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Thorough estate planning 'one of the most loving things'
Thorough estate planning 'one of the most loving things'

Toronto Sun

time17 hours ago

  • Business
  • Toronto Sun

Thorough estate planning 'one of the most loving things'

Published Jun 20, 2025 • Last updated 0 minutes ago • 3 minute read Julia Chung, senior financial planner at Spring Planning is shown in this handout photo. Photo by handout/Spring Planning / The Canadian Press Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page. What does it matter if I'm going to be dead anyway? This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account It's a comment sometimes heard by Julia Chung, an advice-only financial planner at Spring Planning in Vancouver. Her retort: 'It isn't about you. It's about the people that you leave behind.' Having a well-thought-out estate plan is 'one of the most loving things you can do for your friends and family,' Chung says. And it goes far beyond drawing up a will laying out who gets what when you're six feet under. Indeed, Chung says there's planning that must be done for when you're still among the living, but may have lost the ability to make your own decisions due to dementia or other conditions. People are living longer thanks to advances in science, 'but not all of us are going to live really well,' Chung says. A power of attorney is set out in a document entirely separate from a will, and doesn't automatically default to a spouse or adult child. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. There are also financial assets that fall outside of a person's will that need to be sorted out, like beneficiary designations for life insurance, RRSPs and TFSAs. The last thing a bereaved loved one wants to do is go on a wild-goose chase for the information they need to tie up financial loose ends, so some of Chung's clients have a binder put together with key information. 'What information do they need? Just having a will isn't going to tell them where you bank or how to access your mail or who your investment adviser is,' says Chung. 'So how do we get that information to them?' Another aspect to think through is how and when any minor children left behind can access their inheritance. Chung recommends structuring a trust so a young person gets the funds in staggered amounts, not in one big lump sum. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'As I always say to my clients when I see this, 'Think back to when you were 18 or 19. Were you making really smart financial decisions? Because I wasn't,'' she says. Last month, IG Wealth Management released its annual estate planning study, which suggested 54 per cent of Canadians lack a plan. Twenty-nine per cent of respondents said their reason for not having an estate plan was their perceived lack of wealth. 'Ironically, I think that in many cases, it's the people who don't have sufficient wealth yet that need to think about estate planning the most, especially if they have dependents,' said Christine Van Cauwenberghe, IG's head of financial planning in Winnipeg. Forty per cent of respondents reported having legal documents in place to safeguard their finances should they be diagnosed with cognitive decline. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The survey was conducted online by Pollara Strategic Insights, and polled 1,017 adult Canadians between April 10 and 21. The polling industry's professional body, the Canadian Research Insights Council, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population. Van Cauwenberghe says estate planning can be made more complicated in blended families. For instance, it could be all well and good for someone to designate a partner a direct beneficiary for a life insurance policy. But if that partner passes away, children from a previous relationship may be 'completely disinherited,' she says. 'It's usually inadvertent, but it's just due to a lack of planning.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Another item to check off the to-do list is to choose who can serve as executor of your estate, power of attorney and guardian to minor children. It's not necessarily best to have the same person do each job, and it may not make sense to tab someone close to you. 'I think sometimes people choose their executor because they think that person will be offended if you don't choose them. That person would probably be relieved not to be chosen,' says Van Cauwenberghe, adding corporate trustees are an option when there's no one willing or able to take on the tasks. 'It's a big job and understand that most people don't have any experience in it. They don't know what to do, they delay, they make mistakes, they don't reach out to the right experts and it can be very stressful.' Van Cauwenberghe says it can be tough to put these difficult decisions at the top of the priority list. 'If you never set aside the time, it's never gonna happen,' she says. 'But you're not going to be the one to pay the price. It will be your loved ones who will pay the price for your lack of planning.' Toronto & GTA Columnists MMA World NHL

Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner
Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner

Hamilton Spectator

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Hamilton Spectator

Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner

What does it matter if I'm going to be dead anyway? It's a comment sometimes heard by Julia Chung, an advice-only financial planner at Spring Planning in Vancouver. Her retort: 'It isn't about you. It's about the people that you leave behind.' Having a well-thought-out estate plan is 'one of the most loving things you can do for your friends and family,' Chung says. And it goes far beyond drawing up a will laying out who gets what when you're six feet under. Indeed, Chung says there's planning that must be done for when you're still among the living, but may have lost the ability to make your own decisions due to dementia or other conditions. People are living longer thanks to advances in science, 'but not all of us are going to live really well,' Chung says. A power of attorney is set out in a document entirely separate from a will, and doesn't automatically default to a spouse or adult child. There are also financial assets that fall outside of a person's will that need to be sorted out, like beneficiary designations for life insurance, RRSPs and TFSAs. The last thing a bereaved loved one wants to do is go on a wild-goose chase for the information they need to tie up financial loose ends, so some of Chung's clients have a binder put together with key information. 'What information do they need? Just having a will isn't going to tell them where you bank or how to access your mail or who your investment adviser is,' says Chung. 'So how do we get that information to them?' Another aspect to think through is how and when any minor children left behind can access their inheritance. Chung recommends structuring a trust so a young person gets the funds in staggered amounts, not in one big lump sum. 'As I always say to my clients when I see this, 'Think back to when you were 18 or 19. Were you making really smart financial decisions? Because I wasn't,'' she says. Last month, IG Wealth Management released its annual estate planning study, which suggested 54 per cent of Canadians lack a plan. Twenty-nine per cent of respondents said their reason for not having an estate plan was their perceived lack of wealth. 'Ironically, I think that in many cases, it's the people who don't have sufficient wealth yet that need to think about estate planning the most, especially if they have dependents,' said Christine Van Cauwenberghe, IG's head of financial planning in Winnipeg. Forty per cent of respondents reported having legal documents in place to safeguard their finances should they be diagnosed with cognitive decline. The survey was conducted online by Pollara Strategic Insights, and polled 1,017 adult Canadians between April 10 and 21. The polling industry's professional body, the Canadian Research Insights Council, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population. Van Cauwenberghe says estate planning can be made more complicated in blended families. For instance, it could be all well and good for someone to designate a partner a direct beneficiary for a life insurance policy. But if that partner passes away, children from a previous relationship may be 'completely disinherited,' she says. 'It's usually inadvertent, but it's just due to a lack of planning.' Another item to check off the to-do list is to choose who can serve as executor of your estate, power of attorney and guardian to minor children. It's not necessarily best to have the same person do each job, and it may not make sense to tab someone close to you. 'I think sometimes people choose their executor because they think that person will be offended if you don't choose them. That person would probably be relieved not to be chosen,' says Van Cauwenberghe, adding corporate trustees are an option when there's no one willing or able to take on the tasks. 'It's a big job and understand that most people don't have any experience in it. They don't know what to do, they delay, they make mistakes, they don't reach out to the right experts and it can be very stressful.' Van Cauwenberghe says it can be tough to put these difficult decisions at the top of the priority list. 'If you never set aside the time, it's never gonna happen,' she says. 'But you're not going to be the one to pay the price. It will be your loved ones who will pay the price for your lack of planning.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 19, 2025.

Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner
Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner

CTV News

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • CTV News

Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner

What does it matter if I'm going to be dead anyway? It's a comment sometimes heard by Julia Chung, an advice-only financial planner at Spring Planning in Vancouver. Her retort: 'It isn't about you. It's about the people that you leave behind.' Having a well-thought-out estate plan is 'one of the most loving things you can do for your friends and family,' Chung says. And it goes far beyond drawing up a will laying out who gets what when you're six feet under. Indeed, Chung says there's planning that must be done for when you're still among the living, but may have lost the ability to make your own decisions due to dementia or other conditions. People are living longer thanks to advances in science, 'but not all of us are going to live really well,' Chung says. A power of attorney is set out in a document entirely separate from a will, and doesn't automatically default to a spouse or adult child. There are also financial assets that fall outside of a person's will that need to be sorted out, like beneficiary designations for life insurance, RRSPs and TFSAs. The last thing a bereaved loved one wants to do is go on a wild-goose chase for the information they need to tie up financial loose ends, so some of Chung's clients have a binder put together with key information. 'What information do they need? Just having a will isn't going to tell them where you bank or how to access your mail or who your investment adviser is,' says Chung. 'So how do we get that information to them?' Another aspect to think through is how and when any minor children left behind can access their inheritance. Chung recommends structuring a trust so a young person gets the funds in staggered amounts, not in one big lump sum. 'As I always say to my clients when I see this, 'Think back to when you were 18 or 19. Were you making really smart financial decisions? Because I wasn't,'' she says. Last month, IG Wealth Management released its annual estate planning study, which suggested 54 per cent of Canadians lack a plan. Twenty-nine per cent of respondents said their reason for not having an estate plan was their perceived lack of wealth. 'Ironically, I think that in many cases, it's the people who don't have sufficient wealth yet that need to think about estate planning the most, especially if they have dependents,' said Christine Van Cauwenberghe, IG's head of financial planning in Winnipeg. Forty per cent of respondents reported having legal documents in place to safeguard their finances should they be diagnosed with cognitive decline. The survey was conducted online by Pollara Strategic Insights, and polled 1,017 adult Canadians between April 10 and 21. The polling industry's professional body, the Canadian Research Insights Council, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population. Van Cauwenberghe says estate planning can be made more complicated in blended families. For instance, it could be all well and good for someone to designate a partner a direct beneficiary for a life insurance policy. But if that partner passes away, children from a previous relationship may be 'completely disinherited,' she says. 'It's usually inadvertent, but it's just due to a lack of planning.' Another item to check off the to-do list is to choose who can serve as executor of your estate, power of attorney and guardian to minor children. It's not necessarily best to have the same person do each job, and it may not make sense to tab someone close to you. 'I think sometimes people choose their executor because they think that person will be offended if you don't choose them. That person would probably be relieved not to be chosen,' says Van Cauwenberghe, adding corporate trustees are an option when there's no one willing or able to take on the tasks. 'It's a big job and understand that most people don't have any experience in it. They don't know what to do, they delay, they make mistakes, they don't reach out to the right experts and it can be very stressful.' Van Cauwenberghe says it can be tough to put these difficult decisions at the top of the priority list. 'If you never set aside the time, it's never gonna happen,' she says. 'But you're not going to be the one to pay the price. It will be your loved ones who will pay the price for your lack of planning.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 19, 2025. Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press

Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner
Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Winnipeg Free Press

Thorough estate planning ‘one of the most loving things': financial planner

What does it matter if I'm going to be dead anyway? It's a comment sometimes heard by Julia Chung, an advice-only financial planner at Spring Planning in Vancouver. Her retort: 'It isn't about you. It's about the people that you leave behind.' Having a well-thought-out estate plan is 'one of the most loving things you can do for your friends and family,' Chung says. And it goes far beyond drawing up a will laying out who gets what when you're six feet under. Indeed, Chung says there's planning that must be done for when you're still among the living, but may have lost the ability to make your own decisions due to dementia or other conditions. People are living longer thanks to advances in science, 'but not all of us are going to live really well,' Chung says. A power of attorney is set out in a document entirely separate from a will, and doesn't automatically default to a spouse or adult child. There are also financial assets that fall outside of a person's will that need to be sorted out, like beneficiary designations for life insurance, RRSPs and TFSAs. The last thing a bereaved loved one wants to do is go on a wild-goose chase for the information they need to tie up financial loose ends, so some of Chung's clients have a binder put together with key information. 'What information do they need? Just having a will isn't going to tell them where you bank or how to access your mail or who your investment adviser is,' says Chung. 'So how do we get that information to them?' Another aspect to think through is how and when any minor children left behind can access their inheritance. Chung recommends structuring a trust so a young person gets the funds in staggered amounts, not in one big lump sum. 'As I always say to my clients when I see this, 'Think back to when you were 18 or 19. Were you making really smart financial decisions? Because I wasn't,'' she says. Last month, IG Wealth Management released its annual estate planning study, which suggested 54 per cent of Canadians lack a plan. Twenty-nine per cent of respondents said their reason for not having an estate plan was their perceived lack of wealth. 'Ironically, I think that in many cases, it's the people who don't have sufficient wealth yet that need to think about estate planning the most, especially if they have dependents,' said Christine Van Cauwenberghe, IG's head of financial planning in Winnipeg. Forty per cent of respondents reported having legal documents in place to safeguard their finances should they be diagnosed with cognitive decline. The survey was conducted online by Pollara Strategic Insights, and polled 1,017 adult Canadians between April 10 and 21. The polling industry's professional body, the Canadian Research Insights Council, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population. Van Cauwenberghe says estate planning can be made more complicated in blended families. For instance, it could be all well and good for someone to designate a partner a direct beneficiary for a life insurance policy. But if that partner passes away, children from a previous relationship may be 'completely disinherited,' she says. 'It's usually inadvertent, but it's just due to a lack of planning.' Another item to check off the to-do list is to choose who can serve as executor of your estate, power of attorney and guardian to minor children. It's not necessarily best to have the same person do each job, and it may not make sense to tab someone close to you. 'I think sometimes people choose their executor because they think that person will be offended if you don't choose them. That person would probably be relieved not to be chosen,' says Van Cauwenberghe, adding corporate trustees are an option when there's no one willing or able to take on the tasks. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. 'It's a big job and understand that most people don't have any experience in it. They don't know what to do, they delay, they make mistakes, they don't reach out to the right experts and it can be very stressful.' Van Cauwenberghe says it can be tough to put these difficult decisions at the top of the priority list. 'If you never set aside the time, it's never gonna happen,' she says. 'But you're not going to be the one to pay the price. It will be your loved ones who will pay the price for your lack of planning.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 19, 2025.

Thorough estate planning 'one of the most loving things': financial planner
Thorough estate planning 'one of the most loving things': financial planner

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Thorough estate planning 'one of the most loving things': financial planner

What does it matter if I'm going to be dead anyway? It's a comment sometimes heard by Julia Chung, an advice-only financial planner at Spring Planning in Vancouver. Her retort: "It isn't about you. It's about the people that you leave behind." Having a well-thought-out estate plan is "one of the most loving things you can do for your friends and family," Chung says. And it goes far beyond drawing up a will laying out who gets what when you're six feet under. Indeed, Chung says there's planning that must be done for when you're still among the living, but may have lost the ability to make your own decisions due to dementia or other conditions. People are living longer thanks to advances in science, "but not all of us are going to live really well," Chung says. A power of attorney is set out in a document entirely separate from a will, and doesn't automatically default to a spouse or adult child. There are also financial assets that fall outside of a person's will that need to be sorted out, like beneficiary designations for life insurance, RRSPs and TFSAs. The last thing a bereaved loved one wants to do is go on a wild-goose chase for the information they need to tie up financial loose ends, so some of Chung's clients have a binder put together with key information. "What information do they need? Just having a will isn't going to tell them where you bank or how to access your mail or who your investment adviser is," says Chung. "So how do we get that information to them?" Another aspect to think through is how and when any minor children left behind can access their inheritance. Chung recommends structuring a trust so a young person gets the funds in staggered amounts, not in one big lump sum. "As I always say to my clients when I see this, 'Think back to when you were 18 or 19. Were you making really smart financial decisions? Because I wasn't,'" she says. Last month, IG Wealth Management released its annual estate planning study, which suggested 54 per cent of Canadians lack a plan. Twenty-nine per cent of respondents said their reason for not having an estate plan was their perceived lack of wealth. "Ironically, I think that in many cases, it's the people who don't have sufficient wealth yet that need to think about estate planning the most, especially if they have dependents," said Christine Van Cauwenberghe, IG's head of financial planning in Winnipeg. Forty per cent of respondents reported having legal documents in place to safeguard their finances should they be diagnosed with cognitive decline. The survey was conducted online by Pollara Strategic Insights, and polled 1,017 adult Canadians between April 10 and 21. The polling industry's professional body, the Canadian Research Insights Council, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population. Van Cauwenberghe says estate planning can be made more complicated in blended families. For instance, it could be all well and good for someone to designate a partner a direct beneficiary for a life insurance policy. But if that partner passes away, children from a previous relationship may be "completely disinherited," she says. "It's usually inadvertent, but it's just due to a lack of planning." Another item to check off the to-do list is to choose who can serve as executor of your estate, power of attorney and guardian to minor children. It's not necessarily best to have the same person do each job, and it may not make sense to tab someone close to you. "I think sometimes people choose their executor because they think that person will be offended if you don't choose them. That person would probably be relieved not to be chosen," says Van Cauwenberghe, adding corporate trustees are an option when there's no one willing or able to take on the tasks. "It's a big job and understand that most people don't have any experience in it. They don't know what to do, they delay, they make mistakes, they don't reach out to the right experts and it can be very stressful." Van Cauwenberghe says it can be tough to put these difficult decisions at the top of the priority list. "If you never set aside the time, it's never gonna happen," she says. "But you're not going to be the one to pay the price. It will be your loved ones who will pay the price for your lack of planning." This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 19, 2025. Lauren Krugel, The Canadian Press

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