The crisis brought by COVID has served as a stress test for many of the laws and regulations effecting our nation’s seniors. The power of attorney, a document that gives one person, the agent, the legal power to act for another, the principal, fills a dire need to put control over their health and resources in trusted hands in the event of incapacity, especially in times of crisis. Patients in nursing home facilities, for example, need quick and durable responses to the crisis. And guarantees that the courts, and third parties such as banks, will respect their decisions.
In 1948, the “Short Form” POA was created to simplify the process for New York citizens. Since then, it’s become anything but. A new law rectifies this.
New Power of Attorney Bill Comes into Effect June 13, 2021