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94-year-old aunt professionally deemed mentally incapacitated and in need of guardianship. Three family members are willing to work together to petition the courts for joint guardianship. Any advice?

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There can only be one boss and it should be a child of the person. If not a child, the person living closer living wise and capable of doing the paperwork yearly for the State. I personally would not want to be a guardian for anyone especially at 73 years old. Its also costly. If Aunt has the money that can be used.
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I didn’t like being a joint POA and wouldn’t do it jointly again. I wouldn’t be a joint guardian, either.

Reason: there’s always going to be conflict over something or everything. It’s much too stressful on top of the work required. I trust myself and my judgment, and I know I have best interests of the person at heart. With others, they tend to go rogue over stupid things.

Power plays, jealousy, lying, anger at the situation that gets displaced onto the joint whatever person. Laziness. Ineptitude. You can’t imagine until it happens. You’d expect that being joint anything would halve the responsibility, but it can double it.

Never again.
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Choose a pecking order instead
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My brother and I are joint guardians (mandatories in our jurisdiction) for our mother and previously for our brother. Although we were never close, it has worked. It works because my mother has money, we both have our mother's best interests at heart, and are transparent and honest with each other at all times. However, I can see how this kind of arrangement could easily get off track if there are differences over money, level of care, amount of work to be done, etc etc. If you go ahead with this multi person arrangement, you need to be compatible, agree in advance on money, type of care, amount of work by each person, how to decide health issues, and anything else that could cause disagreement. Best wishes to you and your family.
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Lizhappens May 2023
This is very true. I was the girlfriend of one of three brothers who was the primary caregiver of their parents. Fortunately they all wanted the best for their parents and there wasn’t any “real” issues.

unfortunately when a conservatorship had to be started (both had dementia) it was the courts and lawyers that were so very expensive that unnecessarily ate up their savings.

At that point I would elect one person for $$$ sake, but still try to keep the joint responsibilities going if you can.
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Too many cooks spoil the broth.
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ventingisback May 2023
Agreed. It's much more probable that it'll turn out sour than good, being joint guardian. But sometimes people want joint guardianship because they're worried if it's left to one person, that person will steal money in subtle ways. So it's not because they're filled with a desire to caregive, they just want to make sure they also have access to the money (and able to steal too...).

If family members want to be guardian of an aunt...it probably means she has money.

Whether joint-guardianship works out all depends on the integrity of the people involved, and whether they can truly cooperate.
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My LO designated 2 of us as POAs and executors.

One of us moved 1,000 miles away and one of us did all the work.

Be ready to find out the hard way if you are determined to proceed.
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ventingisback May 2023
POA...

But different from guardianship. Guardianship is A LOT of paperwork, every year. A friend of mine described it as h*ll.

If several people are eagerly wanting to be guardian, it probably means the aunt is wealthy. They don't want the money to disappear to the State, through APS guardianship.
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You have been caring for your aunt a long time by yourself. You probably need a break. Hopefully these helpers will be there for you as needed regardless of the documents.

On a POA, it did not cost more to have others named. I shared with all siblings for my parents. One sibling passed before my mom.
For my aunt who has no children, I requested a back up. The first one passed and had to be replaced. Thankfully aunt was still able to sign a new DPOA so that another could be assigned.

Not a problem at all sharing the responsibility. I think the ages and health should be considered of the other family members. Some people are long lived, others not so much. Hard to know years in advance who that might be.

But the cost might be a consideration on guardianship so discuss this thoroughly with your aunts attorney and look at all factors affecting this decision.

Wishing your aunt a smooth transition in care and hoping you find a solution that works for all.
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Get "elder law attorney " advice to both protect and direct all of the family as well as being well informed about options and help navigating an increasingly complex level of systems ........
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mcancro: Retain an elder law attorney.
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I wouldn't have joint guardianship (or POA) as disagreements can always occur. This happened to me and caused a lot of stress between my brother and me. We tried to work together but we had different views on what type of care my mother needed. We believed in advance that we would agree on everything, but that didn't happen and both our relationship and the care for my mother suffered.

If there is no other option but to have joint guardianship, I would ensure that everyone clearly outlines their expectations and their plan on care for your Aunt. Having a detailed plan in advance will ensure that any disagreements can be addressed before you actually have guardianship.
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Personal opinion here but I think 1 person should be the Guardian.
I can tell you now that differences of opinion will arise and having more than 1 Guardian will cause more problems than just the disagreement.
If you have to have more than 1 person 3 should be the way to go so that when discussing a situation or problem when 2 of the 3 agree on the solution that is the way the decision will go. (should work well unless you have 2 people with a bad idea!)
Prevent problems before they arise, appoint 1 person as the Guardian.
Discuss all (as many as you can imagine) potential health problems, living situations and solutions and see what each person says, how they would deal with the situation. Make your decision as to who you would want to be your Guardian if the need arose.
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My husband and his brother were co-guardians to their special needs sister. It worked fine in the State of NY when the three of them lived there. . My BIL recently moved SIL to Texas. Texas does not recognize guardianships from other states so she no longer has guardians. It seems Texas also has a high bar for guardianship, takes a lot to declare someone incompetent there from what we learned from a Texas attorney who specializes in this. So SIL is now a free agent in Texas. We don’t live in Texas and don’t plan to move there so my DH wont be on any future guardianship papers, if any are ever put in place. ,
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ventingisback May 2023
Do you think it was beneficial for SIL, that BIL moved her to Texas? Or did he do it on purpose, so that he no longer has guardianship responsibilities?
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