At District 17 VASIA (Volunteer Advocates for Seniors and Incapacitated Adults), we often meet compassionate people who are ready to help. Many ask these two questions:
“If the need is so great, why does VASIA keep a smaller client base?”
“Why does VASIA say guardianship should be a last resort?”
Both questions have the same answer at the center: public guardianship is court appointed, and court involvement carries serious responsibility. VASIA exists to provide safety, security, and a steady voice in the court system for people who are truly in need of help, especially those who are isolated, neglected, or without family able to serve.
VASIA does not step into someone’s life casually. When VASIA becomes involved as guardian, it is because a judge appoints the program through the court system. It is a legal duty to act in the person’s best interest, to respect their rights, and to document decisions responsibly.
Court appointment also means:
VASIA cannot operate like a casual volunteer club. It must operate like a trusted community partner of the court, with clear processes, careful training, and consistent follow-through.
Guardianship is often necessary, but it is also one of the most significant interventions a person can experience. When someone is found incapacitated, the court may transfer certain decision-making authority to a guardian. Even when done with care and dignity, that is a major change.
Last resort means before a court appoints a guardian, the system should explore whether there are safer, less restrictive supports available.
Those alternatives vary by person, but they can include:
When those supports are not available, not safe, or not sufficient, guardianship may be the only way to provide protection and consistent advocacy.
Many VASIA clients are older adults or incapacitated adults who have no reliable family safety net. Some have been exploited, neglected, or are alone in a facility with no visitor, no advocate at care plan meetings, and no one to notice when something is off.
In those moments, guardianship becomes a lifeline. It provides a framework for security and oversight when no other pathway can keep the person safe.
A smaller client base does not mean a smaller mission. It means VASIA is fulfilling a very specific role: VASIA is the last resort. The goal is not to grow guardianship numbers- it’s to ensure that when the court truly has no safer option, there is a prepared, trustworthy program ready to step in.
VASIA keeps a smaller client base because public guardianship should only be used when it is truly necessary, and because each court-appointed case requires careful, consistent advocacy. These are the biggest reasons:
In many situations, the best outcome is that guardianship is avoided. If a person can be supported by family, community services, or less restrictive legal tools, that preserves independence and dignity.
So when VASIA receives a case, it usually means:
Because VASIA is court appointed, every client situation requires: Accurate documentation, timely reporting, ethical decision-making, ongoing coordination with care teams and facilities, and a steady, informed voice in the court system. This level of responsibility means each case is “deep work,” not casual check-ins. A smaller client base helps ensure every individual receives the careful attention the court and the person deserve.
The people served by VASIA are often living with significant disability, cognitive decline, or complex medical needs. They may not be able to tell their story clearly. They may not be able to report mistreatment. They may not even know what questions to ask.
A manageable client base makes it easier to ensure each client has: A consistent presence, reliable monthly in-person visits, follow-through on concerns, a strong advocate who can speak up when care is inadequate and a steady voice in the court system when reporting is needed
For someone in need of help, it is the difference between being seen and being overlooked.
Because VASIA volunteers serve within a court connected program, the standards must be high. Volunteers complete an interview process, a criminal background check, and training designed to prepare them for real-world situations.
This protects clients from further harm and protects the integrity of the program, so the court can confidently rely on VASIA when there truly is no other safe option.
We always want more volunteers.
Even with a limited number of clients, having more trained volunteers means:
In other words, a smaller client base helps ensure public guardianship stays “last resort,” while a growing volunteer base helps ensure that when someone is truly in need of help, VASIA can serve them well.
Because VASIA believes guardianship should be the last resort, the court system often reviews many factors before appointing a guardian. The details vary case by case, but the common question is always:
“Is there a safer, less restrictive option that still protects this person?”
Sometimes there is, and that is a good outcome. It can mean family steps forward, services are put into place, or a support system is strengthened.
But sometimes there is no one. No family able to serve. No trusted friend. No adequate safeguards. That is when the court may turn to public guardianship.
In other words, VASIA is not replacing family. VASIA is stepping in when family support is missing or when the person has been left without protection.
Many VASIA clients do not have family visiting, calling, or attending meetings. Volunteers often become the closest thing to a consistent outside supporter. As a volunteer guardian advocate, you help ensure someone is not forgotten. You become part of a caring community response, making sure a person who is neglected or isolated has an advocate at the table.
A carefully managed client base allows VASIA to provide stable, reliable advocacy. Judges rely on accurate reporting. Facilities respond differently when they know someone is paying attention. Care teams make better decisions when a consistent advocate is present.
At the same time, a growing volunteer community strengthens the whole system, because it ensures VASIA has enough trained advocates ready to serve when the court faces a true last-resort situation.
Ready to Serve as an Advocate?
If you have a heart for service, a desire to protect seniors, and the willingness to show up consistently, you may be exactly who VASIA needs. Volunteers commit to monthly in-person visits, documentation, and ongoing advocacy, with training and staff support provided along the way.
If you are looking for purposeful community service, this is it. You become security for someone in need of help. You become a servant advocate with a real voice in the court system. And you help ensure that a vulnerable adult is treated with dignity, comfort, and respect.
Apply to Volunteer or call our District 17 office to speak with our volunteer coordinator.
Why does VASIA keep a smaller client base?
Because VASIA is a last resort public guardianship program. The court should only appoint a guardian when less restrictive, safer options are not available or not sufficient. Each case also requires intensive oversight, documentation, and consistent advocacy- so keeping the client base manageable protects vulnerable adults and preserves quality.
Does VASIA want more volunteers?
Yes. Always. Even with a smaller client base, more trained volunteers strengthens consistency, reduces burnout, improves matching, and ensures VASIA is ready when the court refers someone who is isolated, neglected, and truly in need of help.
Why does VASIA say guardianship should be the last resort?
Guardianship can limit a person’s independence. The court and VASIA aim to use the least restrictive option that still provides safety and security. Guardianship is used when other supports are not available or not sufficient.
Does VASIA only help people with no family?
VASIA primarily serves individuals who lack a safe, reliable support system. Many clients are isolated, neglected, or without family able to serve in a consistent advocacy role.
What makes a volunteer guardian advocate different from a friendly visitor?
A volunteer guardian advocate provides consistent visits, documentation, and advocacy as part of a court connected program. The role includes being a voice in the court system and speaking up when care or safety concerns arise.
What support do volunteers receive?
VASIA provides one-on-one training and ongoing staff guidance so volunteers are never alone when questions or concerns come up.