Friday, May 2, 2025

North Dakota House passes bill to create Office of Guardianship and Conservatorship

The office will license and maintain a registry of professional guardians and conservators, set regulations and policies, oversee legal and disciplinary actions, and manage state funding.


By Grant Coursey

BISMARCK — The North Dakota House of Representatives overwhelmingly voted Monday, April 21, to create an Office of Guardianship and Conservatorship.

Senate Bill 2029 passed the House with a 92-1 vote. It previously passed the Senate with a much narrower 24-23 vote.

Amendments in the House would make the proposed office an independent entity, while the version passed by the Senate would have had the office under the judiciary branch budget.

Making the office an independent entity addresses concerns raised in the Senate that housing the Office of Guardianship and Conservatorship under the Judicial branch could create a conflict of interest. Guardians and conservators are appointed to cases by the courts, and their primary function is to work with the courts.

Existing guardianship and conservatorship programs will stay under the agencies that currently manage them until they can eventually be moved under the new office. The deadline for those programs to be moved under is April 1, 2026, according to testimony from Rep. Karla Rose Hanson, D-Fargo, in the House Appropriations Committee.

Otherwise, the purpose of the office remains largely the same as laid out in the Senate version of the bill. The office will license and maintain a registry of professional guardians and conservators, set regulations and policies, oversee legal and disciplinary actions, and manage state funding for guardianship and conservatorship programs.

Supporters of the bill say reform for guardianships and conservatorships has been a long time coming, and the bill will provide much-needed oversight and accountability for guardianships and conservatorships. They say it will hopefully work to solve the shortage of guardians and conservators in the state.

Opponents of the bill have said it will hamper existing guardians and conservators with unnecessary hoops to jump through and that adequate oversight already exists.

The bill will now return to the Senate for a vote of concurrence before it can be sent to the governor.

Full Article & Source:
North Dakota House passes bill to create Office of Guardianship and Conservatorship

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