent EIP outreach.

“IRS employees have been working non-stop to deliver more than 160 million Economic Impact Payments in record time,” said Rettig. “To help with this, we are allocating additional IRS resources to ensure eligible recipients receive their full payments during this challenging time.”

Earlier users don’t need to act: If you’re a government program beneficiary and previously let the IRS know how many in your family are eligible for the extra $500 COVID-19 relief amounts, you don’t need to do anything else.

If you haven’t already received the added dependent payment amount, the IRS says it will automatically issue your extra EIP money in October.

However, if you did miss out on that earlier opportunity, take advantage of this do-over. Go to the Non-Filer tool and update your family dependent data so that you can get your money this year.

And definitely don’t miss the Sept. 30 deadline. The IRS says this will be it for 2020.

If you don’t update your dependent information by that deadline, you’ll have to wait until next year to claim the extra $500 per child as a credit on your 2020 federal income tax return.