RICK COURTNEY, CELA

Rick Courtney, CELA has been a member of SNA since its inception. A past President of the SNA, he currently serves on the Membership Assistance Committee. When his daughter Melanie was diagnosed with cerebral palsy, Rick and his wife Ruthie started researching benefits that might be available to her, which lead him to focus his law practice on special needs and related matters. Find out more about Rick here:

I started out as a child. (No, wait, that was a comedy joke.) I started out with a child—a with two children, actually. My elder law and special needs career began in 1979 with the birth of my twin daughters, Melanie and Melissa.  I had begun law practice with my father in January 1978, in a general civil practice that included domestic relations, estate planning, collection law and creditors’ rights, and civil litigation.

Within a year after my girls were born, Ruthie and I learned that Melanie had cerebral palsy. In the mid-80s after the loss of private health insurance coverage for Melanie, we began to ask if there were benefits available to help with her care–and were repeatedly told “No.” But, we persisted and soon learned that benefits were indeed available under our state’s Disabled Child Living at Home Medicaid program (the Katie Beckett waiver).

I began to learn all I could about available public benefits, particularly for children with disabilities. So, I suppose I have practiced Special Needs law and the estate planning associated with such planning (with emphasis in those areas) for about thirty-five (35) years.

What excites me about this field are the expressions of surprise and appreciation from parents and adults with disabilities when I can clarify confusing rules and programs and when they see a better path forward as a result of our planning with them.

Learn all you can. “Special needs law” is an extremely broad field with many interconnecting parts. One must strive to learn all options available and to know how each part affects a client’s situation in order to plan effectively. This takes time but is essential.

The post-Stetson Dinner Cruise on St. Petersburg Harbor, with great friends and dancing (some wearing the magic Pink Palm Blazer). Piling into a car with five other SNA folk to head to a Cuban restaurant for a dinner of great food and fellowship. (Remember that, Ron?) Learning how to sip some southern Shine in the small pub next door to the Cotton Exchange in Charleston with a bunch of my SNA buds. Note any themes here? And there was the opportunity to testify before Congress in support of the SNT Fairness Act in 2015. (Thanks, Mr. Lindberg!)

If not lounging on a river cruise ship deck with my wife (as we did in Europe in May 2022), then doing projects around the house and playing a little tennis.