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S08654 Summary:

BILL NOS08654B
 
SAME ASSAME AS A09295-B
 
SPONSORCLEARE
 
COSPNSRPALUMBO, ROLISON
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add §227, Eld L; amd §81.19, Ment Hyg L; add §99-uu, St Fin L
 
Enacts the New York state good guardianship act to establish the statewide initiative of not-for-profit guardians.
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S08654 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         8654--B
 
                    IN SENATE
 
                                     January 7, 2026
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  Sens. CLEARE, PALUMBO, ROLISON -- read twice and ordered
          printed, and when printed to be committed to the Committee on Aging --
          reported favorably from said committee and committed to the  Committee
          on Finance -- committee discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as
          amended  and  recommitted  to  said committee -- committee discharged,
          bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended  and  recommitted  to  said
          committee
 
        AN  ACT  to  amend  the  elder law, the mental hygiene law and the state
          finance law, in relation to establishing the statewide  initiative  of
          not-for-profit guardians
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Short title. This act shall be known and may  be  cited  as
     2  the "New York state good guardianship act".
     3    § 2. Legislative intent and findings. The Legislature finds that arti-
     4  cle 81 of the New York state mental hygiene law mandates assignment of a
     5  guardian  when an individual is deemed to be incapacitated and unable to
     6  manage their own affairs. At present, this  mandate  is  not  adequately
     7  funded  by New York state. This has led to a dearth of reputable guardi-
     8  anship resources, leaving judges constrained when attempting to  fulfill
     9  their  legal mandate, risking harm for individuals in dire need of care,
    10  and increasing the cost burden on our social safety net.
    11    Guardianship involves essential  management  of  financial  resources,
    12  coordination  of  health  care,  and  ensuring basic daily needs such as
    13  cooking, cleaning and shopping are met. When an individual  has  signif-
    14  icant  financial  resources,  identifying  a  paid  guardian is a viable
    15  option. However, the reality is that most  people  assigned  a  guardian
    16  cannot afford to pay for this high-level of care. This is where communi-
    17  ty-based  not-for-profit  organizations step in to serve. Reputable not-
    18  for-profit organizations take a multidisciplinary approach to  care  and
    19  tailor  a  plan  to  an  individual's needs, at no charge or for minimal
    20  fees.
    21    Due to the high level of need and lack of an adequate funding  stream,
    22  not-for-profit groups are unable to take on more cases without sacrific-
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD13789-12-6

        S. 8654--B                          2
 
     1  ing  quality  of care. Some districts lack a not-for-profit guardianship
     2  services provider altogether. These factors put a  strain  on  municipal
     3  and  county  budgets when local departments of social services must step
     4  in  as  the  guardian  of  last resort, as they too do not have adequate
     5  resources to keep pace with demand. Moreover, the  lack  of  appropriate
     6  assignments  of  guardians  has  led to a significant cost burden on our
     7  social safety net,  particularly  avoidable  hospitalizations  and  care
     8  through  Medicaid  and  shelter stays. This gap in quality guardians has
     9  also allowed a third rail of actors to enter the market:    unscrupulous
    10  and  unchecked  for-profit  entities  who  collect fees while neglecting
    11  those in their care.
    12    To address this issue, the Legislature proposes to establish a  state-
    13  wide  initiative  of not-for-profit guardians program that leverages the
    14  expertise and capacity of existing, reputable  not-for-profit  organiza-
    15  tions to provide comprehensive, multidisciplinary guardianship services.
    16  This  initiative  will help grow well-established guardianship programs,
    17  create new programs, and promote  alternatives  to  guardianships  where
    18  appropriate  to  ensure  that  the  entire  state  has  access  to these
    19  services. Understanding the magnitude of serving  as  a  guardian,  this
    20  legislation  will  ensure  proper oversight, accountability, and service
    21  delivery while addressing the needs of individuals who cannot  care  for
    22  themselves  due  to  age,  disability, or other conditions. Taking these
    23  steps will also help eliminate bad actors from the  guardianship  market
    24  while  providing  significant Medicaid and social welfare savings to the
    25  state. Lastly, the enactment of this legislation is consistent with  the
    26  recommendations  of  the  adopted  New  York State Master Plan on Aging,
    27  which  supports  a  fifteen-million-dollar  investment  in  guardianship
    28  services.
    29    §  3.  The elder law is amended by adding a new section 227 to read as
    30  follows:
    31    § 227. Statewide initiative  of  not-for-profit  guardians.  1.  There
    32  shall hereby be established within the office for the aging a program to
    33  be  referred  to  as the "statewide initiative of not-for-profit guardi-
    34  ans". Such initiative shall exist to:
    35    (a) serve, within available resources and capacity,  as  guardian  for
    36  individuals  over  the age of eighteen eligible under article eighty-one
    37  of the mental hygiene law for whom an appointing judge is unable to find
    38  a guardian, whether a suitable family member or friend  or  an  attorney
    39  from part thirty-six of the rules of the chief judge, to serve;
    40    (b) operate a free public helpline to provide guidance, resources, and
    41  referrals  for any individual or entity navigating guardianship pursuant
    42  to article eighty-one of the mental hygiene law and/or seeking  alterna-
    43  tive services;
    44    (c)  build  statewide capacity and training opportunities to establish
    45  new programs within existing not-for-profit agencies; and
    46    (d) collect, analyze, and report on data related to guardianship cases
    47  referred to them.
    48    2. (a) To participate in the initiative established pursuant  to  this
    49  section and be eligible for funding, an entity shall:
    50    (i)  be organized as a tax-exempt entity pursuant to section 501(c)(3)
    51  of the Internal Revenue Code or other  charitable  non-profit  organiza-
    52  tion;
    53    (ii)  be  registered  with  the  charities bureau of the office of the
    54  attorney general and in compliance with all applicable registration  and
    55  reporting  requirements  under  section 8-1.4 of the estates, powers and

        S. 8654--B                          3
 
     1  trusts law and sections one hundred seventy-two and one  hundred  seven-
     2  ty-two-b of the executive law; and
     3    (iii)  have  experience  in  providing guardianship services or demon-
     4  strate sufficient capacity to provide guardianship  services  as  deter-
     5  mined  by  the office considering such factors as the entity's organiza-
     6  tional structure, fiscal health, and operations.
     7    (b) A non-profit organization shall not be  eligible  to  serve  as  a
     8  guardian  under  article  eighty-one of the mental hygiene law unless it
     9  satisfies the criteria outlined in paragraph (a) of this subdivision.
    10    (c) Entities participating in the initiative shall  fulfill  guardian-
    11  ship  duties  as provided for in sections 81.20, 81.21, and 81.22 of the
    12  mental hygiene law.
    13    3. (a) The office shall administer the initiative  established  within
    14  this section, including reviewing plans submitted for approval and fund-
    15  ing  of  guardianship services and awarding grants for such services. In
    16  awarding grants, the department shall use best efforts to provide state-
    17  wide distribution of funding.
    18    (b) Funding for the statewide initiative of  not-for-profit  guardians
    19  shall  be from the statewide initiative of not-for-profit guardians fund
    20  established pursuant to section ninety-nine-uu of the state finance law.
    21    4. (a) Participating not-for-profit organizations  shall  collect  and
    22  report  to  the  office anonymized data on guardianship cases, including
    23  demographic information, types of services provided, duration of guardi-
    24  anship, and client outcomes.
    25    (b) The office shall compile the data outlined  in  paragraph  (a)  of
    26  this  subdivision  and produce an annual report summarizing the perform-
    27  ance and effectiveness of the  statewide  initiative  of  not-for-profit
    28  guardians.  Such report shall be submitted annually on or before January
    29  first, two thousand twenty-seven,  and  each  year  thereafter,  to  the
    30  governor,  speaker  of  the  assembly,  the  temporary  president of the
    31  senate, the minority leader of the assembly, and the minority leader  of
    32  the senate.
    33    §  4.  Paragraph  2  of subdivision (a) of section 81.19 of the mental
    34  hygiene law, as added by chapter 698 of the laws of 1992, is amended  to
    35  read as follows:
    36    2.  A  not-for-profit corporation organized to act in such capacity, a
    37  social services official, or public agency authorized  to  act  in  such
    38  capacity  which  has  a  concern  for  the incapacitated person, and any
    39  community guardian program operating pursuant to the provisions of title
    40  three of article nine-B of the social services law which is found by the
    41  court to be suitable to perform the duties necessary to assist the inca-
    42  pacitated person may be appointed as guardian, provided that a community
    43  guardian program shall be appointed as guardian  only  where  a  special
    44  proceeding for the appointment of a guardian under this article has been
    45  commenced  by  a  social  services  official  with whom such program was
    46  contracted.  A non-profit corporation shall not be eligible to serve  as
    47  a  guardian  pursuant  to  this article unless it satisfies the criteria
    48  outlined in paragraph (a) of subdivision  two  of  section  two  hundred
    49  twenty-seven of the elder law.
    50    § 5. The state finance law is amended by adding a new section 99-uu to
    51  read as follows:
    52    § 99-uu. Statewide  initiative  of  not-for-profit  guardians fund. 1.
    53  There is hereby established in the joint custody of the comptroller, the
    54  commissioner of taxation and finance, and the commissioner of health,  a
    55  fund, to be known as the "statewide initiative of not-for-profit guardi-
    56  ans fund".

        S. 8654--B                          4
 
     1    2. Such fund shall consist of all moneys appropriated thereto from any
     2  other  fund or source pursuant to law. Nothing contained in this section
     3  shall prevent the state from receiving grants, gifts or bequests for the
     4  purposes of the fund as defined in this section and depositing them into
     5  the fund according to law.
     6    3.  Moneys  of  the fund shall be made available to the administrative
     7  entity chosen by the director of the office for the  aging  pursuant  to
     8  section  two hundred twenty-seven of the elder law to fund the statewide
     9  initiative of not-for-profit guardians established by such section.
    10    § 6. Severability. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, section or part
    11  of this act shall be adjudged by any court of competent jurisdiction  to
    12  be  invalid  and  after  exhaustion  of all further judicial review, the
    13  judgment shall not affect, impair or invalidate the  remainder  thereof,
    14  but  shall  be  confined in its operation to the clause, sentence, para-
    15  graph, section or part of this act directly involved in the  controversy
    16  in which the judgment shall have been rendered.
    17    § 7. This act shall take effect immediately.
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