Few have escaped the stock market’s downdraft or the personal tragedies associated with the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11. In my business, providing planning advice and trust management, we are helping people capitalize on the hard lessons learned.
On Sept. 25, 2001, I attended a breakfast meeting at which Gov. John G. Rowland spoke. He said it was his first outing since the 11th not directly associated with the World Trade Center collapse and the havoc it wrought with Connecticut families. Appropriate to the group of estate planning professionals he was addressing, Rowland observed that there was a common thread during his conversations with many surviving families: the lack of estate planning.
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