Question Presented
               You asked us to determine whether the Utah Pooled Trust (Trust) and Joinder Agreement
                  conform to the pooled trust exception at 42 U.S.C. § 1382c(a)(3).
               
               Short Answer
               The Trust does not meet the pooled trust exception to counting assets in the Trust
                  sub-accounts as resources because:
               
               
                  - 
                     
                        • 
                           The Trust allows the Trustee to delegate investment authority to an advisor without
                              proper oversight by the Trustee; and
                            
 
 
- 
                     
                        • 
                           Upon the death of a beneficiary, it allows for the payment of impermissible expenses
                              prior to the payback of state Medicaid expenses.
                            
 
 
But if the Trust were amended to satisfy the pooled trust exception, and assuming
                  no other changes were made, beneficiary sub-accounts would not be countable as resources
                  under the regular resource counting rules.
               
               Background
               Definitions, Establishment, and Purpose
               A Utah nonprofit corporation, Arc of Utah, Inc. (Arc), established the Trust in 2008.
                  The Trust was amended in September 2009 and TURN Community Services, Inc. (TURN),
                  also a Utah nonprofit corporation, became the successor Trustee. The purpose of the
                  Trust is to provide “extra and supplemental services and benefits for the health,
                  care, comfort, safety, welfare, education and training of the Beneficiaries,” i.e.,
                  persons with disabilities as defined in the Social Security Act (Act) who have sub-accounts
                  established within the Trust. Art. 1.3, 2.1, 2.9, 5.1. The Trust defines supplemental
                  needs or supplemental care as “non-support disbursements and disbursements for in-kind
                  support and maintenance” which include, but are not limited to, supplemental medical,
                  dental, or nursing care, and expenditures for travel and recreation, including cultural
                  experiences and athletic events, and other expenses authorized by the Trustee. Art.
                  2.10.
               
               A “sponsor” is a parent, grandparent, legal representative or guardian of a beneficiary,
                  a beneficiary himself or herself, or any court. Art. 2.8. It also includes “any person
                  or entity that contributes his, her, or its own assets or property to the Trust for
                  the benefit of a Beneficiary.” Id. TURN maintains a separate sub-account for each beneficiary, but the Trust sub-accounts
                  are pooled for the purpose of investing and managing the funds. Art. 4.1, 4.2.
               
               Amendment, Termination, and Distribution of Assets upon Termination
               The Trust is irrevocable, except that it may be amended with court approval to conform
                  to statutes, rules, or regulations relating to 42 U.S.C. § 1396p. Art. 3.1, 11.1,
                  11.2. The Trustee cannot amend the Trust in a manner that adversely affects the exempt
                  status of the funds under federal or state law. Art. 11.2.
               
               The Trustee will petition the court for further instructions if, due to developments
                  in the law, the Trustee has “reasonable cause to believe that the income or principal
                  in a Trust Sub-account maintained for any Beneficiary is or will become liable for
                  basic maintenance, support, or care for that Beneficiary which has been or would otherwise
                  be provided by local, state, or federal government, or an agency or department thereof,
                  or private program.” Art. 6.2. If it becomes impossible or impracticable to carry
                  out the Trust’s purposes with respect to all Beneficiaries, the Trustee will likewise
                  petition the court for further instructions. Art. 6.3.
               
               Upon the death of a beneficiary, the Trust provides that any remaining amounts in
                  the sub-account may first be used to pay the beneficiary’s expenses, including management
                  and investment fees, estate administration expenses such as attorneys’ fees and taxes,
                  and other outstanding bills for the benefit of the beneficiary. Art. 6.1.1. After
                  payment of such expenses, up to 50% of any remaining amounts shall be provided to
                  the State of Utah or other states from which the beneficiary has received Medicaid
                  assistance, up to an amount equal to the total amount of Medicaid assistance paid
                  on behalf of the beneficiary. Art. 6.1.2, 6.1.3. The remaining 50% (plus any additional
                  amounts remaining after payment of the Medicaid portion) shall be deemed “surplus
                  Trust property” and may be retained by the Trust. Art. 6.1.2, 6.1.3.
               
               Spendthrift Provision
               The Trust provides that “[n]o part of this Trust, principal or income, shall be subject
                  to anticipation or assignment by the Beneficiaries; nor shall it be subject to attachment
                  or control by any public or private creditor of the Beneficiaries; nor may it be taken
                  by any legal or equitable process by any voluntary or involuntary creditor, including
                  those that have provided for the Beneficiary’s support and maintenance. Further, under
                  no circumstance may any Beneficiary compel a distribution from a Beneficiary’s Sub-account.”
                  Art. 5.5.
               
               Governing Law
               The trust documents are governed by Utah law. Art. 12.2.
               Joinder Agreement
               The Trust is effective as to a beneficiary upon: (1) execution of a Joinder Agreement
                  by a Sponsor or court order, (2) acceptance of the Joinder Agreement by the Trustee,
                  and (3) a Sponsor’s delivery to, and Trustee’s acceptance of, property. Art. 3.1 The
                  Trust is irrevocable upon delivery and acceptance of the property, and the Sponsor’s
                  property shall not be refundable except as provided in Article V (Distributions).
                  Id.
               
               Discussion
               (A) The Trust Does Not Meet the Pooled Trust Exception Under 42 U.S.C.
                     
               § 1396p(d)(4)(c)
               In general, irrevocable trusts created after January 1, 2000, that are established
                  with the assets of an individual by means other than transfer by a will are considered
                  to be a resource of that individual for SSI eligibility purposes. See 42 U.S.C. § 1382b(e)(2)(A). The purpose of the trust, the discretion of the trustee,
                  and restrictions on distributions will not affect its status as a resource. See id. at § 1382b(e)(2)(C). There is an exception to this general rule for trusts that are
                  established pursuant to the provisions of § 1917(d)(4)(C) of the Act, commonly known
                  as the pooled trust exception. See 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C). For this exception to apply, the pooled trust must satisfy
                  certain requirements:
               
               1) The trust must be established and maintained by a non-profit association;
               2) A separate account must be maintained for each beneficiary of the trust, but the
                  trust pools these accounts for purposes of investing and managing the trust;
               
               3) Accounts in the trust must be established solely for the benefit of the disabled
                  individual;
               
               4) Accounts must be established by the individual, a parent, a grandparent, a legal
                  guardian, or a court; and
               
               5) The trust must provide that, to the extent that amounts remaining in the beneficiary’s
                  sub-account upon the death of the beneficiary are not retained by the trust, the state(s)
                  will receive all amounts remaining in the trust upon the death of the individual up
                  to an amount equal to the total medical assistance paid on behalf of the individual
                  under the state Medicaid plans.
               
               See id.; POMS SI 01120.203(B)(2). As discussed below, the Trust does not meet the last pooled trust requirement.
               
               (1) The Trust Is Established and Maintained by a Nonprofit Association, But it Potentially
                  Provides Excess Authority to a an Investment Advisor
               
               The Trust was established by ARC and is now maintained by TURN, a nonprofit corporation.
                  But the Trust allows the Trustee to hire investment counsel and delegate investment
                  authority to that counsel. Art. 9.2. More specifically, the Trust provides that the
                  Trustee can delegate to the investment advisor the authority to make investments on
                  behalf of the Trust without prior approval from the Trustee. Art. 9.2.
               
               Pursuant to POMS SI 01120.225(D), a nonprofit corporation may employ a for-profit entity as an investment advisor
                  if the nonprofit corporation maintains ultimate managerial control over the Trust.
                  For example, the nonprofit corporation must remain responsible for determining the
                  amount of the trust corpus to invest, removing or replacing the trustee, and making
                  the day-to-day decisions regarding the health and well-being of the pooled trust beneficiaries.
                  See id. Here, the investment advisor provision does not contain any such restricting language,
                  and, assuming the investment advisor is a for-profit entity, it raises the possibility
                  that the investment advisor would have authority exceeding the limits set forth in
                  POMS SI 01120.225. For example, the provision does not make clear that TURN, as Trustee, must be responsible
                  for determining the amount of the Trust corpus to invest. Art. 9.2; see POMS SI 01120.225(D).
               
               (2) Separate Accounts Are Maintained for Each Beneficiary of the Trust
               Consistent with the second requirement, each beneficiary has a separate sub-account
                  and TURN pools these accounts for the purpose of investing and managing the funds.
                  Art. 4.1, 4.2.
               
               (3) The Trust Accounts Are Established Solely for the Benefit of the Disabled Individual,
                  and Early Termination Is Only Possible with a Court Order
               
               Each beneficiary’s sub-account must be established for the sole benefit of the disabled
                  individual in order to meet the third requirement. See POMS SI 01120.203(B)(2)(a), (e). The sub-account cannot benefit any other individual or entity during
                  the disabled individual’s lifetime, or allow for termination of the account prior
                  to the individual’s death and payment of the corpus to another individual or entity.
                  Id. Exceptions are permitted for certain administrative expenses and payments to a third
                  party for goods, services, and limited travel expenses. POMS SI 01120.201(F)(2)(b)-(c).
               
               In the event that a trust can be terminated during a beneficiary’s lifetime, the trust
                  must provide that:
               
               (1) Upon early termination, the trust must reimburse the state(s) in an amount equal
                  to the total amount of medical assistance paid under state Medicaid plan(s);
               
               (2) After reimbursement to the state(s) and payment of allowed expenses, all remaining
                  funds must be given to the trust beneficiary; and
               
               (3) The early termination power is provided to someone other than the trust beneficiary.
               See POMS SI 01120.199(F). Here, the Trust does not contain any provision expressly providing for early
                  termination, but it does state that the Trustee should petition the court for further
                  instructions if it becomes impossible or impracticable to effectuate the purpose of
                  the Trust with respect to all beneficiaries. Art. 6.3. A related provision states
                  that the Trustee should also petition the court for further instructions where developments
                  in the law give the Trustee reasonable cause to believe the purpose of a Trust sub-account
                  can no longer be effectuated. Art. 6.2. In these two circumstances, it appears that
                  a court could order the termination of a
               
               sub-account prior to the death of a beneficiary.
               These provisions do not themselves provide for any impermissible third-party benefit
                  during the disabled individual’s lifetime, and we assume that if a court of competent
                  jurisdiction did order a Trust sub-account terminated prior to the death of a beneficiary,
                  it would do so in a manner consistent with the purpose of the Trust and in accordance
                  with the payback requirements of POMS SI 01120.199(F). Because it is too speculative to assume a court would do otherwise, the Trust
                  appears to satisfy the third requirement of the pooled trust exception.
               
               (4) The Trust Properly Provides that Individuals Authorized by Statute May Establish
                  a Sub-Account
               
               To meet the fourth requirement, the accounts in the Trust must be established by a
                  parent, grandparent, legal guardian of an individual, individual himself, or by a
                  court. See 42 U.S.C.
               
               § 1396p(d)(4)(C); see also POMS SI 01120.203(B)(2)(f). This requirement is satisfied in the present case as the sub-account at
                  issue was established by the disabled individual. See Art. 2.8; Joinder Agreement §§ B-C. We note, however, that the Trust also provides
                  that a Sponsor includes “any person or entity that contributes his, her, or its own
                  assets or property to the Trust for the benefit of a Beneficiary, by gift, will, contract,
                  or agreement.” See Art. 2.8. If an individual beneficiary sub-account was established by anyone other
                  than a parent, grandparent, legal guardian, disabled individual, or court, it would
                  still be a countable resource.
               
               (5) The Trust Does Not Properly Provide for Medicaid Reimbursement
               The Trust contains specific language providing that, to the extent that amounts remaining
                  in a beneficiary’s account after their death are not retained by the Trust, the Trust
                  pays to the state(s) an amount equal to the total amount of medical assistance paid
                  on behalf of the individual under the State Medicaid plans(s). Art. 6.1.2-.1.3. The
                  Trust does not limit payment to any particular state or time-period. See Art. 6.1.2-.1.3; see also POMS SI 01120.203(B)(2)(g).
               
               But the Trust does not appear to satisfy the fifth requirement of the pooled trust
                  exception because it provides for the payment of impermissible expenses prior to the
                  payback of state Medicaid expenses. See Art. 6.1.1; POMS SI 01120.203(B)(2)(g), (B)(3). To the extent amounts remaining in a beneficiary’s account are
                  not retained by the Trust following the beneficiary’s death, states that provided
                  medical assistance must have priority of payment over other debts and administrative
                  expenses subject to a few exceptions. POMS SI 01120.203(B)(2)(g). The types of administrative expenses that may be paid from the Trust prior
                  to reimbursement of medical assistance to the state(s) include:
               
               
                  - 
                     
                        • 
                           Taxes due from the Trust to State(s) or Federal government because of the death of
                              the beneficiary; and
                            
 
 
- 
                     
                        • 
                           Reasonable fees for administration of the Trust estate such as an accounting of the
                              Trust to a court, completion and filing of documents, or other required actions associated
                              with termination and wrapping up of the Trust.
                            
 
 
POMS SI 01220.203(B)(3).
               The Trust agreement provides that prior to state reimbursement for medical assistance,
                  the Trustee may pay “(1) any management and investment fees attributable to Beneficiary’s
                  Trust Sub-Account, (2) Beneficiary’s estate administration expenses including attorneys’
                  fees and taxes, and (3) any other outstanding bills for the benefit of the Beneficiary
                  pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Trust.” Art. 6.1.1. While the first category
                  of fees and expenses arguably qualifies as an allowable administrative expense, the
                  second and third categories, allowing for the payment of estate administration expenses
                  and outstanding bills, appear to be prohibited expenses. See POMS SI 01120.203(B)(3)(b) (prohibited expenses include taxes “due from the estate of the beneficiary
                  other than those arising from inclusion of the trust in the estate” and “[p]ayment
                  of debts owed to third parties”).
               
               (B) Assuming the Trust Were Amended to Comply with 42 U.S.C. § 1396p(d)(4)(C), the
                  Sub-Account Would Not Be a Resource Under the Regular Resource Counting Rules
               
               Even if the Trust is amended to address the issue noted above, the sub-accounts must
                  still be evaluated under the regular resource rules where a trust is established with
                  a beneficiary’s own assets. See POMS SI 01220.203(B)(1)(A); POMS SI 01120.200(D)(2). Pursuant to these rules, trust property may be a resource for SSI purposes
                  if the individual: (1) has the authority to revoke the trust and then use the funds
                  to meet her basic needs for food or shelter; (2) can direct the use of the trust principal
                  for her support and maintenance; or (3) can sell her beneficial interest in the trust.
                  See POMS SI 01120.200(D)(1)(a)-(b).
               
               The Trust provides that the sub-accounts are irrevocable as to the grantor (sponsor)
                  and the beneficiary. Art. 3.1, 11.1, 11.2. But Utah follows the general principle
                  of trust law that if a grantor is also the sole beneficiary of a trust, the trust
                  is revocable regardless of language to the contrary in the trust document. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 339 (1959); Clayton v. Behle, 565 P.2d 1132, 1133 (Utah 1977) (recognizing that “where the settlor is the sole
                  beneficiary . . . he can terminate the trust at any time and compel the trustee to
                  reconvey the property to him”). Here, however, the Trust is a contingent residual
                  beneficiary because it retains at least 50% of any funds left over after the beneficiary’s
                  death (after payment of administrative expenses). Art. 6.1.1-.1.3; Joinder Agreement
                  § F. The Trust therefore has an identifiable residual beneficiary and is irrevocable.
                  See POMS 01120.200(D)(3).
               
               Further, beneficiaries do not have the right to direct the use of the Trust principal
                  for their support and maintenance; rather the Trustee has the sole and absolute discretion
                  to elect to disburse such funds for the benefit of the beneficiary. See Art. 1.3, 5.1. With respect to selling a beneficiary’s interest in a sub-account,
                  the Trust contains a spendthrift clause that prohibits beneficiaries from anticipation,
                  assignment, attachment, or compelling a disbursement from the Trust. Art. 5.5; see also POMS SI 01120.200(D)(1)(a). Where the grantor is also the beneficiary, such spendthrift provisions
                  are generally invalid. See Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 58 cmt. e (2003); POMS SI 01120.200(B)(16). Even so, the beneficiary’s interest in the Trust has no significant market
                  value because disbursements are within the sole discretion of the Trustee. See Art. 1.3, 5.1. Thus, the beneficiary’s interest in the Trust should be considered
                  a resource with zero market value. See POMS SI 01140.44.
               
               Conclusion
               In sum, we conclude that the Trust does not satisfy the pooled trust exception to
                  counting assets in the sub-account as resources. The Trust allows for an investment
                  advisor to have excess authority and, upon the death of the beneficiary, the Trust
                  allows for the payment of impermissible expenses prior to the payback of state Medicaid
                  expenses. If TURN were to amend these problematic provisions to satisfy the pooled
                  trust exception, and assuming no other modifications were made, the sub-accounts would
                  not be countable as resources under the regular resource counting rules.