New Mexico’s secretive system under which the state handles daily
living and financial decisions for hundreds of incapacitated people a
year would undergo a radical transformation if recommendations unveiled
by a state Supreme Court commission are adopted.
The commission’s
final report of recommendations for an improved guardian/conservator
system in New Mexico – released late Thursday – presents “critically
important” changes to the structure and the practices that have been
under study by the commission since April, stated the report.
The
recommendations would require stricter accountability and oversight of
guardians, including those professional for-profit firms that deduct
their fees from the protected person’s assets.
The commission asks the Supreme Court, the state Legislature and the
governor to work together to fund and implement four of its “highest
priority” recommendations at the “earliest opportunity.”
Three
recommendations would increase oversight by requiring state funding.
That funding is estimated at a little less than $1 million, and would
cover:
• A computerized system to automate the filing and monitoring of conservator reports;
• Hiring auditors to monitor conservatorships;
•
Employing special masters to hear grievances of family members and
others who currently have little voice and few options once a judge
approves a third-party professional as guardian or conservator for an
incapacitated loved one.
Many of those who are deemed incapacitated have dementia, Alzheimer’s disease or have mental illness or impairment.
The
fourth “highest priority” recommendation calls for the passage of a new
slate of model guardianship laws from the Chicago-based Uniform Law
Commission, which has been studying reforms for several years. Those
laws would provide more notice to family members about hearings and
would increase access to court hearings and records. Currently, all
guardianship and conservatorship hearings are closed to the public. The
only public record available is a court docket sheet that lists the name
of the protected person, the parties and filings in the case.
New
Mexico Sen. Jim White, R-Albuquerque, has prefiled a bill for the
upcoming 30-day legislative session that would implement the model
Uniform Law Commission guardianship laws.
Other commission recommendations would go further than the Uniform
Laws by requiring mediation or facilitated family meetings in all
guardianship and conservatorship cases that are contested, which happens
when family members are at odds.
“The Commission heard from
multiple sources that getting family members together early in contested
guardianship and conservatorship proceedings could help to avoid many
common problems in these types of cases,” the report stated.
The
commission asked, and the Supreme Court has already agreed, to appoint
committees to develop rules and forms that would increase
accountability.
The commission also recommended the development of
a process for selecting independent court appointees who advise the
judge on whether a guardian or conservator should be appointed. Critics
say the current system allows the attorney filing for guardianship or
conservatorship to “stack the deck” by nominating the people who serve
as guardian ad litem or court visitor. In California, for example, the
judge randomly selects from a list of attorneys who will serve as
guardian ad litem.
And, in California, an independent court investigator
who works for the court system investigates whether a guardianship is
warranted.
The commission also recommended establishing and
funding an adult protected person oversight board to “regulate certified
bonded, professional guardians and conservators and to communicate
concerns about professional guardians and conservators to the courts.”
Judges
would be required to undergo training that would include “how to
effectively respond to the high emotion that often accompanies these
cases.”
And, the commission urged the Supreme Court to continue
its pursuit of improving the system by creating a recurring, diverse
commission every four years to hold public hearings about guardianship
and conservatorship rules and procedures and make recommendations.
“One
of the biggest lessons learned from this process is that all branches
of government share responsibility for the problems with the current
guardianship system, and as a result, no single branch of government can
reform the system on its own,” the report stated.
The 16-member
commission, composed of district judges, attorneys and other
professionals in the guardianship field, was appointed by the Supreme
Court in April and was chaired by retired state District Judge Wendy
York.
Full Article & Source:
Court suggests critical changes to state rules
People are finally listening long gone is the old worn out words: it's an isolated incident.
ReplyDeleteMoving forward applause to New Mexico!