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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Feldman
DATE TYPED 1/25/05
HB
SHORT TITLE Guardianship Arrangement Study
SB 143
ANALYST Collard
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation Contained Estimated Additional Impact Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY05
FY06
FY05
FY06
$150.0
Recurring General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Duplicates HB 143
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Developmental Disabilities Planning Council (DDPC)
Children, Youth and Families Department (CYFD)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Bill 143 appropriates $150 thousand from the general fund to DDPC for the purpose of
identifying the number of adults who are under probate court guardianship status, listing guardi-
ans who have responsibility to file annual reports and reviewing guardianship arrangements to
ensure the needs of incapacitated adults are being met.
DDPC indicates $100 thousand will be used for a pilot project to conduct a random sample of
visits in three judicial districts to determine the status of the wards, such as evaluation of the
ward’s placement and evaluation of ward’s care, and to provide instruction on submission of the
required annual report.
The remaining $50 thousand will be transferred to the Administrative Office of the Courts to re-
view the current guardianship records and identify the current incapacitated adults with guardi-
ans in New Mexico.
pg_0002
Senate Bill 143 -- Page 2
DDPC states the project will operate under the oversight of a multidisciplinary governance body
consisting of, but not limited to representatives of: Administrative Office of the Courts, New
Mexico Supreme Court, district judges, Office of Guardianship, Aging and Long Term Services
Department, Children Youth & Families Department, New Mexico Protection & Advocacy, New
Mexico Guardianship Association, New Mexico Highlands University, New Mexico State Uni-
versity, University of New Mexico and guardians.
Significant Issues
DDPC indicates Administrative Office of the Courts data states only 12 percent of the required
statutory annual reports are filed. The courts do not have an accurate data tracking system and
the total numbers of guardians/wards in New Mexico cannot be given a precise count. There is a
statutory penalty for not filling the annual report, but the courts do not check to see who has
filed, so there is no effective oversight of many of the guardians and wards once the guardianship
is ordered.
CYFD indicates its Adult Protective Services (APS) program establishes approximately 110 new
guardianships each year. With recent funding restrictions limiting the number of guardianships
available, monitoring the total number of guardianships in existence became critical for all enti-
ties needing these services for their clients.
CYFD also notes the Office of Guardianship began to monitor the number of guardianships es-
tablished in FY05, to track performance and mandatory reporting and to track the movement of
cases from private pay to indigent slots. However, the large number of cases, problems identified
by a task force and external team of experts, and incomplete reporting require a comprehensive
study and analysis.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
CYFD indicates a detailed and accurate report of the number of cases and a resulting analysis of
the actual funds available for new slots would allow APS to make better use of an important re-
source for its clients. It is important to note that APS will transfer to the Aging and Long-Term
Services Department (ALTSD) in July 2005. Therefore, the performance implication will relate
to ALTSD and not CYFD.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $150 thousand contained in this bill is a recurring expense to the general
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FY06 shall revert to the
general fund.
DDPC notes this one-time allocation may require additional resources to address and identify
future problems.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
CYFD states, as a result of the study, APS may experience an increase in the availability of pro-
fessional guardianship slots for adults who lack decisional capacity and have no other decision
makers. This is a necessary resource for adult victims of abuse, neglect and/or exploitation, as
pg_0003
Senate Bill 143 -- Page 3
APS cannot intervene (except with short-term emergency placement) without a surrogate deci-
sion maker.
DDPC notes there are two components of administration oversight to this allocation: (1) DDPC
will provide administrative oversight on the pilot study of ward visits and (2) the Administrative
Office of the Courts will provide oversight of an administrative assistant to review and update
the court records.
DUPLICATION
Senate Bill 143 duplicates House Bill 143.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
DDPC notes the Office of Guardianship has no authority over private, family, or volunteer
guardianship; and there is currently no oversight or enforcement in this area.
KBC/lg