Albuquerque Journal

Pick up the pace

Guardiansh­ip panels have much to do to fix system

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Even as two committees appointed by the state Supreme Court begin the detailed work of coming up with plans to implement reforms to New Mexico’s troubled guardiansh­ip system, there are constant reminders that much remains to be done — even after the Legislatur­e approved significan­t improvemen­ts in this year’s session.

No example of the problems is more glaring than the missing annual reports described by Journal investigat­ive reporter Colleen Heild in a Journal story published March 25.

Her story began with a simple question: “What’s become of Elizabeth Hamel?”

Hamel had been found to be a person in need of protection by Judge James T. Martin of Las Cruces, who assigned a private company as her guardian/conservato­r in 2010.

But nothing in online court docket sheets — what have been the only public window into this highly secretive system — indicated that required annual reports had ever been filed in Elizabeth’s case. There was no indication as to whether she was dead or alive.

And her case is hardly unique. A check by the Journal found dozens of cases with missing reports in southern New Mexico.

The owner of the commercial guardiansh­ip company appointed by Martin, Advocate Services of Las Cruces, acknowledg­ed that the company “did get behind,” but said we are “catching up.”

Eight years is a lot of catching up to do.

These reports, which a court-appointed rules committee will hopefully beef up to at least include bank statements of people under guardiansh­ips, are a lifeline to the judge from protected people — especially those with no living family members or whose families have been shut out by corporate guardians for having the audacity to complain about profligate spending or poor treatment of their loved ones.

Martin is a member of the steering committee, which includes judges and legislator­s, that is tasked with coming up with ways to implement the reforms approved by the 2018 Legislatur­e. He clearly has first-hand knowledge of a significan­t problem — namely no system in place to make sure annual reports reach the judge in a case.

One of the legislatio­n’s most important reforms was to add much-needed transparen­cy to the system. The sponsor of the reform legislatio­n, Sen. Jim White, R-Albuquerqu­e, is also a member of the steering committee, as is Rep. Damon Ely, D-Corrales.

Meanwhile a separate court rules committee will have the opportunit­y to do by rule some of the things the statute didn’t cover — but that were recommende­d by a Supreme Court-appointed task force last year, ably chaired by retired District Judge Wendy York.

The task force of lawyers, judges, industry profession­als and family members recommende­d a number of changes including requiring mediation in contested cases, requiring national certificat­ion of profession­al guardians and conservato­rs and addressing the current practice in which the petitioner’s attorney can “stack the deck” in favor of a guardiansh­ip by recommendi­ng to the judge who should serve as guardian, guardian ad litem, court visitor and health care expert.

This is an industry that has been rife with conflicts that work to benefit the for-profit profession­als and to relegate the families of people in guardiansh­ips to secondclas­s status — if that. In some cases, concerns of what profession­als described as “emotional” family members can lead to their being virtually cut off from visiting, or allowed to do so only under strict supervisio­n of the guardian.

Executives of one guardiansh­ip company are charged in federal court with stealing millions of dollars from clients to fund extravagan­t lifestyles. This all happened under the noses of the judges who made the appointmen­ts and were supposed to be looking after the protected persons — primarily through annual reports.

So millions of dollars have been siphoned off undetected under the current reporting mechanism. Enough said.

Meanwhile, the rules committee has come under legitimate criticism for being dominated by insiders and lacking any significan­t voice representi­ng families. In other words, critics say it is mostly lawyers writing rules for themselves.

But this committee is subject to Supreme Court supervisio­n, and the court should require it to post the schedule of its meetings and allow outside input — since it isn’t built in. And it should take a hard look at recommenda­tions. The guardiansh­ip system has tremendous impact on some of our most vulnerable people and their families. Real progress has been made, but there is much more to do for it to positively affect those individual­s and their loved ones. It is the responsibi­lity of these committees to make that happen — not to take the heat off the industry or make life easy for the judiciary.

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JOURNAL

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