Our Common Agenda
To promote less restrictive alternatives to guardianship To effect long-term changes in North Carolina’s guardianship system

Older adults are no longer the majority of people subject to guardianship in North Carolina.
The number of younger adults with I/DD, mental illness, and traumatic brain injury is expected to grow. Factors such as aging out of foster care, aging parents no longer able to care for adult children, effects of the Olmstead decision and North Carolina’s voluntary settlement agreement with the US Department of Justice, and veterans who have suffered traumatic brain injury account for some of this expected growth.
Current guardianship policies and procedures are not always sensitive to the unique needs of adults with intellectual and other developmental disabilities.
Our initiative aims to inform future policies and procedures for adult guardianship. That way, the institution of guardianship can better meet the needs of all of North Carolina’s vulnerable adults.
An estimated 25,000 adults are under guardianship in North Carolina, with around 6,000 served by public guardians. Of those served by public guardians, 64% are younger adults (age 18-59 years old).
86% of younger adults have a primary diagnosis of intellectual and other developmental disabilities (I/DD) or mental illness.
Exact numbers are unknown due to limitations in how court records are maintained.
Core Concepts and Basic Principles
When looking at guardianship and the principles that should govern, Rud Turnbull, JD, LLD, has reminded us that there are Core Concepts and Basic Principles rooted in federal law and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD). These concepts and principles recognize that the rights of individuals with disabilities are equal to those of persons without disabilities under the law (UNCRPD; Americans with Disabilities Act, other federal and state laws).
Specifically, Rethinking Guardianship's core concepts and basic principles include autonomy, liberty, freedom, dignity, the presumption of competence; and the right to lifetime decision-making support.
Our long-term desired outcomes consist of the following:



