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Uniform Improvements Recommended for Enduring Powers of
Attorney
in the Four Western Provinces
Many
people rely on enduring powers of attorney (EPAs) to
authorize an attorney to handle their financial affairs
while they are mentally incapable. In its report,
Enduring Powers of Attorney: Areas for Reform,
Western Canada Law Reform Agencies (WCLRA) recommends
improvements in the EPA statutes of all four western
provinces to address common issues. These
recommendations are designed to make it easier to use
EPAs in cross-border situations, to promote wider
understanding and knowledge of attorney duties, and to
provide some additional safeguards against attorney
misuse of an EPA.
To make it easier to use EPAs in
cross-border situations, WCLRA proposes:
·
standard formal requirements for making EPAs;
·
uniform legislative changes to promote recognition of
EPAs made in other provinces;
·
a
standard form EPA, for those who wish to use it.
WCLRA recommends that each province adopt
and publicize a uniform statutory list of attorney
duties. If everyone knows how an attorney is supposed to
act, there is less chance that an attorney will misuse
the power of an EPA through ignorance.
To safeguard against misuse, it is important
to bring an attorney’s conduct out into the open where
others can notice if something seems wrong. Proposed
safeguards in this area include:
·
an
attorney must give a formal notice to certain people
when the attorney starts to act under the EPA;
·
persons who suspect misuse can contact a public
official, who would have the discretion to investigate;
·
the
public official would have the power to freeze accounts,
obtain information from financial institutions, examine
records and obtain warrants for search and seizure;
·
financial institutions who suspect misuse would also be
empowered to temporarily freeze accounts while reporting
their suspicions.
WCLRA
consists of the British Columbia Law Institute, the
Alberta Law Reform Institute, the Law Reform Commission
of Saskatchewan and the Manitoba Law Reform Commission.
Copies of this Report may be obtained at no charge by
contacting The British Columbia Law Institute
or by downloading it from the internet at:
www.law.ualberta.ca/alri.
Contact: Laura Watts
Phone: (604) 822-0142
Direct: (604) 822-0633
Fax: (604) 822-0144
Email: lwatts@bcli.org
Laura Watts is the National Director of the
Canadian Centre for Elder Law Studies (CCELS), the
national organization which focusses on issues of
law and aging in that country. She is also a Staff
Lawyer at the British Columbia Law Institute and a
legislative drafter. Annually, she organizes
the Canadian Conference on Elder Law, which is an
international conference advancing issues of elder
law to both legal and interdisciplinary audiences.
Laura is currently working towards establishing a
civil legal aid clinic for seniors in Western
Canada, creating a provincial strategy for adults
with capability challenges and modernizing adult
abuse and guardianship legislation in Canada.
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