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As a caregiver who worked for a particular company and has switched to a company that better meets my needs, client wants to switch company as well so I can continue to be his caregiver. POA keeps stopping the process for unknown reasons and client has no power to switch.

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POA has authority to help with financial or legal matters, if the principle wants help or can no longer do the activities himself. Person with Medical POA has authority to make decisions about medical matter when the principle cannot.

A guardian could determine where the person lives and to hire and fire help, etc.

Is anyone a guardian? Is this person competent to make decisions (in the legal sense -- has a court ever declared him incompetent)?

It would seem that this person could decide for himself who he wanted for a caregiver. But there may be more to this than appears on the surface. Perhaps, for example, the POA has looked at legal ramifications of ending the contract with the first company and going with one of their former employees to a new company.

I did contract work in the information systems area for many years, usually through a contractor company. There were rules prohibiting me from working for a client for a period of time (at least a year) if they had placed me at the client and I left their company. It can get kind of tricky.

So without knowing what contracts you have signed with your old company, or what contracts your client might have signed, I can't say the POA has no business in this issue. There may be some legal concerns.

It is sad that you cannot serve this client at this time. Can you discuss this issue with the POA? Perhaps after a period of time the POA would be able and willing to re-hire you.
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Client is fully capable of making his own decisions. Client is not incompetent whatsoever but client fears POA and the consequences of on stepping on POA's toes. As for the legal matters... I thought any contract could be broken with a company upon clients wish to continue with same caregiver. I hear about clients switching all the time to caregivers they like. Some clients use two company's to satisfy certain things they like about caregivers in their service.
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I would first review your own contract to determine if there are non-competitive clauses.

Since the client can make decisions, I think the crux is your observation that the client fears the POA. The question would then be why (a) the fear exists (b) why the POA is even involved in selecting a caregiving agency (c) whether the client is capable of standing up for his own rights and selecting someone else as his proxy under the POA and (d) why the client "has no power."

There's more to this situation than meets the eye, and it seems to be between the client and the caregiver. Be careful of becoming dragged into a power struggle between these two.
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Thank you for your input ....will leave this alone and let it work its course.
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