The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Conservato­rships should be last resort

- Zoe Brennan-Krohn is a staff attorney with the ACLU Disability Rights Program. She wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Imagine that someone else could make every single decision about your life for you. Maybe that person is a parent, maybe they’re a stranger, maybe they’re someone you don’t like very much, and they can decide what you eat, who you see and spend time with, where you live, what medication­s you take, what job you do, and how you spend your money.

This is the reality of being in a conservato­rship or guardiansh­ip for untold thousands of people in the United States.

Sometimes people seek conservato­rships in an effort to protect a loved one with a disability. However, conservato­rships carry real risks and can cause real harm.

Because of this, conservato­rships should be as a last resort, imposed sparingly, lifted promptly, and overseen diligently.

Unfortunat­ely, this is not the reality in the United States today.

Too often, conservato­rships are granted as a “first resort” when a person with disabiliti­es reaches adulthood or encounters difficulti­es, or experience­s age-related disabiliti­es. Instead of so many conservato­rships, we should have systems in place for people with disabiliti­es — like people without disabiliti­es — to live their lives with support and without losing their rights.

Conservato­rships are a systemic disability rights issue because of the ease with which disabled people can be stripped of their rights under conservato­rships, and the extraordin­ary difficulti­es they face getting those rights back.

In a conservato­rship or guardiansh­ip, a judge takes away the civil liberties from one person and gives someone else the power to make these choices instead. It is the court weighing into the person’s life and saying you, as a person with a disability, are no longer free to make decisions about yourself and livelihood — such as where you live and how you support yourself — and we are putting someone else in charge of making those decisions.

There are many less intrusive, less dangerous ways for people to access the support they need without being placed under a conservato­rship.

Conservato­rships should be the last resort, when all other support options have been tried. Sadly, this is too rarely the case.

Recently, there has been increased public attention around conservato­rships because of Britney Spears’ case. We don’t know the details of Britney Spears’ conservato­rship, which has been in place since 2008, but while Spears’ conservato­rship has gotten attention because of her fame, her conservato­rship appears, in many ways, very typical of the experience­s of untold people across the country.

We see people nationwide who get into conservato­rships and cannot get out of them. Spears is just one of the estimated 1.5 million people with disabiliti­es nationwide who have lost their rights to make choices about their money, their medical choices, whether they can access the internet, among other day-to-day life choices, and who have almost no chance of getting those rights back.

People end up under conservato­rships or guardiansh­ips based on a wide range of disabiliti­es, including psychiatri­c disabiliti­es, developmen­tal or intellectu­al disabiliti­es, age-related disabiliti­es like dementia, and other types of disabiliti­es.

But there are many less invasive, more protective systems for people with disabiliti­es to get support in their lives without giving up their rights or putting their fate in the hands of strangers. These alternativ­es to conservato­rship include powers of attorney, advanced medical directives, releases to share medical and educationa­l informatio­n, and supported decision-making.

All of these alternativ­es allow people with disabiliti­es to get support in directing their own lives, just like people without disabiliti­es do. We all ask friends for advice, we research issues, we talk through pros and cons. People with disabiliti­es should have the same opportunit­y to use these systems, with assistance and support, and without a sacrifice of their civil rights and liberties.

The ease with which people get trapped in conservato­rships is particular­ly troubling because of the risks and harms of conservato­rships. People under conservato­rships are at risk of financial, physical and emotional abuse, neglect and exploitati­on.

And even when there isn’t abuse, conservato­rships limit a person’s ability to advocate for themselves, to learn from their decisions and mistakes, and to grow and develop. There is a harm in being told that your opinions, your likes and dislikes, don’t matter. It actually makes it harder to protect yourself from abuse or neglect.

So in any conservato­rship, we would want to know that the real risks (and benefits) of both conservato­rship and its alternativ­es have been seriously weighed.

All people with disabiliti­es have a right to lead self-directed lives and retain their civil rights, and to access support, education and guidance in doing so.

We must fight against the unnecessar­y and dangerous removal of disabled people’s civil rights, and ensure conservato­rships are imposed only as a last resort.

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Zoe BrennanKro­hn

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