Sue, thank you! I asked the presenter for clarification to be sure no one misunderstand. Clarification was made to 95 year rule on permissions, bringing it into the line with 110 so no one can misunderstand. The pdf of syllabus still has 95 year rule because it was submitted last November, long before the rule was changed - which was made 2 weeks before Rootstech. This rule is being changed online now. Amanda Terry said it will take up to 2 weeks to get all documents changed to reflect 110 year rule change. David Samuelsen On 2/9/2012 10:07 AM, Sue Maxwell wrote: > There already is a 110-year-rule where, if the person has no death date > entered, then nFS assumes the person is still living if the birth date > is less than 110 years ago. (This protects someone from trying to do > work for my 103-year-old mother-in-law who IS still living. It does > nothing if someone makes up a death date, however.) > > The current 95-year-rule says you need permission from next of kin even > if you have a death date for a person and the birth date is less than 95 > years ago. The new 110-year-rule will make both rules the same at 110 > years. However, permission will only be required from ONE of the closest > living relatives (current wife, children, parents, siblings - in that > order). This rule change protects those family members who may be the > closest living relative and have chosen not to do the work YET.