In this Sept. 14, 2017, file photo, Assemblyman Brian Maienschein, R-San Diego, speaks before the Assembly in Sacramento, Calif. |
By City News Service Sacramento
LOS ANGELES (CNS) — With the Britney Spears case playing out in Los Angeles civil court, an assemblyman Wednesday introduced legislation aimed at reforming state conservatorship laws to limit abuses of the system and provide alternatives for conservatees.
Assemblyman Brian Maienschein, D-San Diego, says AB 1663 — The Probate Conservatorship Reform and Supported Decision-Making Act — will ensure probate conservatorships are used only a last resort, due to the potential for exploitation of those the appointments are intended to serve.
The legislation would support alternatives that provide greater agency to conservatees, require courts to consider other alternatives first, make conservatorships easier to end and require conservators to make decisions "aligned with the conservatee's wishes or previously expressed preferences."
In a statement, Maienschein said that prior to his legislative career, he clerked for a San Diego Superior Court judge and "saw firsthand the role that the court plays in establishing probate conservatorships and how the system could be abused and misused."
Though state law holds that conservatorships should only be used if they are the least restrictive alternative, Maienschein said they are often granted without consideration of other options and with few re-evaluations of the conservatees' ableness.
"It's time that we take action to reform the probate conservatorship system in our state," Maienschein said. "It is reform that is long overdue."
In a statement announcing AB 1663, the assemblyman highlighted the highly publicized case of Spears' 13-year conservatorship, which the pop star was only recently able to have terminated.
A post-conservatorship hearing was scheduled for Wednesday in Los Angeles in the Spears case.
AB 1663 has garnered support from disability rights groups, as well as the #FreeBritney movement that emerged amid reports of Spears' efforts to end her conservatorship and allegations of wrongdoing at the hands of her conservators.
"We started our movement for Britney Spears, but we quickly learned
that conservatorship abuse is rampant across the state of California and
beyond," said Leanne Simmons, Free Britney L.A. organizer. "The
successful termination of Britney's conservatorship helped to shine a
light on the problems with conservatorships, but there is much work to
be done."
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