Bill Text: CA AB1663 | 2021-2022 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Protective proceedings.
Sponsorship: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1)
Status: (Passed) 2022-09-30 - Chaptered by Secretary of State - Chapter 894, Statutes of 2022. [AB1663 Detail]
Download: California-2021-AB1663-Amended.html
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Amended
IN
Senate
August 22, 2022 |
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Amended
IN
Senate
August 11, 2022 |
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Amended
IN
Senate
June 23, 2022 |
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Amended
IN
Assembly
May 19, 2022 |
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Amended
IN
Assembly
March 16, 2022 |
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Amended
IN
Assembly
March 07, 2022 |
| Introduced by Assembly Member Maienschein |
January 19, 2022 |
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
Existing constitutional provisions require that a statute that limits the right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.
This bill would make legislative findings to that effect.
Digest Key
Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NOBill Text
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The court may appoint the Director of Developmental Services as guardian or conservator of the person and estate or person or estate of a minor or adult developmentally disabled person. The preferences established in Section 1812 of the Probate Code for appointment of a conservator applies. An appointment of the Director of Developmental Services as conservator shall not of itself constitute a judicial finding that the developmentally disabled person is legally incompetent. The petition for the appointment of the Director of Developmental Services as conservator of an adult developmentally disabled person may include a request that the court adjudge the developmentally disabled person to be legally incompetent or that adjudication
may be made subsequently upon a petition made, noticed, and heard by the court in the same manner as a petition for the appointment of the director as conservator. If the Director of Developmental Services is serving as the guardian of an adult developmentally disabled person on December 31, 1980, after that date the appointment shall be deemed to be the appointment of a conservator and the conservatee shall be deemed to have been adjudged to be legally incompetent.
SEC. 2.SECTION 1.
Section 416.17 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:416.17.
It is the intent of this article that the director, when acting as guardian or conservator of the person of a developmentally disabled person, shall maintain close contact with the developmentally disabled person no matter where the person is living in this state; shall act as a wise parent would act in caring for the parent’s developmentally disabled child; shall permit and encourage maximum self-reliance on the part of the developmentally disabled person under their protection; and shall work with regional centers and the person, to the greatest extent possible, to develop and implement less restrictive alternatives to conservatorship.SEC. 3.SEC. 2.
Section 416.19 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:416.19.
(a) The services to be rendered by the director as adviser or as guardian or conservator of the personSEC. 4.SEC. 3.
Section 1456 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1456.
(a) In addition to any other requirements that are part of the judicial branch education program, on or before January 1, 2008, the Judicial Council shall adopt a rule of court that shall do all of the following:SEC. 5.SEC. 4.
Section 1800 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1800.
It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this chapter to do the following:SEC. 6.SEC. 5.
Section 1800.3 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1800.3.
(a) If the need therefor is established to the satisfaction of the court and the other requirements of this chapter are satisfied, the court may appoint:SEC. 7.SEC. 6.
Section 1812 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1812.
(a) Subject to Sections 1810, 1813, and 1813.1, the selection of a conservator of the person or estate, or both, is solely in the discretion of the court and, in making the selection, the court is to be guided by what appears to be for the best interests of the proposed conservatee.SEC. 8.SEC. 7.
Section 1821 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1821.
(a) (1) The petition shall request that a conservator be appointed for the person or estate, or both, shall specify the name, address, and telephone number of the proposed conservator and the name, address, and telephone number of the proposed conservatee, and state the reasons why a conservatorship is necessary. Unless the petitioner or proposed conservator is a bank or other entity authorized to conduct the business of a trust company, the petitioner or proposed conservator shall also file supplemental information as to why the appointment of a conservator is required. The supplemental information to be submitted shall include a brief statement of facts addressed to each of the following categories:(1)
(2)
(3)
(A)
(B)
(C)
(D)
(4)
(5)
The
If
The
The
(1)
(2)
SEC. 9.SEC. 8.
Section 1835 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1835.
(a) Every superior court shall provide all conservators with written information concerning a conservator’s rights, duties, limitations, and responsibilities under this division.SEC. 10.SEC. 9.
Section 1835.5 is added to the Probate Code, to read:1835.5.
(a) Within 30 days of the establishment of a conservatorship under this division, and annually thereafter, the superior court shall provide information to a conservatee under its jurisdiction, written in plain language,SEC. 11.SEC. 10.
Section 1836 is added to the Probate Code, to read:1836.
(a) Upon appropriation by the Legislature, the Judicial Council shall establish a conservatorship alternatives program within each self-help center in every state Superior Court.SEC. 12.SEC. 11.
Section 1850 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1850.
(a) Except as provided in subdivision (e), each conservatorship established pursuant to this part shall be reviewed by the court as follows:SEC. 13.SEC. 12.
Section 1860.5 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1860.5.
(a) A limited conservatorship continues until the authority of the conservator is terminated by one of the following:SEC. 14.SEC. 13.
Section 1861.5 is added to the Probate Code, to read:1861.5.
Upon the receipt of a communication from the conservatee that the conservatee wishes to terminate the conservatorship, a court shall appoint counsel for the conservatee and set a hearing for the termination of the conservatorship when either of the following conditions apply:SEC. 15.SEC. 14.
Section 1863 of the Probate Code is amended to read:1863.
(a) The court shall hear and determine the matter according to the law and procedure relating to the trial of civil actions, including trial by jury if demanded by the conservatee. The conservator, the conservatee, the spouse or domestic partner, or any relative or friend of the conservatee or other interested person may appear and support or oppose the termination of the conservatorship.SEC. 16.SEC. 15.
Section 2113 of the Probate Code is amended to read:2113.
A conservator shall accommodate the desires of the conservatee, except to the extent that doing so would violate the conservator’s fiduciary duties to the conservatee or impose an unreasonable expense on the conservatorship estate. To the greatest extent possible, theThe Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
(a)Adults with disabilities, including older adults with disabilities, are presumed competent and to have the capacity to make decisions regarding their day-to-day health, safety, welfare, and social and financial affairs, unless otherwise determined through legal proceedings.
(b)All adults, to the best of their ability and with supports they choose, should be able to be informed about, and participate in, the management of their affairs.
(c)Like adults without disabilities, adults with disabilities may use
a wide range of voluntary supports to help them understand, make, and communicate their own decisions. These voluntary arrangements should be encouraged and recognized as a valid way for people with disabilities to strengthen their capacity and maintain their autonomy.
(d)The capacity of an adult should be assessed with any supports, including supported decisionmaking, that the person is using or could use.
(e)Supported decisionmaking offers adults with disabilities a flexible way to maintain autonomy and decisionmaking authority over their own lives by developing and maintaining voluntary supports to assist them in understanding, making, communicating, and implementing their own informed choices.
(f)Supported
decisionmaking can be a way to strengthen the capacity of an adult with a disability.
(g)Supported decisionmaking is one of several options available to adults with disabilities to understand, make, and communicate decisions and to express preferences, including, but not limited to, medical and financial powers of attorney, authorized representative forms, health care directives, release of information forms, and representative payees.
The following definitions apply for purposes of this division:
(a)“Adult with a disability” includes an adult with any disability, including, but not limited to, an intellectual or developmental disability, cognitive disability, communication disability, psychiatric disability, age-related disability, physical disability, sensory disability, learning disability, dementia, cognitive impairment, Alzheimer’s disease, major neurocognitive disorder, or chronic illness or condition.
(b)“Life decision” means a decision, whether minor or major, that affects the adult with a disability, including, but not limited to, a decision
regarding any medical, psychological, financial, educational, residential, social, sexual, religious, and occupational matter. Life decisions include decisions about institutional, residential, and community-based services such as those provided by a regional center, In-Home Supportive Services, a nursing home, or a skilled nursing facility.
(c)“Supported decisionmaking” means an individualized process in which an adult with a disability chooses one or more people they trust as supporters to help them understand, make, communicate, implement, or act on, their own choices. Supported decisionmaking recognizes and accepts the preferences of the adult with a disability, as expressed with the supports and supporters they choose.
(d)“Supported decisionmaking agreement” means a
voluntary, written agreement, signed by the supporter and the supported person, which may be revoked orally or in writing at any time by either party. A supported decisionmaking agreement shall be written in plain language that is accessible to the adult with a disability. It may include images, be read aloud, or be video or audio recorded, in addition to the written version.
(e)“Supporter” means another adult who agrees to help the adult with a disability in using supported decisionmaking. A supporter agrees to help the adult with a disability as requested, which may include providing assistance to the adult with a disability to understand, make, communicate, implement, or act on, their own life decisions. A supporter is not entitled to substitute their judgment for that of the adult with a disability or make a decision on behalf of
the adult with a disability unless they have independent legal authorization to do so. An adult with a disability may have multiple supporters.
(a)An adult with a disability may choose to enter into supported decisionmaking with one or more chosen supporters. The adult with a disability may request a supporter to provide assistance in any way, including, but not limited to, the following:
(1)Participate in supported decisionmaking, including assistance in understanding information, options, responsibilities, and consequences of the life decisions of the adult with a disability.
(2)Assist the adult with a disability in accessing, collecting, obtaining, and understanding information that is relevant to a given life decision from a person or entity, and information about how supporters and supported decisionmaking may be used.
(3)Assist the adult with a disability in understanding information related to a life decision.
(4)Assist the adult with a disability in communicating the adult’s life decisions to appropriate persons, and advocate or assist to ensure that the adult’s preferences and decisions are implemented.
(b)Supported decisionmaking can take many forms and may be informal. An adult with a disability is not required to enter into a written supported decisionmaking agreement to participate in supported decisionmaking.
(c)An adult’s participation in a supported decisionmaking process or
the execution of a supported decisionmaking agreement shall not be used by a court or other entity as evidence of incapacity. Participation in a supported decisionmaking agreement, or the existence of a supported decisionmaking agreement, does not preclude the adult with a disability from acting independently of the supported decisionmaking process or agreement. This subdivision does not limit the admissibility of evidence pursuant to Section 28 of Article 1 of the California Constitution.
(a)Notwithstanding any other provision of this division, an adult with a disability is entitled to have present one or more other adults, including supporters, in any meeting or communication, including, but not limited to, all of the following:
(1)An individualized education program plan (IEP) meeting.
(2)An individual program plan (IPP) meeting.
(3)A service planning meeting.
(4)A care plan and hospital discharge planning meeting.
(5)A financial planning meeting.
(6)A communication or meeting with a bank or other financial institution.
(7)An employment planning meeting.
(8)A medical appointment.
(b)An adult with a disability may indicate that they wish to have one or more adults attend a meeting or communication through oral statement, gesture, or any augmentative or alternative communication method used by the adult with a disability.
(c)A third party may refuse the presence of
another adult requested by the adult with a disability under subdivision (a) only if the third party has reasonable cause to believe that there is fraud, coercion, or abuse by the requested adult.
(d)The Legislature finds and declares that this section is declaratory of existing law.
(a)Each supporter shall do all of the following:
(1)Support and implement the will and preferences of the adult with a disability.
(2)Respect the values, beliefs, and preferences of the adult with a disability.
(3)Act honestly, diligently, and in good faith.
(4)Act within the scope identified by the adult with a disability.
(5)Avoid, to the greatest extent possible, and otherwise disclose, minimize, and manage conflicts of interest.
(b)A supporter shall not coerce an adult with a disability.
(c)Unless otherwise legally authorized, including, but not limited to, authorization by power of attorney, a supporter shall not do any of the following:
(1)Make decisions for, or on behalf of, the adult with a disability, except when necessary to prevent imminent bodily harm or injury.
(2)Sign documents on behalf of the adult with a disability.
(3)Substitute their own judgment for the decision or preference of the adult with a disability.
(4)Obtain information that is not reasonably related to matters with which the supporter may assist the adult through supported decisionmaking.
(5)Use or disclose information acquired for the purpose of supporting the adult with a disability for another purpose that does not support the adult with a disability.
(d)(1)To minimize conflicts of interest, a supporter shall avoid, to the maximum extent possible, providing support on life decisions for which the supporter has a financial or other tangible stake in the outcome, such as decisions related to an employment relationship between the adult with a disability and the supporter.
(2)Where feasible, the supporter shall work diligently with the adult with a disability to find other trusted supporters who can provide support on life decisions for which the first supporter has a financial or other tangible stake in the outcome.
(3)If a supporter does provide support on decisions in which the supporter has a financial or other tangible stake, the supporter shall disclose and discuss any conflicts with the adult with a disability.
(e)A person shall not be a supporter if the adult with a disability has obtained an order of protection for abuse against that person or if the person is the subject of a civil or criminal order prohibiting contact with the adult with a disability.
(f)In addition to the obligations in this section, a supporter is bound by all existing obligations and prohibitions
otherwise applicable by law that protect people with disabilities and the elderly from fraud, abuse, neglect, coercion, or mistreatment. This section does not limit a supporter’s civil or criminal liability for prohibited conduct against the person with a disability, including liability for fraud, abuse, neglect, breach of fiduciary duty, if any exists, coercion, or mistreatment, including liability under the Elder Abuse and Dependent Adult Civil Protection Act (Chapter 11 (commencing with Section 15600) of Part 3 of Division 9), including, but not limited to, Sections 15656 and 15657.
(a)A supported decisionmaking agreement shall include all of the following elements:
(1)The name of the adult with a disability.
(2)The name, address, telephone number, and email address, if applicable, of each supporter.
(3)A list of the areas in which the adult with a disability requests support from one or more supporters.
(4)An acknowledgment by each supporter agreeing to do all of the following:
(A)Provide information, as requested by the adult with a disability.
(B)Support the adult with a disability in good faith and to the best of their abilities.
(C)Respect that the final decision shall be made by the adult with a disability and not the supporter.
(D)Not coerce or manipulate the adult with a disability into making any decision.
(E)Provide the most up-to-date and relevant information to the adult with a disability, based on all the available and known information the supporter has.
(F)Disclose, minimize, and manage conflicts of interest.
(5)The day, month, and year the agreement was entered into.
(6)Any additional information the adult with a disability or the supporter wishes to include in order to express the intent of the parties with respect to the supported decisionmaking agreement.
(b)A supported decisionmaking agreement shall be signed by the adult with a disability and each supporter, in the presence of two or more attesting and disinterested witnesses who are at least 18 years of age, or a notary public. The adult with a disability may use reasonable modifications, such as assistive technology or physical assistance, to sign the agreement. The adult with a disability shall enter the agreement voluntarily and without coercion.
(c)A
supported decisionmaking agreement shall be written in simple language that is accessible to the adult with a disability. It may contain images or be read out loud or be audio or video recorded.
(d)A supported decisionmaking agreement may include other elements, including, but not limited to, any of the following:
(1)A description of the type of assistance and support each supporter agrees to provide, such as a list of which supporter or supporters will provide assistance with each decision, or a description of decisions for which only certain supporters may assist.
(2)A list of decisions for which a supporter shall not assist.
(3)A statement whether the supporters may communicate with each other about support without the adult with a disability present and, if so, in what context and with what limitations.
(4)The name and contact information of an oversight or review person who is not a supporter to oversee any financial assistance or decisions.
(5)Information and copies of other supported or substituted decisionmaking documents the adult with a disability has in place, including, but not limited to, powers of attorney, authorizations to share medical or educational information, authorized representative forms, or representative payee agreements.
(a)(1)A supported decisionmaking agreement is effective until it is terminated in one of the following ways:
(A)By the adult with a disability.
(B)By all supporters.
(C)By the terms of the agreement.
(D)By the death of the adult with a disability.
(E)By operation of law.
(2)Any party may choose to terminate their participation in the agreement at any time by providing written or oral notice of the termination to all parties to the agreement. An adult with a disability may terminate a supported decisionmaking agreement by other conduct intended to communicate termination, including by canceling, defacing, obliterating, burning, tearing, or otherwise destroying the supported decisionmaking agreement or directing another in the presence of the adult with a disability to so destroy the supported decisionmaking agreement.
(b)If there is more than one supporter, the termination by one supporter does not terminate the supported decisionmaking agreement with respect to other supporters.
(c)A supported decisionmaking agreement is terminated with respect to any supporter who is found criminally, civilly, or administratively
liable for abuse, neglect, mistreatment, coercion, or fraud, or is subject to a restraining order with respect to the adult with a disability.
This division does not apply to CARE court proceedings or to a CARE supporter trained and appointed under the Community Assistance, Recovery, and Empowerment (CARE) Act (Part 8 (commencing with Section 5970) of Division 5).
(a)Upon appropriation by the Legislature, the State Council on Developmental Disabilities, in coordination with the University of California Davis MIND Institute and the protection and advocacy agency described in subdivision (i) of Section 4900, and in consultation with a nonprofit organization with experience in supported decisionmaking and other alternatives to conservatorship, shall administer the statewide Supported Decisionmaking Technical Assistance Program (SDM-TAP), as established pursuant to subdivision (b), to provide support, education, and technical assistance, and to administer grants to expand and strengthen the use of supported decisionmaking throughout California.
(b)(1)The council, in coordination with the University of California Davis MIND Institute and the protection and advocacy agency described in subdivision (i) of Section 4900, and in consultation with state and local advocacy, disability, and aging agencies, including self-advocacy organizations, shall establish and staff a centralized SDM-TAP program, which shall provide guidance, assistance, and training to educational entities, families, service providers, professionals, people with disabilities, courts, attorneys, mediators, and others in California who wish to use or expand supported decisionmaking in their professional or personal life.
(2)The SDM-TAP program shall respond to inquiries about supported decisionmaking, including providing technical assistance to people referred to them by the conservatorship alternatives program in subdivision (d) of Section 1836 of the Probate Code.
(3)The SDM-TAP program shall further develop and disseminate information, materials, training, and support on the use of supported decisionmaking, with consideration to providing both of the following:
(A)Tailored access and support for populations and communities that have been historically underserved, including speakers of languages other than English and immigrant, native, and rural populations.
(B)Supported decisionmaking for people who do not rely on speech to communicate, people with complex and significant disabilities, people who do not already have established support networks, people with psychiatric disabilities, and older adults.
(c)The council, in coordination with the University of California Davis MIND Institute and the protection and advocacy agency described in subdivision (i) of Section 4900, and in consultation with state and local advocacy, disability, and aging agencies, including self-advocacy organizations, shall administer SDM-TAP grant funding to state or local government entities, such as courts and school districts, and to nongovernmental entities, such as nonprofit organizations, that submit project proposals to expand the use of supported decisionmaking and reduce the use of conservatorship. SDM-TAP shall conduct outreach to educate local, grassroots, and nontraditional entities about the program, and to solicit these entities to apply for funding under this subdivision. In deciding and allocating grant funding under
this subdivision, SDM-TAP shall consider equity and diversity of grant recipients, including with regard to geographic location, population size, type of entity seeking funding, type of project proposed, and size of the grant.
(d)(1)No later than six months after the Judicial Council issues its findings on conservatorships under Section 1458 of the Probate Code, the council, in coordination with the University of California Davis MIND Institute and the protection and advocacy agency described in subdivision (i) of Section 4900, and in consultation with state and local advocacy, disabilities, and aging agencies, including self-advocacy organizations, shall report to the Legislature on the use of supported decisionmaking in the state, recommendations for how to improve and expand the use of supported
decisionmaking in the state, whether and how the SDM-TAP reduces the number of conservatorships, best practices for supported decisionmaking employed in other states, and effective measures for adults with disabilities to strengthen autonomy and protect against undue influence within supported decisionmaking.
(2)The report shall be submitted pursuant to Section 9795 of the Government Code.
(3)Any information contained in the report shall be deidentified to prevent disclosure of any personal information about specific individuals engaging in supported decisionmaking. Information about specific individuals engaging in supported decisionmaking obtained by SDM-TAP is exempt from disclosure under the California Public Records Act (Division 10 (commencing with Section 7920.000) of Title 1 of the Government Code).
The Legislature finds and declares that Section 17 of this act, which adds Section 20008 to the Welfare and Institutions Code, imposes a limitation on the public’s right of access to the meetings of public bodies or the writings of public officials and agencies within the meaning of Section 3 of Article I of the California Constitution. Pursuant to that constitutional provision, the Legislature makes the following findings to demonstrate the interest protected by this limitation and the need for protecting that interest:
In order to protect the interests and privacy of vulnerable individuals subject to protective proceedings, it is necessary that information
disclosed pursuant to the program described in Section 20008 of the Welfare and Institutions Code be kept confidential.
