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Probate officials back SB 400 and SB 474 to clarify jurisdiction, conservator audits and training
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Summary
A probate administrator told the Judiciary Committee that SB 400 and SB 474 would modernize procedures — allowing name‑changes in regional children's probate court, clarifying firearms disability determinations, expanding audits of conservatorships and enhancing training for newly elected judges.
Beverly Streich, a probate court administrator, testified in support of provisions in SB 400 and SB 474 that she said would close gaps and improve oversight of conservatorships.
Streich summarized the bills: allowing name‑change matters for minors to be adjudicated in regional children's probate courts; clarifying firearms‑disability determinations; ensuring confidentiality for child‑related guardianship proceedings; clarifying appeals routing so child matters go to juvenile court; expanding random audits of conservatorship accounts to allow a forensic audit when a conservator fails to file required financial reports; and strengthening training and observation authority for newly elected judges.
Representatives on the committee pressed for detail on Section 9, which would permit appointment of a forensic accountant when a conservator chronically fails to file required inventories or accounts; Streich explained the change is intended to detect and deter fiduciary malfeasance before loss becomes unrecoverable.
The committee discussed drafting precision and whether language should be tightened; Streich said she would support technical refinements. The bills remain under committee review.

