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Back to School: Legal Documents Every College Student Should Have
Is a member of your family thrilled to be heading off to their college or university campus this fall? While we are more than ready to close the book on COVID-19 and get back to raucous football games and crowded lecture halls, it would be foolish to forget the lessons we have learned during this unparalleled time in our history. One of the most valuable lessons of the past 17 months is to plan for the unthinkable.
Parents naturally see themselves as advisors and protectors of their children, even when those now adult children leave for school. Legally, however, once a child turns 18 years old, they are legally separated from their parents. Practically speaking, this means a parent may not be the first person medical personnel or emergency authorities would call in case of an emergency. The following are the 3 most important legal documents a college-aged student should have in place and why they need them.
JDS Law helps clients with these types of documents every day, but you do not need an attorney to draft them and there are many resources online. Be sure the documents comply with applicable state laws. If the student attends school out of state, the best practice is to execute documents that would be valid in the school state and in their home state. It is also wise to check with the school to see if they have their own forms to complete. Once the documents are fully executed (signed and witnessed or notarized, as required), they should be scanned and saved on the parents’ and student’s smartphones so they can be accessed in a moment’s notice. Depending on whether the college-aged student has assets in his or her name, and the nature and extent of those assets, it may be advisable for the student to name beneficiaries to receive the assets upon death. In some circumstances, it may even be advisable for the student to execute a Last Will and Testament.
One last thing. Although you have been there for them through it all for the first 18 years, as adults, your children can name anyone as their legal proxy, so do not be offended if they name someone other than you. As long as they have named another responsible adult, that still counts as a parenting win.
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