A bill (S.B. 110) is working its way through the legislature that would help incapacitated adults whose caretakers are cutting them off from family and friends.
The bill would allow a court to appoint a guardian for the limited purpose of supervising the incapacitated individual's access to people they want to see or talk to.
The
court would first need to determine that the incapacitated person wants
contact with the person who has been barred - and that the contact is
in the best interest of the incapacitated person.
According to
the bill's sponsor, Sen. Peter Lucido (R-Shelby Twp.), the goal is to
provide a legal avenue for allowing visitation and other communication
when a caretaker says no.
"That's what courts are supposed to do:
access to justice," said Lucido. "It is unjust to allow one party to
seclude others from seeing their loved one."
"Especially in their
golden years, why would you want to bar somebody from having that time
with their loved one? That's what this is about," Lucido said. "Family
members may not get along, but the person who had these children - or an
uncle or aunt that misses their nephew or niece - should have the
benefit of seeing that loved one."
Some say the bill does not go far enough to protect vulnerable adults from being isolated.
Sean
Bennett, a disability rights advocate, submitted testimony to the House
Judiciary Committee for its November 5th hearing, stating, "A better
approach, and that required by Constitutional law, is to stipulate that a
guardian may not restrict visitation or communication rights unless
necessary to protect the person from harm or some other very good
reason."
Alison Hirschel, managing attorney with the Michigan
Elder Justice Initiative, in her testimony commended Lucido's efforts to
address the "common scenario" of incapacitated adults being isolated
from people important to their lives.
"Many of these situations
arise as the result of long-standing family tensions and sometimes
create heartbreaking situations in which concerned family members and
vulnerable adults have no access to each other," wrote Hirschel.
But
she urged some amendments to the bill such as clarifying that it
applies to institutional settings as well as home settings and including
language that "the limited guardian must promote access consistent with
the incapacitated person's wishes and welfare."
Lucido said the
bill has passed in the state Senate, was voted out of the House
Judiciary Committee this week, and is headed for a vote in the House.
Full Article & Source:
Legislation aims to prevent incapacitated people from being cut off from loved ones
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