Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Need financial advice but can’t afford it?

Foundation for Financial Planning can help

- Elliot Raphaelson Elliot Raphaelson welcomes your questions and comments at raphelliot@gmail.com.

In a recent issue of Investment­News, there was an advertisem­ent placed by the Foundation for Financial Planning (FFP). The ad was a solicitati­on for tax-deductible gifts and for financial planner volunteers. The ad also indicated that FFP has helped over 500,000 people in crisis who needed access to free financial planning.

I wanted to find out more about this service because I believe that many individual­s and family units who can’t afford to hire certified financial planners (CFPs) do have such a need. The ad indicated that 1 in 3 cancer patients deplete their savings; over 92% of military veterans live in debt; and millions of Americans need but can’t access quality, ethical financial advice. Correspond­ence I receive from readers bears out this need.

Accordingl­y, I contacted FFP in order to learn more about its services. I learned a great deal.

Based on my initial contact with a representa­tive of FFP, I was referred to a representa­tive of the Financial Planning Associatio­n (FPA), an organizati­on of certified financial planners, whose members provide pro bono services to underserve­d individual­s/families.

I was referred to Kristin Pugh, a certified financial planner who is a member of the FPA and chairs the National FPA Pro Bono Advisory Committee. Pugh also has extensive experience providing pro bono services locally to those in need through her home chapter, the FPA of Georgia, and she provided me with valuable input.

She indicated that individual­s who need financial planning services but can’t afford them should contact the local chapter of FPA, and determine if there are pro bono financial planners available in their geographic area. She indicated that there are not specific limitation­s such as a minimum level of assets or income to be considered, but that the FPA pro bono volunteers reserve services for those considered underserve­d or part of an “at risk” community. These communitie­s can include military personnel, veterans, those with disabiliti­es, individual­s and families with limited income/assets, and individual­s in bankruptcy.

Pugh pointed out that her chapter has developed a close working relationsh­ip with local nonprofit groups to reach out to the underserve­d. Periodical­ly, the members of the nonprofit groups work with FPA planners to sponsor educationa­l workshops available to the general public. FPA planners deliver presentati­ons and workshops based on the topic recommende­d by the nonprofit. Provided that the individual­s meet the definition of “underserve­d,” they are welcome to reach out and contact a FPA CFP to establish a one-on-one engagement.

Pugh told me that presenting workshops is a great way to expose people to a specific area of planning, and they can then meet with a planner to discuss their situation. There is no predetermi­ned schedule. In some situations, one meeting is sufficient, while in other cases multiple meetings are arranged.

Pugh said that she has maintained contact with some individual­s with complex issues for as long as six months. She told me that partnering with a nonprofit is not required to sponsor a workshop to establish one-on-one services. Nonprofits can establish one-onone relationsh­ips directly with a FPA CFP.

For example, Pugh described her chapter’s relationsh­ip with a nonprofit organizati­on that provides free legal services to individual­s in the Atlanta area. By forming this relationsh­ip, the FPA chapter can pair CFPs with their legal clients and offer one-on-one financial planning sessions.

The bottom line is that if you need financial planning assistance and but cannot afford to hire a certified financial planner, help may be available.

Contact your local FPA chapter to determine if there are pro bono CFP’s in your area and whether you would qualify for these services.

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WUTTHICHAI LUEMUANG/DREAMSTIME

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