On the practice of Elder and Disability Law -
"Our clients often come to us feeling overwhelmed by their concerns, whether about impoverishing themselves in paying for a spouse's nursing home placement, or ensuring the personal and financial protection of a child with special needs after they are gone, or obtaining essential disability benefits and health care services. These needs pose complex issues. The law itself is complicated and government procedures and bureaucracies seldom help. Also, we need to take into account sensitive personal and family considerations, particularly involving the effort to find a balance of autonomy and protection that is appropriate for the particular client.
With seven lawyers and five paralegals concentrating on every aspect of elder and disability law, trust administration and estate settlement, our staff has the commitment, knowledge, depth and expertise to respond quickly and effectively to even the most difficult situation. Being an integral part of a full service firm, the second largest in Newton, gives us the capacity to bring relevant expertise - in real estate, domestic relations, creditor protection, or litigation, for example - to bear on any elder and disability law issues. We are very willing to work with a client's other financial, tax, accounting and care advisors, to help the client forge a comprehensive response to his or her needs."
Background
Attorney Donald N. Freedman concentrates his practice in elder law, work- and entitlement-related legal problems of adults with disabilities, special estate planning for families with children with disabilities and other special needs, and advising trustees, guardians and other fiduciaries on most appropriately meeting their responsibilities.
He has argued important elder and disability law cases before the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, the Federal District Court for the District of Massachusetts, and the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.
Attorney Freedman was among three lawyers named as "Boston's Best Lawyers" in the field of elder law, as published in the Boston Globe magazine on July 27, 2008. (Partner of the Firm, Susan Levin, was also among the three.) He was selected by his peers for inclusion in the 2008 and 2009 editions of The Best Lawyers in America® (Copyright 2006 by Woodward/White, Inc., of Aiken, S.C.), in the area of elder law. As published in Boston Magazine, he has been named a Massachusetts “Super Lawyer” in elder law, estate planning, probate and health care annually for the years 2004 - 2007, and in November 2007 was listed in the top 100 Massachusetts "Super Lawyers" in any field.
A past Board Chair of the Massachusetts and New Hampshire Chapter of the Alzheimers Association, Attorney Freedman has also served as an appointee to the Governor's Commission on Mental Retardation, and has worked both as chief staff and as an appointed member of the Massachusetts Developmental Disabilities Council. He is a past member of the Board of Directors of Jewish Vocational Services, Inc., where he chaired the Disability Services Committee.
Attorney Freedman, with Attorney Emily Starr, of Worcester, conceived the most important treatise for Massachusetts attorneys on elder and disability law, the three-volume, "Estate Planning for the Aged or Incapacitated Client in Massachusetts," published by Massachusetts Continuing Legal Education. He and Attorney Starr have authored chapters in and edited every edition of the treatise, now in its 3rd edition, 3rd supplement. He has also co-authored with his wife, Ruth I. Freedman, Ph.D., the chapter, "Planning for Now and the Future: Social, Legal and Financial Concerns," in Life Course Perspectives on Adulthood and Old Age, (American Association on Mental Retardation 1994), and has written and spoken widely on elder and disability law topics.
He has been a member of the Board of Trustees of Temple Emanuel, in Newton, where he also serves on the Daily Minyan and Bereavement Committees, and co-chairs the STARS OF DAVID, an activity group he and his wife helped found about fifteen years ago for Jewish adults with developmental disabilities or other special needs.
A 1969 graduate of Brandeis University, Attorney Freedman obtained his law degree from Boston College Law School in 1972, and has done graduate coursework with the Boston University School of Law Graduate Tax Program. |