By: Zaffirini S.B. No. 1882
 
 
 
   
 
 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 
AN ACT
  relating to a bill of rights for wards under guardianship.
         BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
         SECTION 1.  Chapter 1151, Estates Code, is amended by adding
  Subchapter H to read as follows:
  SUBCHAPTER H. RIGHTS OF WARDS
         Sec. 1151.351.  BILL OF RIGHTS FOR WARDS. (a) A ward has all
  the rights, benefits, responsibilities, and privileges granted by
  the constitution and laws of this state and the United States,
  except where specifically limited by a court-ordered guardianship
  or where otherwise lawfully restricted.
         (b)  A ward has the right:
               (1)  to have a copy of the guardianship order and
  letters of guardianship and contact information for the probate
  court that issued the order and letters;
               (2)  to have a guardianship that encourages the
  development or maintenance of maximum self-reliance and
  independence in the ward with the eventual goal, if possible, of
  self-sufficiency;
               (3)  to be treated with respect, consideration, and
  recognition of the ward's dignity and individuality;
               (4)  to reside and receive support services in the most
  integrated setting, including home-based or other community-based
  settings, as required by Title II of the Americans with
  Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. Section 12131 et seq.);
               (5)  to consideration of current and previously stated
  personal preferences, desires, medical and psychiatric treatment
  preferences, religious beliefs, living arrangements, and other
  preferences and opinions in guiding substituted judgment decisions
  made by the guardian to promote the ward's self-determination and
  well-being;
               (6)  to financial self-determination for all public
  benefits and access to a monthly personal allowance;
               (7)  to receive timely and appropriate health care and
  medical treatment that does not violate the ward's rights granted
  by the constitution and laws of this state and the United States;
               (8)  not to be involuntarily admitted for care or
  treatment to a public or private inpatient facility, a public or
  private psychiatric facility, a residential care facility operated
  by the Health and Human Services Commission, or a nursing facility;
               (9)  to exercise full control of all aspects of life not
  specifically granted by the court to the guardian;
               (10)  to control the ward's environment based on the
  ward's personal preferences;
               (11)  to complain or raise concerns regarding the
  guardian or guardianship to the court, including living
  arrangements retaliation by the guardian, conflicts of interest
  between the guardian and service providers, or a violation of any
  rights under this section;
               (12)  to appear before the court and express the ward's
  preferences and concerns when the court considers the renewal of
  letters of guardianship or is making a determination concerning
  whether the guardianship should be continued, modified, or
  terminated;
               (13)  to have a court investigator, guardian ad litem,
  or attorney ad litem appointed by the court to investigate a
  complaint received from the ward or any person about the
  guardianship;
               (14)  to participate in social, religious, and
  recreational activities, training, employment, education,
  habilitation, and rehabilitation of the ward's choice in the most
  integrated setting;
               (15)  to self-determination in the maintenance,
  disposition, and management of real and personal property,
  including the right to receive notice and object about the
  maintenance, disposition, or management of clothing, furniture,
  vehicles, and other personal effects;
               (16)  to personal privacy and confidentiality in
  personal matters, subject to state and federal law;
               (17)  to unimpeded, private, and uncensored
  communication and visitation with persons of the ward's choice,
  except that if the court determines that certain communication or
  visitation causes substantial harm to the ward, the court may
  limit, supervise, or restrict communication or visitation, but only
  to the extent necessary to protect the ward from substantial harm;
               (18)  to petition the court and retain counsel of the
  ward's choice for capacity restoration, modification of the
  guardianship, the appointment of a different guardian or for other
  appropriate relief under this subchapter, including a transition to
  a supported decision-making agreement;
               (19)  to vote in a public election, marry, and retain a
  license to operate a motor vehicle, unless restricted by the court;
               (20)  to personal visits from the guardian at least
  once a month, but more often, if necessary;
               (21)  to be informed of the name, address, phone
  number, and purpose of Disability Rights Texas, an organization
  whose mission is to protect the rights of, and advocate for, persons
  with disabilities, and to communicate and meet privately with
  representatives of that organization;
               (22)  to be informed of the name, address, phone
  number, and purpose of an independent living center, an area agency
  on aging, an aging and disability resource center, and the local
  mental health and intellectual and developmental disability
  center, and to communicate and meet privately with representatives
  from these agencies and organizations;
               (23)  to be informed of the name, address, phone
  number, and purpose of the Judicial Branch Certification Commission
  and the procedure for filing a complaint against a certified
  guardian;
               (24)  to contact the Department of Family and
  Protective Services to report abuse, neglect, exploitation, or
  violation of personal rights without fear of punishment,
  interference, coercion, or retaliation; and
               (25)  to have the guardian, on appointment and on
  annual renewal of the guardianship, explain the rights delineated
  in this subsection in the ward's native language, or preferred mode
  of communication, and in a manner accessible to the ward.
          (c)  A ward under guardianship may seek injunctive or
  declaratory relief to enforce the ward's rights under this section
  in the court having jurisdiction over the ward's guardianship.
         (d)  The court may award attorney's fees to an attorney
  appointed or retained to represent a ward in a proceeding to enforce
  the ward's rights under this section.
         (e)  In enacting or revising statutes or resolutions, the
  legislature and the Texas Legislative Council are directed to
  replace, as appropriate, the term "ward" with the preferred phrase
  or appropriate variations of the phrase "person under
  guardianship."
         (f)  This section does not supersede or abrogate other
  remedies existing in law.
         SECTION 2.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
  a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
  provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. If this
  Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
  Act takes effect September 1, 2015.