81.22 - Powers of guardian; personal needs.

§ 81.22 Powers of guardian; personal needs.    (a)  Consistent  with  the functional limitations of the incapacitated  person, that person's understanding and appreciation of the harm that he  or she is likely to suffer as the result of the inability to provide for  personal needs, and that  person's  personal  wishes,  preferences,  and  desires  with regard to managing the activities of daily living, and the  least restrictive form of intervention,  the  court  may  grant  to  the  guardian  powers  necessary  and  sufficient to provide for the personal  needs of the incapacitated person. Those powers  which  may  be  granted  include, but are not limited to, the power to:    1. determine who shall provide personal care or assistance;    2.  make  decisions  regarding  social  environment  and  other social  aspects of the life of the incapacitated person;    3. determine whether the incapacitated person should travel;    4. determine whether the incapacitated person should possess a license  to drive;    5. authorize access to or release of confidential records;    6. make decisions regarding education;    7. apply for government and private benefits;    8. (i) for decisions in hospitals as defined by  subdivision  eighteen  of  section  twenty-nine hundred ninety-four-a of the public health law,  act as the patient's  surrogate  pursuant  to  and  subject  to  article  twenty-nine-CC  of  the  public  health  law,  and  (ii)  in  all  other  circumstances, to consent to or refuse  generally  accepted  routine  or  major  medical  or  dental  treatment,  subject  to  the decision-making  standard  in   subdivision   four   of   section   twenty-nine   hundred  ninety-four-d of the public health law;    9.  choose  the place of abode; the choice of abode must be consistent  with the findings under section 81.15 of this article, the existence  of  and   availability  of  family,  friends  and  social  services  in  the  community, the care, comfort and  maintenance,  and  where  appropriate,  rehabilitation of the incapacitated person, the needs of those with whom  the  incapacitated person resides; placement of the incapacitated person  in a nursing home or  residential  care  facility  as  those  terms  are  defined  in  section two thousand eight hundred one of the public health  law, or other similar facility  shall  not  be  authorized  without  the  consent  of  the  incapacitated person so long as it is reasonable under  the circumstances to maintain the incapacitated person in the community,  preferably in the home of the incapacitated person.    (b) No guardian may:    1. consent to the  voluntary  formal  or  informal  admission  of  the  incapacitated  person to a mental hygiene facility under article nine or  fifteen of this chapter or  to  a  chemical  dependence  facility  under  article twenty-two of this chapter;    2.  revoke  any  appointment  or  delegation made by the incapacitated  person pursuant to sections 5-1501, 5-1601 and  5-1602  of  the  general  obligations  law,  sections two thousand nine hundred sixty-five and two  thousand nine hundred eighty-one of the public health law, or any living  will.