Carol Berkowitz resigned as executive director of the Florida Office of Public and Private Guardians on July 12, 2019. (Florida State Guardianship Assn.) |
Florida
Department of Elder Affairs Secretary Richard Prudom’s office revealed
Wednesday that he asked the state’s top guardianship official to resign
after learning of a “significant backlog” of cases and that he has since
worked to close those cases and address the complaints.
“Secretary
Prudom is leading the Office of Public and Professional Guardians and
has made and will continue to make administrative changes moving
forward,” the department’s spokeswoman, Ashley Chambers, said in an
email to the Orlando Sentinel. “… He was made aware of the significant
backlog of cases needing completion.”
Prudom,
in an interview with Spectrum News, said that backlog had more than 80
complaints against guardians — all of them since closed.
"We
have made mistakes in our office. We have not processed these
complaints as efficiently and quickly as we need to," Prudom said in
that interview. "We need to be more responsive to the complainants and
their rights. I take personal responsibility for that. … I’m really
sorry. It should have never come to this."
The
Orlando Sentinel reported July 23 that Carol Berkowitz, the executive
director of the Office of Public and Professional Guardians – the state
agency that handles complaints and discipline of more than 550
professional guardians in Florida — had resigned abruptly after
officials began investigating Orlando guardian Rebecca Fierle for
placing do-not-resuscitate orders for people against their will and
without court permission.
At
the time, neither Prudom nor Berkowitz would comment on the reasons for
her departure. Prudom’s office has not responded to requests from the
Sentinel for an interview with the secretary.
The
firestorm surrounding Fierle began after the death of Steven Stryker, a
75-year-old Cocoa man to whom Fierle had been appointed as a guardian.
Investigators found that Stryker died at a Tampa hospital after staff
could not perform life-saving procedures because of a DNR order Fierle
filed against his wishes.
Chambers
said Prudom has been working with the staff of OPPG to close backlogged
cases and reply to the complainants with its findings. He also has
changed how the investigations are handled, she said.
“Once
an investigation has been completed, the report and its findings will
be shared with the complainant and the guardian rather than waiting for
the administrative [disciplinary] process to take place,” Chambers said.
Prudom
is also streamlining the investigations to focus on complaints that
indicate the guardian may have broken the law, and he will “continue to
work on long term solutions, including legislative recommendations” for
the next session of the Florida Legislature.
Late
last week, Fierle resigned from all her cases statewide, writing that
she would not seek to be reappointed to any cases already taken from her
or seek to be appointed as a guardian again in the future.
She
had once been a guardian in at least 13 Florida counties and handled 95
cases in Orange County alone. Guardians are appointed by judges when
someone is deemed to be incapable of making decisions on their health,
property or personal matters.
There
is statewide guardianship complaint line, run by the Office of Public
and Professional Guardians: 1-855-305-3030. Complaints can also be
submitted on the guardianship webpage at elderaffairs.state.fl.us/doea/oppg_complaint.html.
Full Article & Source:
Florida Elder Affairs chief details changes to troubled guardianship program, says he asked top official to resign
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