HELLO LAURIE,
THAT HAS BEEN ON MY MIND FOR A LONG TIME NOW AND I HAVE FOUND A RESCUE IN IOWA,
CAN'T REMEMBER THE NAME NOW, BUT CAN DIG OUT THE INFORMATION IF YOU WANT IT.
HAVE CHECKED THEM OUT AND THEY SEEM RIGHT FOR MY BABIES WHO ARE SPOILED, HAVE
THE RUN OF THE HOUSE. I KNOW I WOULD NOT BE A
Perhaps you could get her to address the question on line in very
general terms of courseone can't practise law where one is not
licensed.
On Dec 21, 2010, at 4:29 PM, Lorrie wrote:
On 12-21, tamara stickler wrote:
I don't know if this helps, but we just had an attorney move into
the c
Lorrie,
Her name is Lindsay Harrell,
Lindsay Harrell ;
Her new office is in the Havre de Grace Corporate Center
224 N Washington Street
Havre de Grace, MD 21078
She will be starting here full time as of the week of Jan. 3rd, but feel free
to contact her via e-mail.
Her phone (once we get i
On 12-21, tamara stickler wrote:
> I don't know if this helps, but we just had an attorney move into
> the corporate center that I manage, who specializes in pet trusts.
> She is licensed to practice in California and Maryland. ? Would you
> like her contact information? Tamara
Yes, yes, yes, we
On 12-21, Debbie Bates wrote:
>
> Lorrie, that is something I lay awake at night worrying about
> myself...not only my own cats, but the ferals I have TNR'd and care
> forin July I was hospitalized for almost three weeksthank
> goodness my husband was able to care for them (well, as much a
On 12-21, LauraM wrote:
> I worry about that too. I also have turtles and tortoises that
> could easily live 50 years or more. I'm 43 so hopefully I have a
> few good years left, but what will happen when I'm 80 and can't
> lift a 60 pound tortoise? What if I die in a car accident on the
> way to
Even though I have picked a person (not a family member) and provided
for my guys in my will, I worry too. A lot of people want their pets
killed when they dieespecially parot owners. I can't go that route.
On Dec 21, 2010, at 6:45 AM, LauraM wrote:
I worry about that too. I also have t
I have trustees who I know will do the best thing for my cats. They are
friends (and a bank for the financial part). 2 friends so they can outvote
the bank if needed. I have a guardian and successor guardian. The trustees
should be the ones keeping an eye on things. Better is to have a guardian
you
Frank and I have holographic wills (legal and binding in Texas) and we leave
everything, house and insurance policies to our two friends who are also in
animal rescue and if, for any reason they cannot move in and take care of our
cats, our cats are to NEVER go to a shelter, we would rather the
I don't know if this helps, but we just had an attorney move into the corporate
center that I manage, who specializes in pet trusts. She is licensed to
practice in California and Maryland.
Would you like her contact information?
Tamara
--- On Tue, 12/21/10, Natalie wrote:
From: Natalie
Su
Great idea.I can't do that with my house because my husband co owns it (and
has kids) but I gave my vehicle to the trust (so the cats can get to the
guardian who lives in another state) and also a lump sum so the guardian can
add on to their house. I made the requirements for ongoing reimbursement
Have you considered setting up a trust and including the house in the trust.
--- On Tue, 12/21/10, Natalie wrote:
From: Natalie
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk] Finding homes for cats upon death
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Date: Tuesday, December 21, 2010, 5:47 AM
We had actually set up a Fou
Also important to check with an attorney in your area to find out if there
are any state laws that may govern either the trust or the process in
setting up the trust (legalities such as signature requirements, etc).
Laurie
"Love animals: God has given them the rudiments of thought and joy
untroubl
Oh God, not Best Friendsugh...
On Tue, Dec 21, 2010 at 7:41 AM, wrote:
>
> If you are a non-profit org, you might want to consider having a
> succession plan in place to make the transition to someone else smoother.
>
> Succession planning for non-profits:
>
>
> http://www.ehow.com/about_73
Thank you so much - I will check them out! Natalie
-Original Message-
From: felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org
[mailto:felvtalk-boun...@felineleukemia.org] On Behalf Of
merrykatme...@email.com
Sent: Tuesday, December 21, 2010 8:42 AM
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Subject: Re: [Felvtalk]
We had actually set up a Foundation, but now find that we will change it to
a Fund instead. Advice from lawyers was non-existent, I had to find out the
hard way. We are also thinking of leaving the house to someone who would
continue the work, but again - how does one trust someone to do that - a
If you are a non-profit org, you might want to consider having a succession
plan in place to make the transition to someone else smoother.
Succession planning for non-profits:
http://www.ehow.com/about_7327519_succession-planning-nonprofit-organizations.html
http://www.brighthub.com/offi
Lorrie, that is something I lay awake at night worrying about myself...not only
my own cats, but the ferals I have TNR'd and care forin July I was
hospitalized for almost three weeksthank goodness my husband was able to
care for them (well, as much as he could)but I hesitate to do a
I worry about that too. I also have turtles and tortoises that could easily
live 50 years or more. I'm 43 so hopefully I have a few good years left, but
what will happen when I'm 80 and can't lift a 60 pound tortoise? What if I die
in a car accident on the way to Petsmart tonight? We sometimes g
My parents left me enough money to comfortably provide for
all my cats, BUT the question that concerns me is WHO will
care for them? I have three grown kids and grown grandkids
and all of them love cats, but they have a bunch of their own.
I would like to find someone to move into our house and
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