Northeastern Nevada SAFE will offer its first volunteer training 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. March 16 at the Elko Senior Center.
The
organization officially launched last week, announcing Jalaine Stanton
as executive director and board of directors: attorney Katie McConnell,
president; Teri Lockie, treasurer; attorney Lauren Landa; secretary, and
attorney David Loreman, director.
Established
in 2016, SAFE will train volunteers to prepare them for appointment by
Elko District Judge Nancy Porter to elder guardianship cases.
Volunteers
will receive about 20 hours of training before being sworn in and
assigned a case. They will learn about guardianship laws, the protected
person’s bill of rights that was passed by the Legislature in 2017, and
how to advocate for a protected person by making sure financial,
physical, mental and emotional abuses are not taking place.
SAFE
volunteers will also be required to give a written report and testimony
to the court on the status of the protected person during guardianship
hearings.
Although a SAFE must
advocate for a protected person’s well-being, volunteers are also
expected to form relationships with protected persons, their guardians
and caregivers, said McConnell.
“Volunteers are going to be our core strength and be the SAFEs,” McConnell said.
Porter
explained that a SAFE could also offer “a little bit of relief” to a
caregiver as support or stay with the protected person for short amounts
of time.
After training is
complete, a volunteer will undergo a background check and be required to
attend two guardianship hearings before being appointed to one or two
protected persons to visit every other week.
“It is a time commitment to the person and the court,” Landa said. “There will be oversight of the SAFE volunteer as well.”
According
to Porter, there are anywhere between 500 and 900 guardianship cases in
the county which includes elderly, adults, and children, with one case
going back as far as 1971.
“I’m
hoping we could get at least 20 volunteers,” Porter said, adding that
it would be ideal to have more than that to cover all of the cases in
Elko County.
McConnell said if at least five appeared at the first training on March 16, it would be a good start.
“Depending upon how much interest we have” we’ll offer more training sessions, McConnell said.
Landa
explained it was Porter who saw the need for additional help as Elko
County’s population is aging and the caseload is growing.
“This
is the attempt to create some oversight and protection for the people
in our community,” Landa said. She also hopes that others will come to
learn that the organization is looking out for the elderly.
“We
care about these people. We want to protect the people in our
community,” Landa said, and let them know that “somebody is watching out
for them.”
Porter said she
hears 10 to 11 guardianship cases a week which includes accounting and
appointment hearings. taking up about one-third of her weekly caseload.
“There
could have been a lot of abuse that could have gone on because these
cases weren’t being monitored like they should have been,” Porter said.
Loreman
agreed, explaining that he has seen cases coming though to his office
that he said “are being ignored by law enforcement.”
“Somebody
has to care,” Loreman said, explaining that having an advocate though
the SAFE program will be “like having an extra set of eyes for the
court. It gives Judge Porter more information to deal with to make sure
the people are being taken care of correctly and not being taken
advantage.”
“It’s important for
me as a judge knowing that the guardian is not out there doing their
job,” Porter said, adding that although guardians are required to make
annual financial and status reports to the court, “it has not been
monitored. Ever.”
Public
Guardian Kathy Jones said involving a SAFE volunteer in a guardianship
case would add another layer of security in an elderly person’s life.
“I
think it’s a quality of life issue for the protected person to have so
many people advocating for them and watching out for their well-being,”
Jones said, adding that it could prevent abuse and neglect of senior
citizens.
Jones said that she
hoped the program would also bring reason and common sense to
guardianships instead of assuming it is always good or always bad for
the protected person.
There is
also a possibility that a SAFE could even detect which people may only
need supportive-decision making instead of a restrictive guardianship,
McConnell and Porter said, both citing a couple of recent cases that
were reviewed and adjusted because the person involved didn’t need a
guardian, but needed help instead.
“I
think there are a lot of cases like that, but people don’t know or are
uninformed,” McConnell said. “We can help inform them [by] providing
these resources in the community.”
Additionally,
a SAFE may be able to determine if a person is truly in need of a
guardian, something that cannot be learned in a two-hour hearing, Porter
said.
For those interested in
becoming a SAFE, Stanton said she will interview the volunteer, arrange
the training, find a case that matches up with the volunteer’s
personality to recommend to the court, and work with the volunteer’s
schedule, even if they can handle one case.
“We want everybody to volunteer. If you want to help, we’ll find a place for you,” Stanton said.
Most of the time a volunteer invests
is at the start of the the training as the SAFE learns about the case,
McConnell said. “I think you could easily have a full-time job and still
volunteer.”
Stanton emphasized
that a SAFE volunteer is part of a team of guardians, caregivers and
family members who each have the same goal: Looking out for the welfare
of a protected person. It’s very important that the SAFE and the
guardians relate to each other, she said, because “we want to make sure
they have the best quality of life that they can.”
“The goal is to be a team,” Stanton said. “We are advocating for the elderly, and we want to work together.”
McConnell
said that although SAFE will provide eyes and ears for protected people
in the court system, she said that she is frequently asked about
elderly people who do not have a court-appointed guardian and may be in a
vulnerable position.
“We have
no way of helping these people until they are somehow brought in front
of the court, but we’re hoping that this is a mechanism to try help more
people because we’re putting in a non-biased, volunteer person,”
McConnell said. “We can’t give them a SAFE until it goes through the
process.”
Another opportunity
for SAFE is to raise awareness in the community about possible elder
abuse situations, perhaps reporting them to the Public Guardian or
Department of Aging to start an investigation, Landa said.
Porter
said a new resource was implemented with a state guardianship
compliance office recently established though the Nevada Supreme Court.
The
official launch of SAFE comes on the heels of recent elder abuse cases
prosecuted by the Attorney General’s office, including cases in Elko and
Las Vegas.
Attorney General
Adam Laxalt announced five cases of elder abuse, including one that
involved a former lieutenant with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police
Department and attorney who exploited an elderly couple for $700,000.
In
Elko, Wade Fordin pled guilty to charges related to converting more
than $6,100 of his mother’s estate for his personal use. He received 60
days house arrest and probation in district court on Feb. 26.
Abuses
seen by the courts include guardians who might misappropriate a
protected person’s funds by keeping Social Security checks and failing
to pay household expenses or health care bills.
Full Article & Source:
SAFE elderly advocacy program launched
2 comments:
Are they going to handle guardianship abuse?
What a great development. The CASA program which is similar for children is a god send, and I think SAFE will do the same.
Post a Comment