This FAQ is designed for attorneys, mediators, CDFAs, financial planners, and other professionals who need clarity on how specialized planning fits into a divorce involving a child or adult child with disabilities. Parents may read this page, but the guidance is written for the professionals leading the case.
When a case involves a child or adult child with disabilities and the team needs clarity on how benefits, services, or long‑term planning interact with divorce decisions. Early involvement prevents avoidable risks and ensures the decree supports long‑term stability.
No. I work with cases where the professional team needs strategic guidance, not general divorce questions or case management. The work is most effective when the attorney or CDFA is actively involved.
Yes. Many cases come in mid‑process when a professional realizes there are eligibility, planning, or decree‑language risks that need to be addressed before finalizing
No. I support the legal team, but I do not provide legal advice or replace the attorney’s role. My work helps the attorney make informed decisions with the right context.
No. I do not provide financial planning or investment guidance. I help the CDFA or financial professional understand how financial decisions may affect benefits, services, and long‑term stability.
Parents may request a consultation, but the work is typically coordinated through the attorney or CDFA to ensure alignment with the legal and financial strategy already in motion.
Missed risks can lead to loss of benefits, reduced services, long‑term financial instability, or the need to reopen the case later. Specialized planning helps avoid these outcomes.
Eligibility for many disability‑related benefits is tied to income, assets, living arrangements, and support structures. Divorce decisions can unintentionally disrupt these if the team doesn’t have the right information.
I provide clarity on how benefits and services generally interact with divorce decisions. I do not replace legal, financial, or case‑specific benefit professionals.
Yes. I help the team understand how today’s decisions affect future planning pathways, including supports, services, and financial structures.
Parents are welcome to participate, but coordination should occur through the attorney or CDFA. This ensures the guidance is integrated into the legal and financial strategy.
I can help clarify general concepts, but I do not provide therapy, case management, or ongoing support. My role is strategic and focused on the decisions at hand.
Consultations are typically 60 minutes, depending on the complexity of the case and the needs of the professional team.
I can review relevant portions of the decree or planning documents when needed, but I do not provide legal drafting or financial planning
No. The work is intentionally high-level and time-bound. If additional clarity is needed, the professional team may request another consultation.
If the case involves disability-related benefits, services, or long-term planning considerations, and the professional team needs clarity, it is likely a good fit.
Consultations are available by request. This allows me to ensure the case aligns with the type of high-level work I provide.
When a case involves disability‑related benefits, services, or long‑term planning considerations, clarity at the right moment can prevent avoidable risks. If you’re evaluating a case and want to understand whether specialized guidance would help the legal or financial strategy, you can request a consultation