undefined undefined Vital Documents at Your Fingertips
2002
Vital Documents at Your Fingertips
August 2002


“Vital Documents at Your Fingertips,” Ensign, Aug. 2002, 72–73

Vital Documents at Your Fingertips

If we were to have a fire or other disaster in the middle of the night, the first thing I would grab (besides my flashlight, bathrobe, and slippers) would be my portable file. I have organized a legal-size, expandable file folder containing the following valuable documents:

  • Bank account, credit card information.

  • Birth certificates.

  • Children’s vital information (adoption and guardianship papers, special medical needs, fingerprint records).

  • Funeral, mortuary, cemetery plans.

  • Insurance policies (life, home, health, automobile) with a list of company names, agents, premium due dates, cash values.

  • Marriage certificate.

  • MedicAlert information.• Military papers.

  • Real-estate documents.

  • Retirement benefits.

  • Social Security cards.

  • Vehicle titles, registration, identification and license plate numbers.

  • Wills, living wills.

  • Additional documents: citizenship papers; safe deposit box (number, location); stocks, bonds, other investments; tax papers; affiliations; lists of debts.

The idea for organizing our family’s most important documents in a portable file stemmed from a presentation I attended years ago, and I have used the file ever since. When my husband was hospitalized, medical personnel required a copy of his living will. I knew right where to find it and quickly made a copy for them. Keeping my file current is easy. Every year as I prepare year-end summaries for tax purposes, I also update my file.

While it is important to store some original documents in a secure place, having copies at my fingertips has brought me a measure of peace. I know that in the event of an emergency, I am as prepared as I can be.—Berneice Neeley, Riviera Ward, Salt Lake Granite Park Stake