• 3 days ago
“If this happened to Britney, it can happen to anybody.”

Britney Spears is free, but her story has people questioning whether other conservatorships should be abolished ...

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00:00So I'm just grateful, honestly, for each day and being able to have the keys to my car
00:06and being able to be independent and feel like a woman.
00:08If this happened to Brittany, it can happen to anybody.
00:21Not only did she shine a light on this conservatorship, but she shines a light on conservatorships
00:27from California to New York.
00:29I'm here to be an advocate for people with real disabilities and real illnesses.
00:35I'm a very strong woman, so I can only imagine what the system has done to those people.
00:41Hey, hey, ho, ho, the conservatorship has got to go.
00:45Hey, hey, ho, ho.
00:51It's giving a huge amount of power to one person, and that power is controlled by the court.
00:59But the conservator is the person who exercises that power on a day-to-day basis, and that's
01:06built in.
01:13It's fundamentally a disability issue, and I think our society's stigma and ableism is
01:22a big part of why they're so overused.
01:25There's something called the school-to-guardianship pipeline, or school-to-conservatorship pipeline,
01:30where people with intellectual and developmental disabilities end up in conservatorship as
01:35soon as they turn 18, often because schools tell families that that's what they should
01:42do or that's what they must do.
01:44There are people who could use many, many alternatives that are less restrictive, that
01:50actually protect people's safety better, that families don't know about.
01:54Some people also end up in conservatorship during or after a psychiatric crisis of some
02:00sort.
02:02And then people end up in conservatorships later in life, as they age into disabilities
02:09like dementia or Alzheimer's.
02:19I want to be able to get married and have a baby.
02:22I was told right now in the conservatorship I'm not able to get married or have a baby.
02:27I have an ID inside of myself right now, so I don't get pregnant.
02:33I wanted to take the ID out so I could start trying to have another baby, but this so-called
02:39team won't let me go to the doctor to take it out because they don't want me to have
02:44children, any more children.
02:45In our view, the problems of conservatorship are not just outright abuse and neglect.
02:53That's of course a harm and it's real and it happens a lot, though we don't know how
02:57often because there isn't data about these issues.
03:00But the other piece of it is that even where everyone is acting in complete good faith,
03:07it's a harm to take away someone's autonomy.
03:10It's particularly sad and painful in the context of young people with intellectual
03:16and developmental disabilities who are told right when they're 18 that, you know, well
03:21you don't know how to balance a checkbook yet, you never will be able to, so we're going
03:25to take away all your rights.
03:26Some of you may know that as a result of Brittany, California has passed legislation to try to
03:41ensure that conservatorships like this that were corrupted by her father do not happen
03:46again.
03:47In recent months, one conservatorship has captivated the world, revealing the deeply
03:54restrictive nature of these arrangements and just how easily they can be abused and
04:00how difficult it can be to escape.
04:05Of course, I'm talking about Brittany Spears.
04:09Part of what needs to be done is really changing laws to be really explicit that conservatorship
04:16and guardianship is the last resort and we also need more, much easier access to getting
04:24out of conservatorships, to access the court to get out of a conservatorship, to have a
04:28lawyer who could help you, you know, in the termination process.
04:40There's a really wide range of how people can get support and make their own decisions
04:47and this is the same as people without disabilities do as well.
04:51If I decided what I was going to eat for breakfast today on my own, didn't talk to
04:56anyone about it, did that.
04:57If I'm going to buy a car, I don't know anything about cars, I'm not going to do that without
05:02support.
05:03I'm going to talk to people who I trust.
05:04We need to expand recognition of that for people with disabilities that there are many
05:13voluntary ways that people can direct their own lives and supported decision making is
05:18an option there of helping people, allowing people with disabilities to choose people
05:24they trust to help them make their own choices.
05:27There are other things like powers of attorney that people can use or advanced medical directives
05:32or simple documents to share medical information or share educational information.
05:39Hopefully my story will make an impact and make some changes.

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