FOX6 WBRC
AUGUSTA, GA (WFXG) -
There's a new set of rules designed to help clear up problems in the Augusta Judicial Circuit's guardian ad litem system.
Tom Allgood, an attorney and one of the authors of the new rules and application process, said the changes started several months ago and took several re-drafts. The new rules are designed to keep a closer eye on the guardian ad litem system.
"It just got to be too cumbersome," Allgood said.
Judges making their own rules, guardians charging clients what they felt was fair, and some guardians taking on way more cases than others.
These were just some of the reasons for a 13-page comprehensive overhaul changing the guidelines and application process to become a guardian ad litem for the Augusta Judicial Circuit.
"All the judges had their own rules, and they had ways, or methods, but they each approved guardians for use or assignment in their cases individually," Allgood said. "It was just decided that we could better use this resource if we drafted some rules and guidelines that applied to every guardian assigning cases by any judge."
WFXG was the first to investigate allegations against Janet Weinberger and complaints about her billing practices.
Now, nearly six months after our story aired, new rules and bylaws are being drafted.
Full Story: FOX6 WBRC
Showing posts with label Augusta Judicial Circuit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Augusta Judicial Circuit. Show all posts
Sunday, May 17, 2015
Friday, January 23, 2015
Georgia - Increased oversight needed for troubled guardian ad litem program
Augusta Chronicle
The Augusta Chronicle has done the public a great favor by drawing attention to problems faced, and to some extent created, by guardians ad litem, who are appointed by courts to represent the interests of children in divorce cases.
SINCE GUARDIANS do not represent the divorcing parents, they serve an important but entirely different role than do attorneys for plaintiffs and defendants. Attorneys are trained in adversarial proceedings to argue the case for their clients. Guardians, like the children they represent, find themselves in the middle of difficult and often troubling circumstances.
And while guardians seek to discover the best possible solution for children of divorce, “best possible” is almost always “least hurtful,” because divorce hardly ever is without pain for the affected children.
For more than 12 years, I served as a guardian in the Augusta Judicial Circuit on cases assigned to me by more than 10 judges.
During part of that time I served also as president of the guardian association (now defunct), which attempted through its bylaws, training programs and other forms of assistance to ensure professional and ethical work by individual guardians.
Full story: Augusta Chronicle
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