Under a court-ordered guardianship, 86-year-old widow Helen Hale was plucked from the house she and her husband had built on wooded acreage in Cypress for their retirement and relocated to an unlicensed group home run by a caregiver with a criminal history.
Across Texas, 30,000 to 50,000 disabled and elderly people like Hale have lost the right to decide where they live, to choose a caretaker or to spend their life savings after being declared incapacitated and ordered into guardianships, according to new estimates obtained by the Houston Chronicle from the Texas Office of Court Administration and interviews with probate court officials statewide.
Nationally, the number of people declared "incapacitated" is rapidly increasing as the population ages. And so have reports about mistreatment, neglect and problems involving relatives and non-relatives appointed to protect them, according to warnings from the federal Government Accountability Office.
In some of the state's largest counties, like Harris, Travis and Bexar, so many people are in guardianships that each probate judge oversees from 1,500 to 3,000 "wards" of the court. Yet most judges have only a single investigator to check out potential problems.
Bexar County has an unusually high number of guardianship cases - about 6,000, which is almost as many as Harris County - because so many military members retire to San Antonio, but have no children or relatives nearby, court officials say.
In some guardianship cases, including Hale's, lawyers get appointed after families fight over the care of an elderly or disabled relative. Those guardians are paid out of the assets of disabled and elderly Texans.
Hale's first lawyer guardian was Marcia Pevey, the highest-paid guardian in Texas in the last year, data analyzed by the Chronicle shows. From August 2010 to September 2011, Pevey collected more than $200,000 for guardianship services - more than anyone else statewide.
Full Article and Source:
Guardianships Putting Thousands of Elderly Texans at Risk
Why is Pevey the highest paid guardian and how many cases does she "oversee"?
ReplyDeleteGood article! And I am sorry, Jennifer. No one should have to o through this nightmare.
ReplyDeleteI know TX is one of the hotspots and I also know GRADE is working hard to fix it in that state.
ReplyDeleteThis is only going to get worse unless our legislators start listening!
Jennifer, you and your family are doing a great job.I am praying that Grandma gets home real soon and Marcia Pevey ends up in jail!!
ReplyDeleteFamily feuding should mediated in order to avoid guardianship.
ReplyDelete