Jumping back in to address a few issues
Is the hoarding really that bad?
Trust me, yes. Have you seen the show Hoarders? I've considered submitting her house except I'm not sure she'd ever speak to me again much less agree to appearing. She's in total denial about the hoarding. It's another one of those things that keeps insisting is someone else's fault. This behavior is not new; she's been hoarding on an increasing scale since I was a little girl. Just one quick example for those of you think I might be exaggerating, her car is so crammed full of stuff that they have to continually clear out room to sit. She has to move a pile just to shift.
So why not involve CPS?
CPS in her county is totally impotent. The only thing calling CPS would due is cause a ton of drama. They've been called recently (and not by me) and never followed through in making a home visit. As previously stated my mother claims that the condition of the house is all the kid's fault (not true). If any cleaning occurs it will be the kids who are forced to do it. As a true hoarder, she's very adverse to allowing anyone to throw things away. I don't believe they could clean the house up to a truly acceptable standard at this point without professional help. My mother can't afford to hire professional help and wouldn't be open to doing so if she could. (The house also needs some pretty major maintanence work done. It's been neglected for a couple decades.)
For the sake of argument, let's assume that CPS visited, declared the house unsafe and removed my brother and sister. Their father (a mentally unstable, chronically unemployed substance abuser) would all but certainly be granted custody of my brother. He does not currently have any parental rights to my sister (long story), so it's very possible that she could get tossed into foster care at least in the short term. He could theoretically fight for rights for her as well. (He's funded by his well-to-do, enabling parents.) This would involve a costly legal battle for me to prove that their father is an unfit parent and obtain legal custody/guardianship. My mother would rather see me as their legal guardian than their father, but she's not at the point where she'd sign them over to me of her own accord. (I know all this because we've been through it before. Long story short, my brother tried to go live with his father recently. Without knowledge of the hoarding, the court found our mother to be the lesser of the two evils.)
None of this is in the best interests of the kids. They want to stay in their current school and close to all of their friends. Aside from that, they would be fine with coming to live with me if not for all of the drama it would cause. I would have to completely destroy the relationship with our mother (for all three of us) to forcibly take custody and possibly fight off a legal challenge from their father as well. I am the only willing, stable and responsible adult in their lives who could take them in. If it ever comes to the point where my brother and sister both want and need to escape our mother's custody, I'd be willing and able to take on that battle, but that's obviously not a decision I take lightly. (I would have to take them both, as our mother is very spiteful and would prevent any relationship if one of them remained in her custody.) This probably sounds like I don't get along with our mother, but we actually get along decently well now that I don't live with her. I wish I could say that our mother could be convinced to seek professional help to prevent me from involving the authorities, but that wouldn't work. She's very defensive; any suggestion, regardless of the phrasing, would be taken as an attack. I need to stay on good terms with her so I can continue to monitor the situation. There is no easy solution here.
Why is the my business in the first place?
I'm not just their sister. To a large degree, I raised them. Their father wasn't around. Our mother was always working. Up until I went away to college, I was responsible for them for more hours a week than any other person. Once I left things really started to go off the rails at home. I know I'm not responsible for the situation my brother and sister have found themselves in, but I have to intervene because I'm only of the few advocates they have. Their health and well-being (both physical and mental) is my business.



