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We are in SC and my step-father placed my mom in a Memory Care Facility. There is no POA - but the facility states since he is spouse he can do this. He does not do medical recommendations by the facility or doctor recommendations. He verbally abuses her, very rarely goes to see her and when he does, he mentally torments her. He does not even make sure she has necessities at the facility, including briefs, wipes, and oxygen. He also does not take her to doctor appointments. I reported him to APS several times (they say mom is not a vulnerable adult bc she is in a facility), he is mad at me and told facility they are not allowed to provide me any information. He also has dementia, house is in dissary, he has become belligernt and wants to control everything that happens with my mother. I do not have $15,000.00 for an elder law attorney and facility is of no help even though they see me doing everything and my mom expressing she does not want my step father involved with her or her care at all.I do not know what else to do. Does anyone have any suggestions? Like I said I emailed all her doctors, reported him to the hospital, have kept nursing facility updated with all of this, and filed numerous APS reports. He refuses to let me mother come home and live - he tells her she is crazy and she is not going anywhere because he enjoys living with out her but then the facade changes when he is infront of others. There is alot more to this story as to the neglect she received at home but I would be writing a book. LOLThank you in advance for any suggestions

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If your daughter wants to help her grandmother you've already identified her needs. You said she needs necessities at the facility, including briefs, wipes, and oxygen, and transportation to and from doctor's appointments. These are much easier things for a family member to do than move in with someone and be their full time caregiver. Your mother's funds can be used to pay for your daughter's time, or perhaps you'd like to pay her from your own money.

If you're hoping your daughter would enjoy to give up her personal time at home, development of her career and/or education, and her investments into her future social security by becoming an unpaid caregiver in exchange for "free rent" I would refer you to the emancipation proclamation which indicates that a place to live isn't a fair exchange for one's freedom.
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Proberts1028 Jan 12, 2026
Thank you for your response and information. I greatly appreciate the time you took to provide the information.
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Your mother went to MC because she has dementia, which is progressive, always becomes worse and generally requires 24/7 care of several caregivers.
You focus a lot on daughter getting apartment with grandma and all we be Ok. It won’t. Even if she goes and helps grandma now as some suggest it will be different 1-1 situation with disease which destroys so much of sick person and those around them.
Why would you want that for your daughter? Instead of proper career, job, school? Caregiving is the hardest job ever!
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No! I don't care if your daughter "wants" to do it or not. You should now allow it - you will destroy her life - is that what you want for her? She needs to go to school, get a good job, and live her own life. Every quarter of a year that you keep her from earning social security credits from working an actual W-2 job is that much less that she will have for her own retirement. Your Mother may have to stay there. - she obviously is not able to care for herself. What you say about how the memory care mistreating her doesn't make much sense. Who gives you this information if you are not allowed to speak to anyone about her condition? If you want to complain, complain to the agency that oversees memory care facilities in your state and have them do an investigation of the facility for mistreatment of their residents. Also, if she needs wipes, diapers, or whatever and medicare doesn't cover them, then buy them and have them sent to the facility!
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JeanLouise Jan 26, 2026
Well said. I immediately felt sorry for her daughter to be pressured into caregiving and sacrifice her opportunities
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Your responses below say that you are going through a divorce and working but you want to move your mother into an apartment and have your daughter take care of her? How old is your daughter? What training does she have? Will your mother be paying your daughter a full-time salary, including her taxes? Who will take care of your mother outside of the 40 hours a week that your daughter should be paid to work? Who will pay for the apartment? You say that private insurance is paying for her memory care facility. Do you have a copy of the policy? Will it pay for nurses to come into the apartment, or only for facility care?

I think if APS is rejecting your allegations and so is the Ombudsman (who is employed by the state, not the facility), your only option is to go to court to get guardianship of your mother. That would, indeed, be expensive. And once you had guardianship, then you would probably need to file for divorce and/or financial support from your stepfather, and that would be a long and expensive battle also. Does your mother have her own income and assets from her lifetime, like a pension, investment account, property in her name, or at least co-owned with her husband? Or is all of that in his name?

What is your mother's actual diagnosis, and what is her capability level?

I'm sorry this is so distressing to you, especially when you're going through the additional stress of a divorce. But this all needs to be carefully planned and thought out, not just wishful thinking like, "oh my daughter can just move into an apartment with her and it will all be okay."
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lealonnie1 Jan 12, 2026
Not to mention, daughter loses social security quarters for retirement! In home caregiving always sounds so "easy" until the truth hits you like a meteor in the face.
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Please don't ruin your daughter's life by doing this. She can be responsible for you when you need it, if she wishes, but she shouldn't be responsible for your mother. You said she needs constant assistance. MC sounds like where she should be. The care isn't one on one, but it is constant. If step father is abusing her and staff, they need to call the police and possibly get a restraining order. This may affect POA by father.
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I think this is the wrong time for you to take this on as you are suggesting and time is your friend, in this case. This is what I suggest, assuming your daughter actually has the time and resources to devote to your mother.:

1) Have your daughter spend extended time with your mother at the facility EVERY DAY, to get a sense of what she is like for more than a short visit. She can help her with toileting and meals, etc., so she gets the attention she needs AND she can get a taste of what it would really be like doing this as a full-time job.
2) Take care of your divorce without a second legal battle and stress. Button it up.
3) Wait for stepfather to truly lose his mind and become declared incompetent after he does something stupid at home (kitchen fire? floods the property? etc), has an accident and ends up in the hospital, etc., and you report him to APS.
4) Step forward as your mother's guardian when step father is removed after being declared incompetent.

At that time you can decide if removing her from MC is really the right move, or finding her an AL where support can be managed but not requiring the type of all-in care that is a lot harder to manage in reality than in theory.

You are not in a good position to get what you want. He is her spouse. She chose him and she is suffering the consequences. She did not chose you when it mattered and the legal system will be on his side. If she is living in MC she probably has a diagnosis of dementia and is no longer legally competent to choose a new POA. Sad but true.
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JeanLouise Jan 26, 2026
Her daughter deserves her own life, not guilt-tripped into the servitude of caregiving. Cannot imagine a parent putting this burden onto their child.
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can you put $100. Dollars in your mother’s care facility account for things like a haircut or snacks? You or your daughter can come monthly to the facility and clean and trim your mom’s nails, wash her hair, clean her room, supervise the haircut, organize her room and closet, help her bathe and do her laundry if that’s an option, and stroll her around the facility and talk with her. Bring her some favorite snacks. Your daughter should not sacrifice her life to be your mother’s caregiver. I would work with step father if I was in your shoes and be grateful he is paying for her care in a facility. He may be insensitive or worse but no one wants to have their peace and life and home destroyed by being a 24/7 poop/pee/security and grocery duty and doctor appointment attendant. He is entitled to his life too. Hire the help needed with their funds to make this tenable for all, for as long as possible. You can visit her and augment her care a much as you want.
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JeanLouise Jan 26, 2026
Well said
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There's a lot here that doesn't add up. So, since I am familiar with South Carolina, I checked the internet. Here's what I found:

AI Overview

In South Carolina, a spouse generally cannot unilaterally place a wife with dementia in a memory care facility without legal authority like a Healthcare Power of Attorney(POA) or court-appointed guardianship if she lacks capacity, as she retains decision-making rights until legally deemed incapacitated, even for spouses. Without these, the husband may need to petition the court for guardianship or conservatorship to make such decisions, though facilities' policies and social workers can offer guidance on temporary care or placement, especially if her safety is at risk, but legal steps are needed for permanent placement without consent. 
Why a POA or Guardianship is Needed
Capacity: A POA is only valid if signed when the person (your wife) has the mental capacity to understand it. If she lacks capacity due to dementia, she can't sign one now.
Legal Authority: Without a POA or court order, even a spouse isn't automatically granted power to make major healthcare or placement decisions for an incapacitated partner.
Guardianship/Conservatorship: If no POA exists, a family member must petition the South Carolina court to become a legal guardian (for healthcare) or conservator (for finances) to gain the authority to make these choices. 
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Also, Proberts, the facility supplies briefs, wipes and oxygen. It's their job. You say it's private pay, so mom isn't in a charity ward where necessities aren't provided. Plus if dad is abusing mom on facility property, I doubt that the facility would allow that. So who is giving you this information? Have you actually seen the things that go on there?
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Special diapers and oxygen if medically necessary, should be provided by the facility and billed to the responsible party, her husband, hospice, or insurance. You just visit and keep mom happy for a few hours every week. Stay out of their marital trouble and encourage your daughter to go live her own life and find what makes her happy. You can be there as a support for your daughter. She is free to find what she wants, take reasonable chances and always have a safe landing place with you, if needed. Probably you never got that. I didn’t. You were responsible early. Keep boundaries. If you’re curious, look up enmeshment and generational trauma, cptsd, and covert narcissist are topics that might be interesting on YouTube.
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As the spouse, your stepfather can make the decisions for your mom's care.
If she is in a Memory Care Facility, I don't understand what medical recommendations by the doctor he is not doing. Your stepfather should not need to provide any cares. That is the job of the MC facility.
It sounds like your mother is where she belongs. I'm sure she's much better cared for than she would be at home with him. If your mother has stated that she does not want her husband involved, she can ask the staff to keep him away. She should be protected from him if she doesn't want him there.

I don't think you are in a position to take care of your mother's needs. It sounds like you have dreams and hopes which are not realistic. You are working and going through a divorce, but hope to get her an apartment, have your daughter move in, and get nursing care at home. Who will pay for all this? Does your daughter want to move in with Grandma and take care of her? This hopeful solution is not fair to anyone. Be an advocate for your mom at the memory care. They are responsible for taking care of her needs. Let them do their job and help them to provide the best care for your mom.
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