Spectrum News Watchdog reporter Curtis
McCloud on Tuesday sat down exclusively with Elder Affairs Secretary
Richard Prudom, who opened up about this investigation for the first
time.
He also shared concerns about a backlog of complaints against guardians in Florida that were only recently addressed.
“We dropped the ball on this one. This will
not happen again. This is a wakeup call, and we will actually do a
better job,” Prudom said.
Prudom: We Need to be More Responsive
For weeks, Spectrum News has been sharing ongoing reports about embattled former guardian Rebecca Fierle.
The professional guardian is now facing a series of state and criminal
investigations. Those are focused on Fierle’s handling of finances and
care of the seniors for whom judges appointed her to care.
Those same judges are now removing her from
more than 150 cases, saying she abused her powers and had various
conflicts of interests.
Prudom was apologetic, owning up to the
mistakes he says his department made in handling complaints against
wards across the state within the Office of Public and Professional Guardians.
"We have made mistakes in our office. We have
not processed these complaints as efficiently and quickly as we need
to," Prudom said. "We need to be more responsive to the complainants and
their rights. I take personal responsibility for that."
Prudom says there was a backlog of more than 80 complaints, which have since been closed out.
In the wake of that backlog, Carol Berkowitz,
the former director of the Office of Public and Professional Guardians,
stepped down from her position in a one-page resignation letter.
“We have caught up with our backlog. We only
have the outstanding investigations, and obviously, it takes the
appropriate time to do that,” Prudom said.
The secretary says the backlog was discovered after an investigation was launched into Fierle.
Prudom apologized to those who have lost trust in the state's guardians because of the investigations.
“That’s the last thing I want to do is for
them to lose trust in a program that is designed to protect the frailest
of the frail, those incapacitated individuals who need our help,"
Prudom said. "And when the issue with guardian Fierle came to light,
obviously I released the investigation to the judge who was holding a
hearing to remove her from her cases.”
Fierle Case Exposes Oversight Needs
Prudom says the next likely action his office
would have taken against Fierle is revoking her license, but she
resigned as a state guardian in a letter to the secretary earlier this
month.
Still, many are pointing blame at his office.
“The misconception is that somehow we have
oversight over day-to-day operation of professional guardians in their
operation of a ward's supervision. We do not,” Prudom said.
Watchdog reporter Curtis McCloud asked Prudom,
When asked whether there are oversight checks
and balances as it relates to state guardians, Prudom said, "There is
not, and there should be, and there will be.
"I think you know professional guardians
register to be a professional guardian. There are supposed to abide by
conditions of employment, standards of practice, and the judge, when
they assign a guardian a ward, they expect those professional guardians
to abide by those standards of practice. That is not being done. It
needs to be done.”
Because of state law, the most severe action
that the Department of Elder Affairs can take against a professional
guardian is to revoke their license. The courts and judges, however, can
appoint wards to guardians — or, in Fierle’s case, take them away.
When asked whether someone is to blame for
the wrong that has been done to wards, Prudom replied, “I don’t think
there is any one blame, but I think it is actually a system that is not
working the way it should. We talked early on about (how) these
professional guardians are operating with no checks and balances. I
think that is something that is obviously a system deficiency.”
That's a deficiency Prudom says he is working to help fix.
Full Article & Source:
Florida Elder Affairs Chief on Guardian Complaints: We Dropped the Ball on This
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