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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Trujillo
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/26/08
1/31/08 HM 6/aHCPAC
SHORT TITLE Study Developmental Disabilities Guardianship
SB
ANALYST Wilson
Relates to SB 169
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY08
FY09
FY10 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$0.1
$0.1
$0.1
$0.1
Non-
Recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC)
Aging & Long-Term Services Department (ALSD)
Department of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of HCPAC Amendment
The House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee amendment to HM 6 adds the Attorney
General’s Office to the task force. The amendment adds that the recommendations of the task
force shall also be sent the courts, corrections and justice interim committee.
Synopsis of Original Bill
House Memorial 6 directs the Developmental Disabilities Planning Council (DDPC) to convene
a task force to review the processes by which guardians of adults under the Uniform Probate
Code are appointed, trained, supervised and reviewed.
HM 6 provides that the task force be composed of representatives from the DDPC, the AOC, the
Adult Protective Services Division of the ALTSD, the DOH, other appropriate state agencies,
New Mexico district court judges, the New Mexico guardianship association, the protection and
advocacy system, the senior citizens law office, individual and corporate guardians, elders,
individuals with disabilities, advocates or other representatives of elders or adults with
disabilities and other interested individuals. The representatives of state agencies should
constitute less than fifty percent of the membership of the task force.
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House Memorial 6/aHCPAC – Page
2
The task force should consider potential statutory or regulatory changes, training requirements,
identification and dissemination of best practices and other recommendations that would
improve New Mexico’s system for qualification, appointment and oversight of guardians of
adults with limited capacity.
The recommendations of the task force should be presented to the interim legislative health and
human services committee no later than October 31, 2008.
Copies of this memorial are to be transmitted to the DDPC.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
There will be a fiscal impact on the participating agencies associated with time spent by staff to
participate on the task force.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
This memorial is a continuation of HJM 34 from the 2007 Session. Recommendation 14 from
the Task Force was to extend the current task force for one additional year.
AOC provided the following summary of the principal issues and concerns addressed by the
Task Force:
Oversight and Accountability of Guardians (Paid and Volunteer)
Despite the reach and ramifications of a guardianship order, there are no uniform systems
in place in New Mexico that provide for the effective oversight and monitoring of all
court-appointed guardians. A majority of guardians are not filing the required annual
report, often because they are not aware of the requirement to do so and individual
follow-up or on-site monitoring of guardians and the adult for whom they are guardian is
rarely if ever pursued. The lack of an effective system for monitoring guardianship
arrangements is compounded by the lack of data in the current guardianship system. For
instance, there is no information readily available regarding how many guardianships are
limited and how many are plenary, or even how many total guardianship orders are in
effect today. The lack of available training and support to guardians is also a major
concern; for example, there is no consistent orientation or training provided to newly
appointed guardians on a statewide basis.
Maximizing Autonomy and Self-determination
Guardianship involves taking away the legal rights of adults to make their own decisions
about where to live, whether to buy something, with whom they might visit, and other
critical day-to-day decisions. Throughout the guardianship process, the adult’s autonomy
and self-determination should be maximized to the greatest possible level consistent with
the person’s capacity. The current system does not meet this standard.
The Task Force believes that other methods should be considered and perhaps tried
before guardianship is sought. Alternatives to guardianship include a power of attorney,
advance directive, representative payee, informal arrangements with family members or
others, etc.
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House Memorial 6/aHCPAC – Page
3
When guardianship does become necessary, legal practice in New Mexico is not always
consistent with the “least restrictive" philosophy of the Probate Code, and the Task Force
considered a variety of ways to better align practice with philosophy. The Task Force
suggests that individuals under guardianship should be encouraged and assisted to
exercise and improve their decision-making skills whenever possible, and guardians
should be encouraged to involve them in decision-making to the extent feasible.
Periodic Review of the Need for Guardianship
Once established, guardianship orders are rarely reviewed by the courts, even though the
situation of the protected adult may change over the years. The Task Force reviewed the
circumstances or events that should trigger a status review and concluded that, at a
minimum, there should be a required court review of guardianship orders that had not
otherwise been reviewed by the court for ten years. Information that would lead the
courts to convene a status conference or formal hearing earlier might stem from a review
of the guardian’s annual report, or from a reviewer’s on-site visit, or perhaps from
information provided to a monitor by friends, relatives, neighbors or other informants.
The group endorsed the concept that it should be easier to move to a more limited
guardianship, but a formal process with adequate procedural protections should be
maintained when a more extensive or restrictive guardianship arrangement is proposed.
Interaction of Different Statute
The primary provisions of state law related to the determination of incapacity and the
appointment, powers and duties of a guardian are contained in the Probate Code.
However, there are several other state laws that cover situations in which an adult who is
or becomes incapacitated may arrange for (or have appointed) a substitute decision-
maker. The Task Force reviewed the provisions of these laws and the gaps or conflicts
between them.
The Task Force recommends that persons known to have been designated as power of
attorney or named as health care or mental health treatment agents in an advance
directive should be notified in the event that any other person or agency seeks a
guardianship order for the adult, and recommends that such persons be assigned a high
priority for the court to consider in appointing a guardian. This honors the wishes of the
adult and simplifies the substitute decision-making process. The Task Force believes that
proposed guardians should be more fully informed and involved when guardianship is
sought and given an opportunity to review the proposed order that will define their
powers.
The Task Force believes that guardians of adults subject to proceedings under the Mental
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code should be assured an opportunity to
participate in hearings under the Code, but agrees that guardians do not have authority
under the Code to consent to voluntary admission to a mental health treatment facility.
Task Force Recommendations
The Task Force agreed upon a variety of recommendations in two categories.
Recommendations for current action are actions that the Task Force believes can be
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House Memorial 6/aHCPAC – Page
4
achieved in the short run (over the next year or so). Recommendations for future action
represent those actions which may require further planning and clarification, and may
need a longer time frame for implementation. However, the Task Force believes that
action should begin quickly on both its short-term and long-term recommendations. A
more detailed explanation of the recommendations is included in the body of the report.
Recommendations for Current Action
1. Require Orientation and Training for Newly Appointed Guardians
2. Provide Annual Report Forms to All Newly Appointed Guardians
3. Appropriate Funds for a Pilot Program of Guardianship Monitoring
The Task Force supports a state appropriation of $200,000 in the 2008 legislative
session to fund a pilot program for monitoring guardians.
4. Appropriate Funds for a Guardianship Training Program
The Task Force supports the appropriation request by the Office of Guardianship
in the Developmental Disabilities Planning Council, also in the amount of
$200,000, for recurring funds to develop a training program.
5. Provide Training on Alternatives to Guardianship
6. Strengthen Recognition of Advance Decisions Made by Competent Adults
7. Provide Training and Support to District Court Judges
8. Voluntary Certification Program for the Private Bar
9. Seek Funding for Skill-Development and Training
10. Amend the Probate Code
Require that any petition for a guardianship set forth efforts made to locate other
court appointed guardians, persons with power of attorney, agents named in
advance directives, or surrogates appointed by the alleged incapacitated person,
and require that any such persons be notified of guardianship proceedings.
Include any such previously named agents or surrogate decision-makers on the
priority list of persons to be considered by the court for appointment as guardian,
and allow a Court to pass over someone with higher priority for appointment only
for good cause shown.
Require the person petitioning for a guardian to serve a copy of the petition on the
proposed guardian.
Require that a copy of the proposed guardianship order be provided to the
proposed guardian, to allow an opportunity to review the proposed order.
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House Memorial 6/aHCPAC – Page
5
Require court review of guardianships at least every ten years.
Assure that increases in the level or authority of guardians not be permitted
without a full court hearing, while preserving the authority of the court to reduce
guardianship through less formal processes.
11. Amend the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code to require that
priority be given to a previously appointed probate guardian when a treatment guardian is
appointed and clarify that no one except competent adults themselves may voluntarily
commit themselves to a mental health care facility.
12. Amend the Uniform Health Care Decisions Act to spell out the limited circumstances
in which the guardian, or the court, could make decisions different from or in conflict
with the specific previous health care instructions executed by the adult.
13. Amend the Mental Health Care Treatment Decisions Act to spell out the limited
circumstances in which the guardian, or the court, could make decisions different from or
in conflict with the specific previous mental health care instructions executed by the
adult.
14. Extend the Current Task Force for One Additional Year
Recommendations for Future Action
Improve and Expand Data Collection
Revise the Annual Report Form
Provide Additional Annual or On-going Training for Guardians
Implement a Structured Guardianship Oversight Program Through the Courts
o
Tickler System for Annual Reports
o
Review of Annual Reports
o
On-site Visits by Court Representatives
Designate and Fund a Responsible State Agency
Stronger Enforcement of Authority Granted Through Advance Decision-Making
Strengthen the independent role of the Guardian ad Litem
Implement Criminal Background Checks for Prospective Guardians
Consider Further Statutory Changes That Would Improve the Guardianship
System
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
Logistical support to the Task Force was provided by Protection and Advocacy System pursuant
to a contract from the DDPC. The Task Force met monthly, and also convened four work
groups, which met at least monthly to further analyze and discuss the issues identified in the
memorial.
RELATIONSHIP
HM 6 relates to SB 169, Bernalillo Guardian Monitoring Study that will establish a monitoring
program for guardianships and conservatorships in Bernalillo County.
DW/bb