(b) Illustrative powers.— Among the powers the terms of a trust may grant explicitly to a trust protector are the following:
- (1) To increase, decrease or otherwise modify what is distributable to one or more beneficiaries of the trust.
- (2) To terminate the trust and direct how the trustee shall distribute the trust property to or in further trust for any one or more of the beneficiaries.
- (3) To expand, modify, limit or terminate a power of appointment, and to grant a power of appointment to a beneficiary of the trust on terms as the trust protector specifies.
- (4) The powers described in section 8104 (relating to trustee's power to adjust) to adjust between income and principal and to convert the trust to a unitrust in accordance with section 8105 (relating to power to convert to unitrust).
- (5) To convert a trust in whole or in part to a special needs trust, or provide that a special needs trust shall arise or be established at a specific time or upon the occurrence of an event with respect to some or all of the trust's assets.
- (6) To appoint or remove trustees, investment advisors and investment managers, and prescribe a plan of succession for future holders of any of these offices.
- (7) To appoint or remove trust directors, specify their powers and modify the powers of a trust director.
- (8) To appoint one or more successor trust protectors, and prescribe a plan of succession for future holders of that office.
- (9) To renounce, release, limit or modify any power given to a trustee by the terms of the trust or by law.
- (10) To resolve disagreements among trustees.
- (11) To change the trust's situs or governing law, or both.
- (12) To apply to a court of competent jurisdiction to interpret any terms of the trust or pass upon an action that the trust protector, another trust director or a trustee proposes to take or not take.
- (13) Any other or different power that the settlor expressly grants to the trust protector.