Financial Planning for the Families of Children with Special Needs.
Financial Planning for the Families of Children with Special Needs.
We were fortunate to have Rhiannon Gogh Founder of SENDA deliver a very engaging webinar regarding financial planning for the families of children with special needs, and provide us with this recorded version of the event. Rhiannon has kindly provided us with the below link so that members may continue to benefit from her insight and knowledge on this subject.
The video link:
https://zoom.us/clips/share/fonufXEyS5i0dE_Lt_oPPg
This webinar is focused on understanding the UK landscape with regards to special needs and disabilities and its impact upon financial planning. The seminar will focus on unique challenges faced by the families with children that have additional needs, how to meet those unique financial challenges and identifying some key areas of foreseeable harm.
This is a really interesting webinar from Rhiannon Gogh from SENDA (the UK Alliance of Special Educational Needs and Disability Advisers) into this challenging subject. While the seminar may be professionally focused at PFF members we encourage CII members to consider watching this generally informative CPD event.
Learning objectives:
- Understanding the landscape of special needs and disability in the UK and how it impacts financial planning
- Learning the 5 unique challenges faced by families
- Understanding how to meet the unique financial challenges through holistic planning
- Identifying and avoiding the two key areas of foreseeable harm
Delivered by: Rhiannon Gogh
Rhiannon Gogh is a Fellow of the PFS, speaker, trainer and author. She is the director of PlanIt Future, a firm specialising in advising the families of those with SEND (Special Educational Needs and Disability) and the Director of the Carers Academy. In 2024 she founded SENDA (the UK Alliance of Special Educational Needs and Disability Advisers) a professional body of solicitors, financial and charitable advisers. She has trained for SOLLA, PFS, CII and CISI. She is also a carer for her son, Tristan 15, who has autism.