AUSTIN - A new study by the Spectrum Institute
has determined that the Supreme Court of Texas is allowing the adult
guardianship system throughout the to operate in violation of the
mandates of the ADA and Section 504.
In response, the Spectrum Institute filed a class action complaint with the Supreme Court of Texas on April 9, 2018.
“Our complaint calls the attention of the judiciary to documented
deficiencies in the guardianship system -- deficiencies that place
respondents at risk of abuse and neglect,” said Tom Coleman, a civil
rights attorney who founded the Spectrum Institute, a nonprofit
organization promoting equal rights and justice for people with
disabilities.
The complaint seeks to protect individuals whose rights are being
violated by the system and who are unable to file such a complaint with
the Supreme Court due to the nature of their cognitive and communication
disabilities, which include adults who have been adjudicated wards and
whose cases are active and adults whose cases are pending but have not
yet been adjudicated as wards of the state.
“We reviewed the Texas Constitution, state statutes, rules of
court, and reports that have been published by government agencies
documenting deficiencies in the adult guardianship system in Texas,”
said Coleman, who produced Pursuit of Justice, a film that exposes the
nationwide abuses of seniors and people with disabilities under
guardianship.
“We also searched the websites of the Texas Judicial Branch and the State Bar of Texas.”
Because the Texas Supreme Court is a public entity within the
meaning of Title II of the ADA and a recipient of federal funds under
Section 504, the complaint requests the Supreme Court to make the
necessary modifications in policies and practices to bring the state's
adult guardianship system into compliance with the requirements of the
ADA and Section 504.
A copy of the complaint has been sent to various state agencies and
organizations, including the Civil Rights Division of the United States
Department of Justice.
Court statistics reveal that more than 54,000 adults are under an
order of guardianship in Texas. Most of them are men and women with
intellectual and developmental disabilities while many are seniors
experiencing cognitive decline and others are adults of various ages
whose cognitive functioning has been impaired by an injury or medical
illness.
“Court appointed attorneys are often under the control of the
judges in the probate court who order the payment of their bills so the
attorneys are incentivized to please the judge not their disabled
clients, which creates a conflict of interest and a scenario for
potential abuse and neglect,” Coleman said.
The population of seniors in Texas has increased by more than 19
percent since 2012 to nearly 3.4 million. The number of vulnerable
adults with disabilities -- between the ages of 18 and 64 -- has risen
more than 6 percent since 2012 to 1.7 million and will likely increase
an additional 16 percent by 2025.
Because such increases in both populations are predicted for future
decades, it is expected that guardianship caseloads will increase,
according to Coleman.
Full Article & Source:
New study says rights of Texans being violated, SC allowing guardianship system to violate ADA
1 comment:
I saw the Spectrum Institute's documentary about guardianship and was very disappointed. It was all about voting which is the last worry of those who are being abused.
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