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Next problem to solve: even if you were able to get her out, medical transport will cost thousands of dollars. You can look up a company and they'll give you an exact estimate based on what type of vehicle and care she requires during the trip, and how many miles.
If you succeed in getting her to Texas you first need to find out how the guardianship transfers (I'm not sure so I would ask a social worker). Then you can help her apply for Medicaid in Tx, if she isn't already on Medicaid in NJ and if so, how and when that transfers.
I think the reason the facility workers don't respond to many of your inquiries may be because they legally cannot. If you are neither PoA nor guardian they have no business talking to you about your mom and her affairs. Sorry, but this is how the law works...it is to protect people and their privacy. You not being able to afford a lawyer is no one else's problem but yours and your mom's.
What I don't understand is if your mom has capacity, why isn't she working with you directly to move? If she is incapacitated, who is legally managing her affairs? Is the facility her guardian? If she isn't acting on her own, then who is currently her legal representative?
You would then let THEM reach out to the NH in NJ. The logistics of getting her from one to the other will be daunting, especially if you don't have money to throw at the problem.
Right.
And OP: since your mother is in the facility, I guess (even if she would be mentally sharp), she’s physically not able to manage all that alone: getting to the airport, etc.
And since your mother hasn’t tried to escape from the facility, I guess she mentally also doesn’t know how to go about leaving the facility. She would have left already.
She might not be mentally incompetent, but in some ways has cognitive decline and can’t figure out on her own, how to leave.
If she’s mentally competent, she’s allowed to leave whenever she wants to: she might be obliged to put in place certain care, before she’s allowed to leave. Again, since your mother hasn’t taken these steps, I guess there is some cognitive decline.
I agree with mstrbill: “The only way is for someone to go there, obtain guardianship, and then remove her from the facility.”
I read all your replies.
The facility has no incentive to solve the problem fast. They get money the slower this is solved.
I see I guessed right: no one has POA.
You emailed a model POA for your mother to sign: be careful. I myself don’t allow my elderly LO to sign anything without my presence. It’s hard enough to be careful of what you sign (read the small print) when you’re young and healthy. It’s risky for an elderly person to sign things, without you double-checking, being physically present during the signing.
They could give her any other document and ask her to sign. You never know.
There are bad people everywhere, also in facilities. Yes really. Don’t assume everyone in facilities has the best intentions for your LOs.
Also, a POA doesn’t just get signed by your mother: it’s not that simple. You must get a lawyer, or notary, to notarize/make the document legally valid — AT THE SAME MOMENT that your mother signs. A paper (POA) with only her signature on it means nothing. This is also to protect her. Signing POA is serious. It gives a lot of power to the POA.
You asked how to get guardianship if you have no money? I don’t think you’ll ever get a pro bono lawyer to help you. It costs a lot to get guardianship — that’s exactly why people sign a POA ahead of time to avoid all that. There’s no way around it: you’ll probably have to spend money, if you want guardianship.
As I mentioned, only a court can decide that someone is mentally incompetent.
A social worker is NOT allowed to decide that; nor a doctor at a facility. That would give them too much power; corruption; self-interested in keeping patients for their own financial gain.
Only a court can declare someone is mentally incompetent.
OP, from what I understand, no one has POA. Then the only option you have is to try to get guardianship.
You could physically go there and take your mother out - but if you don’t have POA, you’ll get into trouble.
Meanwhile, it doesn’t look like the facility is going to release her. They’re probably glad no one has POA; it means they have almost total power to decide (unless you OP get guardianship; then you’re the decision-maker).
YES.
Sometimes the only way is for you (person who is POA) to physically go there and take your mother out.
The facility clearly has no interest in solving this fast. The longer your mother stays, the more money they get.
Where there’s a will, there’s a way. Of course they could have replied to you. Ignoring you is disrespectful and cruel towards your mother who wants to leave asap.
At her age, why was residential living necessary for her care?
Is she LEGALLY responsible for herself? If not, who has LEGAL (POA?) responsibility for her care?
It sounds as though you are attempting to connect and communicate to and through the appropriate channels, but I’m not sure you realize how terribly difficult EVERYTHING is, and has been, in parts of New Jersey since March 2020.
Please attempt to provide a few specific details about your mother’s needs.
I’m sure that any of us who have attempted to care for LOs through the last 3 nightmarish years will be more than glad to share what tools have helped them.
I feel that’s none of our business; and it’s irrelevant for figuring out how to get her out.
The only thing that matters is, who is POA.
OP — if no one is POA, and if your mother was declared mentally incompetent (only a court can declare that) (a doctor’s opinion is not enough), then you’re in trouble.
Then, the ONLY way for you to be allowed to decide where she lives, is by you getting guardianship. That costs money and time. For this reason, people sign POA ahead of time, to avoid the whole guardianship process.