SANTA FE – The New Mexico Supreme Court, working with the Executive and
Legislative branches, has formed a committee with representatives from
all branches of state government to assist in the implementation of
newly enacted legislation for improving the adult guardianship system.
Second Judicial District Court Judge C. Shannon Bacon will chair the
steering committee and District Judge Nancy Franchini will serve as vice
chair.
The panel will make recommendations regarding $1 million allocated to
the Administrative Office of the Courts by the Legislature for
guardianship reforms. Among the possibilities are funding auditors –
potentially in the State Auditor’s Office – to examine financial
information submitted to the courts by conservators, hiring contractors
to assist in a statewide review of guardianship and conservatorship
cases, and designing user-friendly online forms to ensure conservators
file more accurate and consistent information with the courts, which
also will help with auditing and monitoring of conservatorship reports.
Court-appointed guardians make personal and health care decisions for
individuals who are incapacitated. Conservators are appointed by a court
to manage the financial and possibly the property affairs of an
incapacitated person, including those who may have dementia, traumatic
brain injuries, a developmental disability or mental illness.
The Supreme Court has appointed a separate committee to recommend
changes in rules that govern court procedures in guardianship and
conservatorship cases. Gaelle McConnell, an Albuquerque attorney, will
chair the Ad Hoc Guardianship and Conservatorship Rules and Forms
Committee. The committee, as part of its work, will consider rule
amendments necessary to comply with the guardianship legislation (Senate
Bill 19) approved during the 2018 legislative session.
The new law, which takes effect on July 1, opens court hearings that are
now closed and expands access to court records for family members and
others who are entitled to notice of guardianship proceedings under the
new statutory requirements.
Formation of the rules committee was among the recommendations of the
New Mexico Adult Guardianship Study Commission, which was appointed by
the Supreme Court last year to propose improvements in the guardianship
system. Other commission recommendations included changes in annual
financial reports that conservators must file with courts.
The steering committee also will advise the Supreme Court on possible
future steps for revising the guardianship system, including how to
proceed with recommendations made by the study commission.
Other steering committee members are: Sen. James White of Albuquerque;
Rep. Daymon Ely of Corrales; State Auditor Wayne Johnson; Leslie Porter,
cabinet director in the Office of Gov. Susana Martinez; Third Judicial
District Court Chief Judge James Martin; Thirteenth Judicial District
Court Chief Judge Louis McDonald; and First Judicial District Court
Judge David Thomson. Three AOC staff members are non-voting committee
members: Greg Saunders, chief information officer; Celina Jones, general
counsel; and Patricia Galindo, an attorney who works on guardianship
and conservatorship issues.
Other rules committee members are: District Judges Bacon and Franchini;
Mary Galvez of Guardianship and Care Management Services LLC; Alice Liu
McCoy of Disability Rights New Mexico; Ruth Pregenzer, an Albuquerque
attorney; Sarah Steadman of the University of New Mexico Law School; and
Mary H. Smith, an Albuquerque attorney.
Full Article & Source:
New Mexico Supreme Court Forms Guardianship Committees
I do not know the various people appointed to this committee, but I'd feel better if there were real advocates on the committee or if the committee made a commitment that it would listen to advocates.
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