Sunday, July 29, 2012

NC requests guardian in child porn case

By John Harbin
Times-News Staff Writer

Prosecutors have filed a motion to have a guardian ad litem appointed for the victim in a federal case involving the alleged exploitation of a minor and child pornography.
Former teacher Deborah Lee Tipton, 45, of Hendersonville was indicted on April 4 in U.S. District Court and charged with one count of sexual exploitation of children and two counts of possession and disseminating child pornography, according to court records.

Full story: BlueRidgeNow


Saturday, July 28, 2012

When is Burning a Child with a Cigarette Okay?

There is a case in Maine that has run its course through the system. The case is a perversion of Justice and the father has been put through the wringer by the Guardian ad litem.

The father recently filed a complaint with the head Judge – Judge LaVerdiere – in which he complained about the Guardian ad litem and the neglect this woman showed for the case and the child. This father was and still is upset with the medieval process that he and others have to go though with the Guardians ad litem assigned to their case. There is a shopping list of why this Guardian ad litem practiced neglect and bias – throwing any shred of common sense out the window and not looking out for this child's best interest.

1. This Guardian ad litem neglected the child’s safety. Several years ago in July it was brought to the GALs attention that his son was burned – it appeared that the burns were caused by cigarettes. In addition there were several large bruises on his shoulders that his son complained about. The father sought treatment for his son as any good parent would do. He also complained to the Guardian ad litem.

According to the rules for Guardians ad litem if a GAL knows that a child has been abused he/ she must make an immediate report to DHHS. In this case the GAL did not report and dismissed the fathers concern. In addition the father was accused of causing trouble – which could be true if a parents concern for their child is causing trouble.

2. Despite the fact that the father has no history of drug or alcohol use or mental illness he was forced to have mental evaluations done so that he may have limited supervised visits with his child. These visits are limited to once a week for a few hours. In addition he was forced to have an assessment done for anger management because the Guardian ad litem felt the father had issues in controlling his anger. This father did what any parent would do when faced with the threat at losing contact with their child. He complied. The Dr. doing the evaluation pointed out that the fathers perceived anger was justified considering the harassment he was getting from the Guardian ad litem. The Guardian ad litem chose to ignore the findings of this Dr – thus disrespecting the opinion of a professional and making a diagnosis of the problem. This Guardian ad litem (and this would also apply for any Guardian ad litem) has no authority to make a diagnosis – never. This Guardian ad litem under rule 3, 3.2, 12(a) is supposed to work with other professionals involved in the assessment or treatment of the parties involved. She clearly did not.

3. This Guardian ad litem showed bias against the father. In addition to the assessments the father was forced to take – this despite the fact he had no history of violence, mental illness or alcohol and drug use – the mother was never asked to do the same. The mother as part of her daily regimen of coping with life is on a mix of ten plus drugs that includes - Vicodin, Oxycontin, Ativan, Neurotin, Phenergin and Medicinal Marijuana. The child was placed under the mothers care despite the knowledge the mother was often incapacitated by these drugs. Is it any wonder the father may have shown frustration towards the Guardian ad litem's recommendations?

The Judgment of this Guardian ad litem is clouded. Both the rules and standards state that a Guardian ad litem must make well reasoned and defensible recommendation regarding the best interest of the child and be an independent voice, free of bias. In all three points it is questionable whether the child’s safety was taken into consideration. Certainly the 'best interest of the child' was ignored. These points and others were cited in the complaint to Head Judge LaVerdiere. He went through and weighed the rights and wrongs – and in the end decided, upon consultation with the Guardian ad litem, that this Guardian ad litem did nothing wrong. Well at least nothing that would warrant even the light slaps on the wrist that Maine's Judiciary has doled out to their GALs. You be the Judge and let us know if the Guardian ad litem was right or wrong.

email: MeGALalert@gmail.com

For more information on the rules and standards please follow these links:


Wednesday, July 25, 2012

County guardian ad litem losing $38,000 retainer

By Steve McConnell

Lackawanna County Family Court has decided it will not pay guardian ad litem Danielle Ross her $38,000 annual retainer to represent children in custody disputes, Judge Trish Corbett said Monday.

Court officials are reviewing Ms. Ross' contract in light of a 113-page report of the county's guardian ad litem program by the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts released this month, Judge Corbett said. Requested by Lackawanna County President Judge Thomas J. Munley in response to complaints about the program, the report found Ms. Ross is taking on too many cases, that no one was tracking its cost, and that there were no records collected to determine its effectiveness.

Full story: TheTimes-Tribune




Temporary guardian sought for Jackson’s kids

By ANTHONY McCARTNEY - Associated Press

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The turmoil in Michael Jackson’s family landed in court Wednesday after a request was filed for temporary guardianship of the singer’s three young children.

Margaret Lodise, the guardian ad litem for the children, said the petition seeks to appoint Tito Jackson’s son TJ as a temporary guardian.

Full story: Washington Post

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Late night bar hopping with a four year old

Is 'in the best interest' of the child according to one of Maine's Guardian ad litem's


As a parent if your four year old child came to you and told you she was scared of being in a situation your ex put her in what would you do? If your child was taken to an adult environment, a bar, late at night where there was loud music, alcohol and intoxicated adults involved. What would you do?  Would it make a difference if you were involved in a divorce and custody battle?

Most parents would try to take some kind of protective action for their child. If a Guardian ad litem was involved – you would complain to them; after all, that is what they are put in place for. Clearly a child (no matter what the age) being put into an inappropriate adult situation is not in the child’s best interest. Nor does the child feel emotionally safe. Common sense would dictate that this child (or any child) should be protected and removed from this situation or environment.

There is an actual case in Maine that has gone through the courts where common sense appears to have been thrown out the window. The Guardian ad litem in question is said to be one of the most senior Guardians ad litem in the state and is also a member of the Guardian ad litem Institute (the trade organization that promotes the interests of Guardians ad litem in the state of Maine). This Guardian ad litem has had criticism about her handling of other cases, in which there have been complaints against her. Her Judgment clearly seems questionable and; for that matter, the Judge who is reported to have agreed with this Guardian ad litem also seems off base.

The child in question told her father that she felt scared being in the bars to which she was taken by her mother. She witnessed fights and yelling, and her mom's boyfriend being pushed around. “Bad words” were often being said between people. When the father brought this to the Guardian ad litem's attention (the person who is supposed to be looking out for the best interest of this child) – the Guardian ad litem stated that the father simply did not trust that his four year old daughter was in good hands. The father, concerned for his daughters safety, continued to make his point and express his concern. His concern was not taken seriously by the Guardian ad litem. Instead of investigating whether or not the situation of a child’s late night visit to bars was good for the child, this Guardian ad litem continued to blame the father for trying to cause trouble.

How are we to believe, as this Guardian ad litem and the Judge would seem to be doing, that this little girl's 'best interest' was served by late night visits to bars that she found frightening? What about her emotional  safety? Is this kind of place a good moral environment for children? To say the least of what this child is learning from the experience? We would say that common sense was not used by the child’s mother nor by the Guardian ad litem for that matter. Sadly, this type of poor judgment is frequently seen with quite a number of Guardians ad litem in the State of Maine. Examples like this are the reason why there is now - and has been - a very real need for Guardian ad litem reform in Maine. Too much time has passed and too many families hurt by Guardians ad litem and the courts that 'manage' the Guardians ad litem. This should not go on any longer. Please contact us if you or your child have been hurt by the poor judgment and lack of common sense of a Guardian ad litem.

NationalGALalert@gmail.com

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

The court system serving Punishment with no Visible Crime

THE DOUGLAS VS DOUGLAS CASE


We don't know either of the Douglas's personally, nor are we advocating for them, but we find that just reading the court's report of their case online is a profoundly disturbing experience, increasingly so after several readings. The Maine Supreme Court decisions on their appeal appeared logical but seemed to take baby steps in correcting lower court confusion and custody actions that seem punitive and incomprehensible. It is the process and handling of the case before it reached Maine's Supreme Court that are so troubling. The core issue for us is that this might be a "poster child" case in which a Social Worker Guardian ad litem functions as an expert, with no oversight and no expertise in assessing parental fitness, for child custody and visitation purposes.

Maine Supreme Court Decision - Douglas vs. Douglas

Lower court decisions seem to have deprived Mr Douglas of any visits with one of his children for this child's first two years for no clearly documented reasons. How did this come about? What evidence was used to justify this radical action? Why is any  contact with his older child (by his first marriage)  only  permitted with professional surveillance?  Because there is no explanation of this (to us) extreme action in the court report, we suspect that the allegations that led to deprivation of the father's visiting rights with his child were arrived at 'ex parte' (one-on-one) between Guardian ad litem and judge.  No one, including the man himself, will know the "crime" for which he is being "punished" with such restrictive child visitation.   What is truly weird in this case is that Douglas has no such oversight or restrictions with his younger child who is not his ex-wife's child.  This is not the first time we have seen this illogical situation in a custody dispute.

AS RESPONSIBLE CITIZENS IN A DEMOCRACY, WE HAVE TO ASK:

Is there a logical answer?  Is Mr Douglas only dangerous to  his older child- and not his younger child?  Is he for some reason incapable of parenting the older child, but not his younger child?  Is he in tenuous control of violent impulses?  Is he in poor reality contact?  Is he involved in criminal activities?  Is he mentally subnormal and incapable of child care without close supervision.  What is the exact nature of the impediment to him having ordinary, unsupervised  visiting rights with his older child?   The second part of our question would be, "Who decided this apparent craziness?"  Was it the Guardian ad litem in this case, the Guardian ad litem and the judge?  Who?  And what is the expertise behind these opinions that drastically impact on this man and his eldest child?  There is a surreal quality to the dry matter of fact court narrative in all of this.  No visits for 2 years, for no apparent reason is presented "as if" this were a totally ordinary event that should require no further explanation or justification.

In terms of the visible evidence in the final report from the Supreme Court, the Guardian ad litem in this case seems guided by her conception of "in the child's best interest", and, in the report, uses unscientific, pseudo-psychological formulations and techniques to justify actions taken. In the lower court there appears to be an absence of any questioning of the Guardian ad litem's reasoning behind her clinical views and her recommendations. Let us pick just a few of the classic pieces of faux  - reasoning that jump out of the report from the Supreme Court.

"CAUSTIC AND CONTROLLING",  A NEW CRIME?

"Caustic and controlling" are quoted in the Supreme Court report as words used by the Guardian ad litem to describe the husband/father in this case and as part of the rationale depriving him of visitation with his son for 2 years. One has to ask, "So what?" How are "caustic and controlling" relevant to child safety, visitation or shared custody? Exactly why are these adjectives an impediment to the man, in this case, being a parent to his child? How many thousands of people in the US might be labelled "caustic and controlling"?  Should we investigate and seize their children immediately?  Should we consider mounting a public health campaign for this psychobabble problem? Is it like, physical exposure to lead, mercury, alcohol or measles? Or ... is this a pompous, pseudo-psychological, pseudo scientific way of saying that the Guardian ad litem accepts the opinion of the other parent that she finds the father to be obnoxious and on this basis denies visits with his child for 2 years? These are the kind of shallow "psychobabble" formulations that are without any scientific, or predictive significance, yet they seem to have had a powerful impact in court decisions and in Guardian ad litem reports. It is total nonsense used by the Guardian ad litem to imply that something of great and deep seriousness was going on.  Unfortunately, it's not a joke.  But this "psychobabble formulation" is a part of the apparatus that is used in all seriousness to justify no visits for two years! It has the power to destroy the earliest days of a parent child relationship.  Better watch out for  your ;"'caustic and controlling" tendencies if you go to court, they might grab  your kids.

BEING IN CONTROL FOR AN HOUR INTERVIEW GETS "SUPERVISED" VISITS

  In another part of the court report, the father's counselor observed with total seriousness, that during an hour in his/her office that the father and his other  child related well. Are you surprised?  Are you impressed by the "science"?  This is another, "so what"? Why does this one hour observation have any usefulness, meaning or validity (for good or bad) in determining custody? It might suggest
  • (a) that the father is fully normal and this is his usual demeanor 
  • (b) that he is mentally ill, but not so out of control that he can't hold it together for an hour when under observation
  • (c)that the counselor is subnormal if he/she has faith in this sort of observation or pronouncement 
  • (d) that the GAL is subnormal to quote this "finding" 
  • (f) that the lower court is also subnormal, if it gives any meaning to this meaningless, but expensive, one hour ritual.

The earlier allegations by the child's mother of sexual abuse of the child by the father (a not uncommon divorce strategy) were quickly dismissed after appropriate investigation, but the father needed to do counseling (it's unclear for what purpose?) and visitations are withheld (why?). Later "tapered" visits (Guardian ad litems love this termonology), gradually extending time, are allowed with clinical supervision. It appears to be a case of treating the father's contacts with his child with extreme caution, without defining exactly what the danger is that requires such elaborate caution. Does anyone know, or is this data buried in 'ex parte",  sealed confabs between Guardian ad litem and judge?  

Either the father poses some sort of specific danger to the child, or his parental rights are being denied, his human rights are being violated, and the child is being deprived of 2 years of normal involvement with his father. The man's "parental fitness" problem- if there is one- needs explicit definition.  And ...  any treatment game plan need to be tied to some sort of problem for which treatment is a recognized solution? Otherwise, it looks like Guardian ad litem/judicial "bullying" of this father and child. Father is made to jump through "counseling hoops" at great expense, for no clearly stated reason. If there is no solid rationale behind it and no measurable goals, prescribing counseling for nothing is an expensive human rights abuse. Do counseling sessions without goals or evaluation do anyone but the counselor any good?  How will an end point to counseling get defined?  It strikes us as a perhaps well-intentioned example of "civilized violence".  More punishment without a charge or conviction!  When will this father be able to see his oldest child without professional supervision?  Why not right now?

What is surprising is that some courts seem to have bought into this highly unscientific, pseudo-psychology mumbo jumbo without reservations. More frightening is the fact that they are enforcing counseling like an expensive form of totalitarian "attitude correction" (for what attitude?).

As citizens we find this case very upsetting for the above reasons, but it should be  Exhibit A for the need for Guardian ad litem reform. Unfortunately, it is also Exhibit A for district court reform too. The intellectual shoddiness, the human rights violations and the resulting harm being done to a little boy, who can't spend any free time with his father, for no clear reason, for 2 years is shocking. No wonder Maine has gotten an "F" on its national report card for protection of children and children's rights for three years in a row.  Clearly, we are not endorsing either of the Douglases as "parent of the year", but we can see no stated rationale in the court report for why  Mr Douglas has been allowed no visitation with his child for 2 years.  "Caustic and controlling" just doesn't cut it as a reason.  You shouldn't have to be certified by a Guardian ad litem as "parent of the year" to share custody; especially when it is not a standard applied out of the courtroom.  Is there a national or state parenting standard for which Mr Douglas gets a failing grade?  Of course not, we haven't come to that outside of the judicial system.  The failing grade goes to those who are responsible for this example of "cruel and unusual punishment".

While every case is unique, the mind boggling abuse of a Guardian ad litem with limited clinical skills playing a God-like expert, radically limiting visits,  enforcing expensive counseling for no clear purpose, with no clear goals for no definable end point is so illogical and so contrary to democratic values as to be unbelievable. Yet it is a common paradigm in Maine and other states with failing report cards for children's rights.

There are many other similar stories in Maine and across the nation. The link below brings you to an interview given by the director for Judicial Excellence on Guardian ad litem/ Judicial abuse. The interview is just under 10 minutes in length:

Judicial Excellence interview

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Open Letter From Chief Justice Regarding GAL Oversight

July 17, 2012
Open Letter From Chief Justice Leigh I. Saufley

Re: GAL Oversight Review

I want to thank the public, interested parties, and stakeholders who attended the May 31, 2012, meeting regarding improving the Guardian Ad Litem complaint process, and I thank those who took the time to send in written comments as well.

The written comments that have been posted on the judicial branch web page are available at:

http://www.courts.state.me.us/maine_courts/supreme/gal_comments.shtml.

As mentioned at the meeting, the Maine Judicial Branch has obtained the assistance of the National Center for State Courts to provide the Branch with information on how other state courts investigate and resolve complaints against GALs. We expect to receive information from NCSC in the near future.

In the next few weeks, the Branch will form a Task Force to review the public comments, as well as the information received from the NCSC, and to provide feedback as we develop proposals for revisions to the GAL complaint process. We intend to create a Task Force that is broadly representative of the stakeholders involved in these matters.

Because the Branch must report back to the Joint Standing Committee on Judiciary by October 1, 2012, members of the Task Force must be available to attend meetings in August and September. We anticipate as many as three meetings in Augusta in that short time frame. Several people who filed comments expressed an interest in providing further assistance or information to the Branch or to serve on any committee we might form.

To keep the numbers manageable, we will select one or two members to represent the separate stakeholder groups, including public/consumer representatives. Those interested in serving on the Task Force should notify the court by July 24, 2012, by email to lawcourt.clerk@courts.maine.gov, or to Clerk of the Supreme Judicial Court, 205 Newbury Street, Room 139, Portland, ME 04101.

We will post the members of the Task Force and meeting dates once the Task Force is formed.
Once, again, I thank all those who have taken the time to share their comments with the Court.

Open Letter From Chief Justice Regarding GAL Oversight (PDF)

Sunday, July 15, 2012

The ‘Dating Game’ – Maine Guardian ad litem style

Custody tensions can be hard enough without the ‘help’ of a stranger coming in and making recommendations based on a bizarre and abstract idea that has no clear foundation other than that person’s opinion.

For the past several years that Guardian ad litem role expansion has been what Maine’s Justice Saufly (and others) call “mission creep” in the role of Guardian ad litem. Going beyond what the courts have mandated and beyond the scope of these Guardian ad litem’s professional training. One area of “mission creep” is that a Guardian ad litem has no right to prescribe unusual social behaviors in managing the lives of divorcing parents and their child.

There is one case that has made its way through the court system where a Judge has made history. The Guardian ad litem working this case has essentially recommended that the parents (both of them have remarried) start ‘dating’ allegedly ‘in the child’s best interest’ (the Guardian ad litem has rewritten to state that monthly ‘meetings’ are recommended – whatever it is called by the Guardian ad litem it is not something the Guardian ad litem has any authority nor mandate to recommend). What is interesting is that this Guardian ad litem has no background in psychology and is stretching the Guardian ad litem role way beyond any Maine statutes.. It is a Guardian ad litem as a law unto him/herself. As this Judge has endorsed the recommendation he/ she is in effect giving approval to court ordered dating for divorcees in the State of Maine. An embarrassing first in the United States for Maine and our court system.

According to rules for the Guardian ad litem section 3, 3.2, 12 (a) “Working effectively with other professionals involved in the assessment or treatment of the child” is something that can apparently be ignored by Guardian ad litems if it does not fit their personal opinion of the “child’s best interest” in any situation. This Guardian ad litem is imposing his/ her surreal bias on the situation and in opposition to the opinion of a licensed mental health professional, to say nothing of the wishes of one of the remarried parties. It is a do your own thing plan of action. This Guardian ad litem has no mandate nor training (nor does any Guardian ad litem in the State of Maine or in the US) to recommend this course of “over the top” action. What the goal of this situation is, is hard to understand – other than the claim that it may meet some need of one parent over the other. This and a totalitarian mind set on the Guardian ad litem’s need to impose his/ her will. It would be laughable, as a bad joke, were it not so destructive of the lives of real people.

Should this bizarre recommendation actually be implemented – as it looks like it will – by the court; then both the Guardian ad litem and the court should be held responsible for this insane idea and lack of common sense. The Guardian ad litem should be dismissed – permanently. The Judge should be sanctioned at the very least if not removed. There is no room in Maine’s Justice system for such bad jokes or decisions.

An example such as this one is a strong cry for effective, long overdue oversight of Maine Guardian ad litems. Those who would say that there is “no scandal” in the Guardian ad litem program must have an extremely tolerant view of scandal.

Late appeal allowed for GAL fee award made without notice - Gudino v. Gudino

APPEALS – APPELLATE PROCEDURE – EXCUSING PROCEDURAL DEFAULT – FEE AWARDS (AT TRIAL) – GUARDIANS AD LITEM.  We’ve all seen many short opinions wherein the appellant is out of luck because the incomplete Record supposedly leaves the appellate court with nothing to go on.  But in an unpublished opinion called Gudino v. Gudino, the Court of Appeals looks it all over, discusses much in careful detail, declares that “given the undeveloped state of the Record, we decline to address these issues for the first time on appeal,” and decides the appeal for –

Full story:  Virginia Family Law Appeals


Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Starkville Guardian AD Litem

In today's world, we too often hear about cases of child abuse or neglect or abandonment.

And high profile custody battles often leave us worried about the children caught in the middle.

Fortunately, the courts have developed a system that does its best to make sure those innocent ones get a say in what's going on in their lives.

Knowing that children often can get the short end of the deal in life, a judge often solicits the services of another legal mind.

Full story: WCBI

The story was originally published June 20, 2012


Report makes recommendations for guardian ad litem program

thetimes-tribune

An arm of the state Supreme Court issued a stern report of a Lackawanna County court program that was created to protect children in family custody disputes, which also has been under the gaze of the FBI.
The Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts released a 113-page report on Thursday centered on the county family court's guardian ad litem program, finding it suffers from a lack of oversight and financial accountability, and providing 51 recommendations to improve it.

Full story: thetimes-tribune
Full story includes a link to the report.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Maine Voices: There is no scandal with the guardian ad litem system in Maine

There is wide agreement that improvements in guardian ad litem supervision would be a worthwhile goal.

PORTLAND — Dr. Jerome Collins' recent critique of the guardian ad litem "system" in Maine (Maine Voices, "Maine's guardian ad litem program desperately needs better oversight," March 9) recites some weaknesses in the supervision of guardians ad litem in Maine, identified in reports by the Office of Program Evaluation and Governmental Accountability in 2006, and by the Report of the Advisory Committee on Children and Families, the judicial branch's 2008 response.

Contrary to his claims, there is no "scandal," and nothing is being "suppressed."

Full story: PPH

Maine Voices: Maine's guardian ad litem program desperately needs better oversight

Members of the program, which is intended to advocate for children, aren't directly supervised.

By DR. JEROME COLLINS

KENNEBUNKPORT - There is a quietly suppressed guardian ad litem scandal in Maine that few know about unless they are children who have been affected by rogue members of the Maine Court's guardian ad litem program.

Guardians ad litem are court-appointed professionals who are mandated by the courts to conduct investigations aimed at determining what is in the child's best interest in cases involving child custody disputes and child protection issues.

Full story: PPH

Horry County guardian ad litem program seeks volunteers

CONWAY - Sam Hodges points to files in a drawer, and in boxes, to show the volume of cases her office is working on--and works on each year.

Any time a child is involved in a child abuse or neglect case, the state requires that victim child be assigned a guardian ad litem.  The guardian checks up on the child, acts as a bit of a go-between between the family and the justice system, and can be an advocate for the child in any situation regarding his or her custody or possible life-changing moves.

Full story: SCNow

The Money pit that is Guardian ad litem fees and invoices

Those who work in the Guardian ad litem industry, live in an extremely unusual, court-protected, economic world. Once they are appointed to a case by the court, they have a well-paid, court-protected cushy job. For the most part they charge between $100 to $200 per hour on average. They ask for a substantial cash advance of two or more thousand dollars before they start, which means that they are paid for services in advance. They are very hard to remove from a case, once started. Even if clients try to remove them, their continuance under client protest is virtually insured in court by the well-worn mantra, “in the child’s best interest”. While many do detailed monthly invoices; many do not. Nor are they under any obligation to itemize the activities for which they charge, if it is “not in the child’s best interest”. Billing clients by GALs  is strictly a matter of do your own thing. It is a consumer protection nightmare to say the least. There is no consumer protection.

Full story: and Justice for all

Critics worry about lack of oversight of court-appointed child advocates in Maine, urge reform

By Judy Harrison, BDN Staff
Posted June 01, 2012, at 11:02 a.m.   

PORTLAND, Maine — People seeking reforms to the guardian ad litem program in the state court system expressed their concerns Thursday in a meeting with Leigh Saufley, chief justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court.

Many of the 50 or so people who attended the meeting had experience with the program during their divorce proceedings. Others at the event, which was structured like a hearing before a legislative committee, were lawyers who work as guardians ad litem.

Guardians ad litem, or GALs, are appointed by judges “to represent the best interests of one or more children in legal proceedings for divorce, determination of parental rights and responsibilities, child protection and similar legal actions in Maine,” according to information on the court system’s website. Guardians ad litem may be lawyers or mental health professionals.

Full story: BangorDailyNews

New state law helps child advocates



guardian ad litem - Yahoo! News Search Results
Under a new state law, Guardian ad Litem volunteers are now eligible to transport the children they serve.
For her first case as a Guardian ad Litem volunteer child advocate, Lois Philbrick was assigned to five children. The siblings were living in a homeless shelter with their mother, who had two more children not in the child welfare system. Philbrick couldn’t take the children anywhere. She had to get to know them in the two rooms they shared in the shelter.
Full Story: The OCALA

Guardian Ad Litem Program: Role of Child Advocates Expanding


guardian ad litem - Yahoo! News Search Results
LAKELAND | A new law is seen as a boon to recruitment and retention of Florida's Guardian Ad Litem program, which provides paid and volunteer advocates for thousands of children caught up in the state's child welfare system.

The evolving nature of the program finds guardians filling an expanded role, mentoring abused and neglected minors and helping their caretakers navigate the ins and outs of state bureaucracies.

Building relationships, a tenet of the guardian's responsibility, has been hampered by an inability to transport children in their private vehicles, advocates say.