National Organization for Women

Donate Join, Re-Join or Renew

Current Action Alerts

  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Chapters
    • Southern Feminist Organizing
    • Seek Then Speak
    • Gallery
    • FL Collegiate NOW
  • Events
    • Get Involved
    • Book Club
    • Membership Events
  • FLNOW Ed Fund
  • Issues
    • Constitutional Equality
    • Economic Justice
    • Freedom from Violence
    • LGBTQIA2+ Rights
    • Racial Justice
    • Reproductive Justice
    • More Issues
      • National Health Care
      • Human Trafficking and Sex Worker Rights
      • Book Bans
      • Support Our Young Feminists
      • Child Custody / Court Watch
  • News
    • Press Releases
    • Blog
    • Sign up for our newsletter!
    • Florida NOW in the News
  • Resources
  • Legislation Tracking
    • Delegation Meetings & Town Halls
  • PAC
    • Florida NOW PAC
      • 2025 Endorsments
    • Endorsement Questionnaire
  • Members
  • Join or Renew
  • REPORT SEXUAL ASSAULT

  • Read More

Latest News

January 31, 2024 by katforflorida

Florida NOW in the News: Florida lawmakers propose guardianship reforms but bills languish

By Jeffrey Schweers, Orlando Sentinel January 31, 2024 at 2:19 p.m.

TALLAHASSEE — Time is running out on legislation aimed at further reforming the state’s much-maligned guardianship system, which is supposed to protect Florida’s most vulnerable citizens from people who aim to exploit them.
The nearly identical bills by Sen. Ileana Garcia, R-Miami, and Rep. Rita Harris, D-Orlando, would provide more transparency and oversight of guardians and their wards to protect against fraud, abuse and death.

Yet, despite strong grass roots support and hundreds of letters to the House Civil Justice Subcommittee Chair Bill Robinson, R-Bradenton, Harris’ bill still has not been scheduled for a committee hearing with only one more week of such meetings left this session. Neither has Garcia’s.

“We have one chance left before the last meeting is scheduled, and if it’s not heard, then it’s dead this session,” said Kat Duesterhaus, legislative director for the Florida chapter of the National Organization for Women. “We’re really discouraged that this bill hasn’t been heard.”

NOW supports the legislation, because it represents women and girls, and the majority of people under guardianship in Florida are women, Duesterhaus said.

But it’s also personal for her, having just gone through an embattled guardianship case involving her grandmother that lasted a year and a half.

“We should have the right to say who cares for us, and that’s not happening,” she said.

Advocates have been working with lobbyists for guardianship lawyers to make compromises both sides can live with, including patient privacy concerns and jury selection to hear some cases.

“It’s really important to get something passed that will improve transparency and improve safeguards,” Harris said. “People going through this feel a sense of urgency. They see what happened in previous cases and don’t want to let it happen to their loved ones.”

Similar legislation was filed last year by Rep. Mike Caruso, R-Delray Beach, but he withdrew it before the legislative session began.

All this year’s recommendations are in alignment with the statewide guardianship task force report, Duesterhaus said.

“The guardianship program is broken, and your proposed legislation takes an important step to fix it,” Pinellas County Clerk of Courts Ken Burke, chair of the task force, said in a letter to Garcia and Harris.

The task force was created in 2021 to make recommendations to improve the guardianship system, in which judges appoint professional guardians to look after the affairs of people no longer able to care for themselves.

“Better protections are desperately needed for these vulnerable wards,” Burke said.

Florida’s guardianship system has been under scrutiny for more than a decade, with advocates and their legislative allies making several reforms over the years. Past changes include disclosure of criminal background checks, giving the clerks of court authority to review assets, and creating an Office of Public and Professional Guardians.

The case of Rebecca Fierle, first reported by the Orlando Sentinel in 2019, placed the guardianship system under the microscope and led to sweeping changes in the system meant to end abuses uncovered by investigators in her case.
Fierle was accused of signing a Do Not Resuscitate order for Steven Stryker, a chronically ill Tampa man, and capping his feeding tube against his wishes, leading to this death.

Originally charged with aggravated abuse and neglect of an elderly or disabled person, Fierle last year accepted a plea deal to one count of neglect of an elderly person and was sentenced to five years of probation.

In 2020, Gov. Ron DeSantis signed several bills into law inspired by the Fierle case, including a requirement that guardians get a judge’s approval before signing a DNR and greater control over how guardians are appointed.

And in 2022, DeSantis signed a bill creating a statewide database of guardianship information, but it can only be accessed by those directly involved.

“Most guardians are good, honest people doing their job to protect their wards,” Duesterhaus said.

But safeguards are needed for the handful of bad apples lured into the field because of the millions of dollars at stake, she said. Palm Beach County alone identified $7.3 million in unsubstantiated disbursements and missing assets.

The new legislation originally required the Legislature to establish visitation rights for the family members of a minor or adult, unless there is clear evidence that it is not in the best interest of the ward. It was changed to provide visitation rights to heirs only.

It also would have required a full reevaluation every three years of the need for guardianship, including an examination by an examining committee and a hearing but that was dropped at the urging of the lobbyists for elder care lawyers.

Also removed was an option to impanel a jury to determine whether the petitioner met his or her burden to suspend a power of attorney, Duesterhaus said.

Harris remains cautious but hopeful about the bill’s eventual passage in later years but knows it will take time before full reform comes to the system.

“It’s a complex issue, and I don’t think we’ll solve it this session,” she said.

January 29, 2024 by katforflorida

Join us for the 2024 Florida NOW State Conference

We enthusiastically invite you to register for the 2024 FL NOW Annual State Conference.

We will be at The Florida Hotel, Orlando again this year, which is a lovely facility for those of you couldn’t make it last year.

The Lee County NOW Chapter and Greater Orlando NOW Chapter are sponsoring.

The basic schedule is:
Friday evening: Reception with speakers, 6pm
Saturday: Speakers and workshops, 9am to 6pm
Saturday evening: Dining, Entertainment and Socializing
Sunday: Speakers and FL NOW business 9am to 1pm

More details are coming soon but we urge you to book your conference tickets and hotel rooms now for great speakers, workshops, and friends.

The raffle is for another handmade, wonderful quilt by Suzanne.

Step 1: USE THIS FORM TO REGISTER ONLINE

Please consider adding $5.00 to cover the electronic payment fees.

Early Bird Registration $127. Until February 29th 2024

The registration charge starting March 1, 2024 for the conference is $139. which includes appetizers during Friday evening’s reception and lunch on Saturday.

If you prefer to pay by check, please email your registration info to Suzanne at flnowtreasurer@gmail.com and mail your check to: Florida NOW c/o West Volusia NOW, PO BOX 1133, Deland FL 32721. If you send a check, you will be immediately registered upon receipt.

Saturday Only Registration Fee: $89. (Please follow instructions above)

OPTIONAL: RESERVE YOUR SPOT FOR DINNER ON MAY 4TH ONLINE ALONG WITH YOUR ONLINE REGISTRATION

Join the FL NOW State Board for Saturday night (May 4th) dinner at Buca di Beppo in the mall, $45 / head, set menu (salad, pasta, entrée, dessert, unlimited soft drinks), alcohol is on your own. Add dinner to your conference ticket below by March 1, 2024 or you can send a check by March 1, 2024 to Florida NOW c/o West Volusia NOW, PO BOX 1133, Deland FL 32721. Please include a note that this check is for Saturday night dinner.

Step 2: RESERVE A ROOM by calling the reservations phone number at 800-588-4656 (the discounted room rate is $130/night until April 5)

Step 3: CLICK HERE TO ORDER THE 2024 CONFERENCE TEE

Order this 2024 Conference TEE by March 1st and you receive a discount of $5.00. After March 1st the TEE will be $25.00.

If you need further information, do not hesitate to contact Judi Marraccini, 2024 FL NOW State Conference Chair.

BONUS! BUY RAFFLE TICKETS FOR THE CHANCE TO WIN THIS FABULOUS HANDMADE FEMINIST QUILT MADE BY OUR BELOVED FL NOW TREASURER SUZANNE SOUTHARD WITH YOUR REGISTRATION TICKET BELOW!

January 26, 2024 by katforflorida

“I fear the word guardianship more than the word cancer” – Lawmakers Take Bold Action to Prevent Elderly Death, Abuse and Fraud Following Rebecca Fierle and Traci Hudson Cases

Statewide Legislation Aims to Reform Guardianship System and Protect Vulnerable Seniors

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – In the wake of distressing incidents exposing the demise, neglect, and financial exploitation totaling millions of dollars among elderly Floridians, as revealed through the criminal convictions of former Florida guardians Rebecca Fierle and Traci Hudson, state legislators have introduced comprehensive legislation to overhaul Florida’s guardianship system.

Fierle, arrested in 2019, was charged with causing the death of her ward, Steven Stryker, through the removal of his feeding tube and the signing of a do-not-resuscitate order.

Less than a year prior, Fierle had been granted full authority over Stryker by a judge in less than three minutes, despite Stryker having appointed a close friend to be his durable power of attorney and health care surrogate.

Fierle made nearly $4 million as a guardian, double-billing her wards, patients, and AdventHealth–money she did not report to the courts. Fierle’s case took a shocking and morbid turn when investigators found the cremated remains of nine people in her Orlando office. After a trial concluded with a hung jury, Fierle ultimately opted for a plea deal, accepting a reduced charge of neglect of an elderly person.

Traci Hudson, another former Florida professional guardian, was sentenced last year to 8.5 years in prison for 11 counts of grand theft, five counts of exploitation of an elderly or disabled person and four counts of perjury. Hudson, a former president of the Guardianship Association of Pinellas County, obtained power of attorney and guardianship over multiple Tampa Bay seniors, then stole money from them.

Shocking revelations during the investigation uncovered Hudson was writing herself checks from her ward’s accounts, billing wards for more than 24 hours of work in a day, paying excessive commissions to realtors, and altering inventories. Hudson pleaded guilty to the felony charges following a three-year investigation.

These high-profile cases underscore systemic issues within the guardianship system, compelling Florida lawmakers to propose legislative reforms aimed at preventing future abuses and protecting vulnerable individuals.

Proposed legislation, Senate Bill 48 by Senator Garcia (R) and House Bill 887 by Representative Harris (D), represents a critical response to the urgent need for reform within the guardianship system. Key reforms in the bill include increased oversight, safeguards, and court monitoring processes, aligning with recommendations from the Guardianship Improvement Task Force. The legislation aims to address the systemic issues that allowed individuals like Traci Hudson and Rebecca Fierle to exploit vulnerable wards.

Ken Burke, Pinellas County Clerk of Court and Comptroller, and Chair of the Guardianship Improvement Task Force, emphasized the broken state of the guardianship system in letters of support for the legislation. “Better protections are desperately needed for these vulnerable wards,” Burke wrote.

The urgency for change is evident in the bipartisan efforts of these lawmakers, as well as with the growing grassroots coalition Floridians for Guardianship Reform who support the legislation. The coalition includes dozens of individual advocates and organizations such as Florida National Organization for Women (NOW), Center for Estate Administration Reform (CEAR), Families Against Court Travesties (FACTs), and Florida Alliance for Retired Americans (FLARA).

“I fear the word guardianship more than the word cancer,” said advocate Hillary Hogue. As Hogue recently told WP, she became an unpaid citizen watchdog after her own horrible guardianship experience. To get her father released from one, she paid over $100,000 in legal fees. Hogue is one of the dozens of advocates working in coalition to support the legislation.

“With over 4 million residents over the age of 65 in Florida, the need for urgent reform is undeniable,” said Kat Duesterhaus, Legislative Director of Florida National Organization for Women. “Our imperative is clear – to prevent ongoing abuse, safeguard lives, and uphold the fundamental rights, dignity, and autonomy of those who find themselves incapacitated.”

The coalition provides the following resource for Floridians who want to support the reform: www.linktr.ee/GuardianshipReform.

###

Note: Due to a drafting error, Garcia and Harris’ bills are titled “Karilyn’s Law,” and are to be renamed “Doris’ Law,” as Harris confirmed to Florida Politics. Read more about Doris’ story here as covered by ABC’s Action News I-Team, who in their own words have been “covering Florida’s broken professional guardianship system for more than a decade, uncovering instances of isolation, exploitation and abuse of Florida’s most vulnerable seniors by court-appointed guardians in our ongoing series ‘The Price of Protection.'” We thank all local, state, and national media for your steadfast coverage of guardianship victimization and proposed reforms.

For media inquiries, please contact:
Kat Duesterhaus, Legislative Director
Legislative@flnow.org / 772-267-6353

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • …
  • 132
  • Next Page »

Take Action

Become a Florida NOW Member

Update Your Contact Info or Chapter

Learn About Our Seek Then Speak Campaign

2025 Legislative Recap

Upcoming Events

Notice
There are no upcoming events.

MERCH

Order a Florida NOW T-Shirt online! Shipping in 5-10 days. Go to: https://www.etsy.com/shop/TheKatylist

Get Florida NOW Updates

Sign up for our mailing list, choose only the news you want to receive.

Florida NOW

Florida NOW’s purpose is to take action through intersectional grassroots activism to promote feminist ideals, lead societal change, eliminate discrimination, and achieve and protect the equal rights of all women and girls.

Learn more about us.