What This Statute Says
A.R.S. § 46-452.02 sets the duties of the Arizona long-term care ombudsman. The ombudsman investigates and resolves complaints, monitors facility conditions, trains volunteer ombudsmen, and reports on systemic issues to the legislature.
2. Hear, investigate and attempt to resolve complaints by agreement, mediation or conciliation.
A.R.S. § 46-452.02This statute is the duties side of the ombudsman office created in § 46-452.01. The ombudsman investigates complaints, helps residents and their families understand the available remedies, monitors trends in facility quality, and produces annual reports to the legislature.
The office also enjoys immunity for good-faith actions, similar to the protection given to APS workers under § 46-452. The immunity supports candid advocacy on behalf of residents.
For an estate plan that anticipates long-term care for the planner or a spouse, knowing the ombudsman exists is part of the contingency picture. Our FAQ on long-term care insurance covers the financial side; the ombudsman covers the care-quality side.
When This Statute Comes Into Play
This statute typically becomes relevant in three situations. A family is responding to a current crisis involving a vulnerable adult. An attorney is building safeguards into a long-term estate plan. Or a civil or criminal case is being evaluated after harm has already occurred. The statute is part of a larger framework in chapter 4 of title 46, and it usually operates alongside the related sections cross-linked below.
What This Means for Arizona Families
Arizona's vulnerable adult protection laws can feel distant until they suddenly become very personal. A parent's bank calls about suspicious activity. A neighbor wonders about an aging family member. A care facility raises a concern. When that moment arrives, the rules in chapter 4 of title 46 are the framework you are working inside.
If you are worried about an older relative or a family member with a disability, you usually have several tools available. A private conversation with the bank using the trusted-contact rules. A call to Adult Protective Services. A referral to the long-term care ombudsman. Or a petition for guardianship or conservatorship in superior court. Each tool fits a different fact pattern. Our FAQ on how guardianship and conservatorship proceedings work in Arizona covers the court track in detail, and our FAQ on whether it is safe to add a child to a parent's bank account covers the everyday financial step that often comes up first.
If you are building an estate plan that anticipates your own future incapacity, the back-end protections in chapter 4 are part of why a well-drafted durable power of attorney and a healthcare directive matter. A trusted agent with clear authority is the front line. The statutes are the safety net behind them.