Guardianship Review 2006

Home
CLC Membership
Meeting Minutes
Bulletins
Schedule
Glossary
Contact Information
History of the Coalition
Committees
Cuts & Changes

 

Adult Guardianship Review - 2006

Fri Oct 13, 2006
Report on Proposed Advance Care Legislation


http://www.bccpd.bc.ca/i/pdf/ChartingCourse_Full.pdf
 
http://www.bccpd.bc.ca/i/pdf/ChartingCourse_ExecSumm.pdf
 
Charting the Course Ahead outlines the Representation Agreement Resource Centre's response to Bill 32--a proposal for new BC legislation that will strengthen advance care directives. The RARC, and its community supporters including BCCPD, believe there are many documented problems with these directives and that BC's Representation Agreements are superior tools to ensure that people's health care wishes are respected. Charting the Course Ahead proposes a path to enable a meaningful choice for British Columbians who want to plan for their future care and ensures Representation Agreements are truly accessible and fully effective. An executive summary and the full report are available above. You can also contact the RARC at www.rarc.ca for more information.
 

UPDATE: The Community Coalition for the Implementation of Adult Guardianship Legislation has prepared the following brief:

bulletSay No to Advance Care Directive Legislation

On December 23rd, the Attorney General initiated a public consultation process around the issue of Adult Guardianship:

bullet Consultation Paper on Attorney General Website - deadline for feedback is February 3, 2006

The coalition wrote a letter to the Attorney General expressing our concerns about the consultation paper:

bulletCoalition Letter to Attorney General on Adult Guardianship Issues

The Representation Agreement Resource Centre has also prepared a response:

bulletRARC's Initial Response to Discussion Paper

Please add your voice to ensure these concerns are heard by the Attorney General:

Comments should be submitted February 3, 2006 to Strategic Planning and Legislation Office

bulletBy email: AGWEBFEEDBACK@gov.bc.ca  (Please include “Legislative Review” in the subject line.)
bulletBy mail:
bulletStrategic Planning and Legislation Office
bulletMinistry of Attorney General
bulletPO Box 9283 Stn Prov Govt Victoria BC V8W 9J7
bulletBy facsimile: 250 953-4072

MEMO

To:       Community partners and contacts

From: Representation Agreement Resource Centre (RARC)

Re:      Overview of RARC’s initial response to the Ministry of Attorney General’s proposal on changes to legislation and new legislation.

 

NEW ADVANCE DIRECTIVE LEGISLATION 

We are very concerned about the proposal for new advance directive legislation.

British Columbia already has advance care planning legislation – the Representation Agreement Act.

The Representation Agreement Act already provides for appointing, in advance, a substitute decision-maker for health and personal care. The representative must make decisions according to the person’s wishes and instructions. 

We believe the proposed new legislation on advance directives is a step backward:

·        Research shows this old approach is ineffective.

·        There is no check and balance when those who are responsible for providing care services (Ministry of Health and Health Authorities) are also promoting and interpreting the directives.

·        Directives do not protect a person’s wishes. They are often presented at a time when people are at their most vulnerable. There is great risk that patients will feel pressured to sign advance directive forms because they want access to care; not because it reflects their autonomous wishes.

·        Advance directives cannot be used to give or refuse consent for treatment at a future time when the health condition may have changed or new treatment options become available.

When they created the Representation Agreement Act in 1993, citizens rejected the advance directive approach in favour of representation agreements to ensure advance care planning is safe, ethical and based on best practices.

Please see the attached BC Association for Community Living policy on advance directives, which highlights the dangers of this approach. “The issue of advanced health care directives should ring alarm bells for all British Columbians…”

We support keeping the Representation Agreement Act as British Columbia’s ONLY legal tool for advance health and personal care planning.

We do not support new advance directive legislation.
 

CHANGES TO REPRESENTATION AGREEMENT ACT 

We understand that there will be no changes to provisions with respect to capability/incapability for Section 7 powers. This is consistent with the community’s effort to create an alternative to guardianship and to provide for assisted decision-making. This is good news for all adults in BC.

We are, however, very concerned that all of the current powers under Section 7 be retained. It appears that the authority to “obtain legal services and instruct counsel…” under Section 7 will be eliminated. This is an important provision and must be preserved for the following reasons:

·        It is a separate and different authority from “legal matters.”

·        It protects people’s rights and assets.

·        It allows access to justice for many who may not otherwise have this opportunity (e.g. a representative went to Small Claims Court on behalf of his mother because the assisted living residence refused to return her damage deposit when she had to move to a care facility. Others have settled modest compensation settlements with insurance companies and other parties.)

·        It avoids guardianship.

·        It is being used and it is working.

·        There is no evidence that there are problems.

We understand there will be no changes to Section 9 health and personal care powers. But we are concerned about the proposal to eliminate the authority in Section 9 that allows a representative to make arrangements for the temporary care and education of minor children and other minor or adult dependents. We believe this authority is necessary because:

·        The enduring power of attorney (EPA) covers making arrangements for temporary financial support and for paying bills related to care but not consenting to care or arranging care;

·        The authority to arrange ‘temporary’ care or education for minor children or other dependents is not sufficiently provided for elsewhere;

·        It is being used effectively. In one example, a representative (of an adult with a minor child) was able to arrange education matters for the minor child when the parent’s health situation temporarily required the representative to act.

With respect to changes to the Representation Agreement Act, we support:

·        Retaining, in Section 7, the authority for “obtaining legal services for the adult and instructing counsel to commence proceedings, except divorce proceedings, or to continue, compromise, defend or settle any legal proceedings on the adult’s behalf”;

·        Retaining, in Section 9, the authority to “make arrangements for the temporary care and education of the adult’s minor children and any other persons cared for or supported by the adult.”
 

CHANGES TO GUARDIANSHIP LEGISLATION

The following points reinforce and build on recommendations made by the Public Guardian and Trustee (PGT) in Modernizing the Legal Framework, 2005.

In keeping with the principles of BC’s community-initiated law reform of adult guardianship, guardianship must be the last resort.

To ensure this, we support:

·        Requiring the court and the statutory guardianship process to consider alternatives to meet the adult’s needs, before a guardian is appointed;

A guardian should not be appointed if there is an existing and valid enduring power of attorney and or representation agreement under Section 7 or 9 (providing it covers all powers needed at the time and the attorney/represent-ative is complying with their duties). In the case of statutory guardianship, this matter should be dealt with before an assessment, as recommended by the PGT. In the case of alternatives that may be put in place instead of guardianship, a representation agreement under Section 7 is one option.

·        Requiring both the court and statutory guardianship to determine that there is a need for a guardian;

For example: “no Certificate of Incapability be issued unless an assessment has been performed that indicates that the adult is not capable of managing his or her property and there are reasonably foreseeable decisions that need to be made by a guardian and alternatives have been explored.” See the PGT recommendation with respect to the court (discussion paper, p. 14).

·        Providing for broad criteria to allow the termination of statutory guardianship even in respect of an adult who has not been assessed as capable.

For example someone may be under statutory guardianship because they do not have a support network. Once a support network has been developed, there is an opportunity to make a representation agreement. This is particularly important for adults in the community living sector where there is new emphasis on facilitating the development of personal support networks. 

RELATED FEEDBACK 

In his discussion paper, the Public Guardian and Trustee recommended an education initiative to increase awareness of adult guardianship legislation. We believe that in the case of representation agreements, this is long overdue.

We strongly urge the Ministry of Attorney General to implement an education initiative, led by the community and directed to the public and professionals on:

1.      Alternatives to guardianship, in particular, representation agreements, and

2.      Representation agreements and advance care planning.

 

 

Home | CLC Membership | Meeting Minutes | Bulletins | Schedule | Glossary | Contact Information | History of the Coalition | Committees | Cuts & Changes

The Alliance is an open and inclusive gathering of people and organizations dedicated to empowering individuals and families to make decisions about how they lead their lives in the community.

Alliance for Community Living
Contact the Alliance
Last updated: 07/25/08