Albuquerque Journal

Ambitious guardian changes proposed

Commission suggests more oversight of those appointed to help incapacita­ted

- BY COLLEEN HEILD

A special commission on Friday unveiled a slate of ambitious proposals to strengthen oversight of the state’s ailing guardian and conservato­r system, which oversees finances and other major decisions for many of New Mexico’s most vulnerable citizens.

The Supreme Court-appointed commission’s recommenda­tions include hiring special court employees to hear grievances and requiring more accountabi­lity from the profession­als appointed to make decisions for incapacita­ted people.

Other recommenda­tions include requiring mediation or “facilitate­d family meetings” between feuding relatives in contested cases and creating an “adult protected person” oversight board to regulate profession­al guardians and conservato­rs, who must be certified and bonded.

The initial set of proposals, due to the Supreme Court by Oct. 1, focus on ways to improve the profession­alism of corporate guardians and conservato­rs who handle a protected person’s finances by requiring bonding to protect an incapacita­ted person’s assets.

The state’s courts are responsibl­e for appointing guardians and conservato­rs for incapacita­ted individual­s who can’t handle their own affairs. Often family members are appointed, but if there is no family or if family members are feuding, courts would appoint thirdparty profession­al guardians.

Dozens of families have come forward since a Journal series highlighte­d the problem, detailing concerns and potential deficienci­es in the system,

sparking the decision to make changes.

The commission also proposed requiring certificat­ion of all corporate guardians and conservato­rs, presumably by a national guardiansh­ip agency, but backed off the idea of requiring a state license that an oversight board could revoke for malfeasanc­e or misconduct.

Chaired by retired state District Judge Wendy York, the group was tasked in April with providing the Supreme Court with concrete ways to improve the system that, in an attempt to protect the incapacita­ted person, operates out of the public eye. All hearings are held in closed courtrooms, with few participan­ts and with nearly all court records sealed.

Enhanced reporting

Typically, the only oversight of such cases has been the guardian’s or conservato­r’s filing of a several-page annual report to the judge each year, but the commission is recommendi­ng enhanced reporting to include bank and financial statements. Such filings would continue to be sealed.

Family members who have in the past been stymied by a lack of access to the courts to air complaints about a loved one’s treatment or a guardian or conservato­r’s conduct could file grievances with an independen­t court commission­er who would investigat­e and, if warranted, report to the judge in the case.

Under the recommenda­tions, judges in appointing a guardian or conservato­r also would have to make specific findings of fact if they deviate from an incapacita­ted person’s advance directive, trust, will or estate plan.

“I feel like we’ve made some headway,” said Emily Darnell Nuñez, the sole layperson appointed to the commission. “We haven’t solved all the problems, but we have made a good first step.”

Last year, the Journal series “Who Guards the Guardians?” prominentl­y featured the protracted guardiansh­ip/ conservato­r case of Nuñez’s mother, Blair Darnell.

Secrecy issue

The thorny issue of secrecy and sequestrat­ion of such cases wasn’t addressed in the initial set of proposals but is scheduled to be discussed by the commission later this year, along with other possible recommenda­tions for changes in state law.

A final commission report is expected by Jan. 1, ahead of a 30-day legislativ­e session, and could include funding proposals for reforms if approved by the Supreme Court and endorsed by Gov. Susana Martinez.

Over the past decade, there have been prior attempts at reform involving commission­s appointed by the Legislatur­e.

But state Sen. Jerry Ortiz y Pino, D-Albuquerqu­e, said this marks the first time the state Supreme Court has taken the lead.

“The court, in bringing this to the forefront, has to do something. We (state legislator­s) have to do something; we can’t let this fester any longer,” said Ortiz y Pino, a commission member and longtime advocate for reform.

The 16 commission members include judges, attorneys, a psychologi­st, two appointees from Martinez’s administra­tion and current and former legislator­s.

Although mostly disgruntle­d family members testified at monthly commission meetings, the commission’s work gathered momentum after July’s federal criminal indictment of top executives of a longtime Albuquerqu­ebased corporate guardiansh­ip/ conservato­rship firm, Ayudando Guardians, for alleged embezzleme­nt of millions in client funds.

Weeks earlier, state financial regulators announced they had found evidence of siphoning of $4million of client trust funds at Desert State Life Management, which originally handled special trusts and guardiansh­ips for special needs clients and still retained some courtappoi­nted conservato­r cases.

Just this week, State Auditor Tim Keller alerted state officials to an initial audit finding that New Mexico’s Office of Guardiansh­ip, which provides guardiansh­ip services to about 900 indigent clients through private contracts with guardiansh­ip firms, had lax internal controls, failed to investigat­e complaints about contractor­s and performed required annual compliance reviews on only two of 21 state-funded guardiansh­ip companies last year.

Ortiz y Pino said the recent revelation­s about guardiansh­ip companies “have reinstated the belief that this is a big mess.”

“The question will be: Is the state willing to spend the money to bring about these changes?”

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