Amended in Assembly June 14, 2013

Amended in Senate April 23, 2013

Senate BillNo. 821


Introduced by Committee on Business, Professions and Economic Development (Senatorsbegin delete Priceend deletebegin insert Lieuend insert (Chair), Block, Corbett, Emmerson, Galgiani, Hernandez, Hill, Padilla, Wyland, and Yee)

March 20, 2013


An act to amend Sections 1613, 1915, 1926.2, 3024, 3025, 3040, 3041.2, 3051, 3057.5, 3077, 3093, 3098, 3103, 3106, 3107, 3109, 3163, 4053,begin delete 4107,4980.36,end deletebegin insert 4107, 4980.36, 4980.397, 4980.398, 4980.399, 4980.40,end insert 4980.43,begin insert 4980.50,end insert 4980.72,begin insert 4984.01, 4984.7, 4984.72,end insert 4989.68,begin insert 4992.05, 4992.07, 4992.09, 4992.1, 4996.1,end insert 4996.3,begin insert 4996.4,end insert 4996.9,begin insert 4996.17,end insert4996.18, 4996.23,begin insert 4996.28,end insert 4999.20,begin delete4999.33,end deletebegin insert 4999.33, 4999.45,end insert 4999.46, 4999.47,begin insert 4999.50, 4999.52, 4999.53, 4999.55,end insertbegin delete andend delete 4999.60begin insert, 4999.64, and 4999.100end insert of, and to add Section 4021.5 to, the Business and Professions Code, and to amend Section 14132 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to healing arts.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 821, as amended, Committee on Business, Professions and Economic Development. Healing arts.

(1) Existing law, the Dental Practice Act, establishes the Dental Board of California, which was formerly known as the Board of Dental Examiners of California. Existing law requires the board to have and use a seal bearing its name. Existing law creates, within the jurisdiction of the board, a Dental Hygiene Committee of California, that is responsible for regulation of registered dental hygienists, registered dental hygienists in alternative practice, and registered dental hygienists in extended functions.

This bill would amend those provisions to remove an obsolete reference to the former board and to make other technical changes.

(2) Existing law, the Optometry Practice Act, provides for the licensure and regulation of optometrists by the State Board of Optometry. That act refers to the authorization to practice optometry issued by the board as a certificate of registration.

This bill would instead refer to that authorization issued by the board as an optometrist license and would make other technical and conforming changes.

(3) Existing law, the Pharmacy Law, governs the business and practice of pharmacy in this state and establishes the California State Board of Pharmacy. Existing law prohibits the board from issuing more than one site license to a single premises except to issue a veterinary food-animal drug retailer license to a wholesaler or to issue a license for compound sterile injectable drugs to a pharmacy.

This bill would additionally authorize the board to issue more than one site license to a single premises to issue a centralized hospital packaging license. The bill would also establish a definition for the term “correctional pharmacy.”

Existing law authorizes the board to issue a license as a designated representative to provide supervision in a wholesaler or veterinary food-animal drug retailer. Existing law requires an individual to meet specified requirements to obtain and maintain a designated representative license, including a minimum of one year of paid work experience related to the distribution or dispensing of dangerous drugs or devices or meet certain prerequisites.

The bill would require the one year of paid work experience to obtain a designated representative license to be in a licensed pharmacy, or with a drug wholesaler, drug distributor, or drug manufacturer. The bill would also make related, technical changes.

(4) Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of marriage and family therapists, licensed educational psychologists, licensed clinical social workers, and licensed professional clinical counselors by the Board of Behavioral Sciences.begin insert Existing law makes various changes to the licensing and associated eligibility and examination requirements for marriage and family therapists, licensed clinical social workers, and licensed professional clinical counselors, effective January 1, 2014.end insert

begin insert

This bill would delay the implementation of these and other related changes until January 1, 2016.

end insert

Existing law requires all persons applying for marriage and family therapistbegin insert, licensed clinical social worker, or licensed professional clinical counselorend insert licensure examinations to have specified hours of experience, not including experience gained by interns or trainees as independent contractors.

This bill would specify that experience shall not be gained by interns or traineesbegin insert or associatesend insert for work performed as an independent contractor or reported on an IRS Form 1099.

Existing law also authorizes the board to issue a license to a person who, at the time of submitting an application for a license pursuant to this chapter, holds a valid license in good standing issued by a board of marriage counselor examiners, board of marriage and family therapists, or corresponding authority, of any state or country if certain conditions are met, considering hours of experience obtained outside of California during the 6-year period immediately preceding the date the applicant initially obtained the license.

This bill would instead require time actively licensed as a marriage and family therapist to be accepted at a rate of 100 hours per month up to a maximum of 1,200 hours if the applicant has fewer than 3,000 hours of qualifying supervised experience.

Existing law establishes a $75 delinquent renewal fee for a licensed educational psychologist and for clinical social workers.

This bill would instead specify that $75 is the maximum delinquent renewal fee.

Existing law requires an applicant for registration as an associate clinical social worker to meet specified requirements. Existing law also defines the application of social work principles and methods.

This bill would additionally require that all applicants and registrants be at all times under the supervision of a supervisor responsible for ensuring that the extent, kind, and quality of counseling performed is consistent with the training and experience of the person being supervised, and who is responsible to the board for compliance with all laws, rules, and regulations governing the practice of clinical social work. The bill would also specify that the practice of clinical social work includes the use, application, and integration of the coursework and experience required.

Existing law requires a licensed professional clinical counselor, to qualify for a clinical examination for licensure, to complete clinical mental health experience, as specified, including not more than 250 hours of experience providing counseling or crisis counseling on the telephone.

This bill instead would require not more than 375 hours of experience providing personal psychotherapy, crisis counseling, or other counseling services via telehealth.

(5) The bill would also make other technical, nonsubstantive changes.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: no.

The people of the State of California do enact as follows:

P4    1

SECTION 1.  

Section 1613 of the Business and Professions
2Code
is amended to read:

3

1613.  

The board shall have and use a seal bearing the name
4“Dental Board of California.”

5

SEC. 2.  

Section 1915 of the Business and Professions Code is
6amended to read:

7

1915.  

No person other than a registered dental hygienist,
8registered dental hygienist in alternative practice, or registered
9dental hygienist in extended functions or a licensed dentist may
10engage in the practice of dental hygiene or perform dental hygiene
11procedures on patients, including, but not limited to, supragingival
12and subgingival scaling, dental hygiene assessment, and treatment
13planning, except for the following persons:

14(a) A student enrolled in a dental or a dental hygiene school
15who is performing procedures as part of the regular curriculum of
16that program under the supervision of the faculty of that program.

17(b) A dental assistant acting in accordance with the rules of the
18dental board in performing the following procedures:

19(1) Applying nonaerosol and noncaustic topical agents.

20(2) Applying topical fluoride.

21(3) Taking impressions for bleaching trays.

22(c) A registered dental assistant acting in accordance with the
23rules of the dental board in performing the following procedures:

24(1) Polishing the coronal surfaces of teeth.

25(2) Applying bleaching agents.

26(3) Activating bleaching agents with a nonlaser light-curing
27device.

28(4) Applying pit and fissure sealants.

P5    1(d) A registered dental assistant in extended functions acting in
2accordance with the rules of the dental board in applying pit and
3fissure sealants.

4(e) A registered dental hygienist, registered dental hygienist in
5alternative practice, or registered dental hygienist in extended
6functions licensed in another jurisdiction, performing a clinical
7demonstration for educational purposes.

8

SEC. 3.  

Section 1926.2 of the Business and Professions Code
9 is amended to read:

10

1926.2.  

(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a
11registered dental hygienist in alternative practice may operate one
12mobile dental hygiene clinic registered as a dental hygiene office
13or facility. The owner or operator of the mobile dental hygiene
14clinic or unit shall be registered and operated in accordance with
15regulations established by the committee, which regulations shall
16not be designed to prevent or lessen competition in service areas,
17and shall pay the fees described in Section 1944.

18(b) A mobile service unit, as defined in subdivision (b) of
19Section 1765.105 of the Health and Safety Code, and a mobile
20unit operated by an entity that is exempt from licensure pursuant
21to subdivision (b), (c), or (h) of Section 1206 of the Health and
22Safety Code, are exempt from this article. Notwithstanding this
23exemption, the owner or operator of the mobile unit shall notify
24the committee within 60 days of the date on which dental hygiene
25services are first delivered in the mobile unit, or the date on which
26the mobile unit’s application pursuant to Section 1765.130 of the
27Health and Safety Code is approved, whichever is earlier.

28(c) A licensee practicing in a mobile unit described in
29subdivision (b) is not subject to subdivision (a) as to that mobile
30unit.

31

SEC. 4.  

Section 3024 of the Business and Professions Code is
32amended to read:

33

3024.  

The board may grant or refuse to grant an optometrist
34license as provided in this chapter and may revoke or suspend the
35license of any optometrist for any of the causes specified in this
36chapter.

37It shall have the power to administer oaths and to take testimony
38in the exercise of these functions.

39

SEC. 5.  

Section 3025 of the Business and Professions Code is
40amended to read:

P6    1

3025.  

The board may make and promulgate rules and
2regulations governing procedure of the board, the admission of
3applicants for examination for a license as an optometrist, and the
4practice of optometry. All of those rules and regulations shall be
5in accordance with and not inconsistent with the provisions of this
6chapter. The rules and regulations shall be adopted, amended, or
7repealed in accordance with the provisions of the Administrative
8Procedure Act.

9

SEC. 6.  

Section 3040 of the Business and Professions Code is
10amended to read:

11

3040.  

It is unlawful for a person to engage in the practice of
12optometry or to display a sign or in any other way to advertise or
13hold himself or herself out as an optometrist without having first
14obtained an optometrist license from the board under the provisions
15of this chapter or under the provisions of any former act relating
16to the practice of optometry. The practice of optometry includes
17the performing or controlling of any acts set forth in Section 3041.

18In any prosecution for a violation of this section, the use of test
19cards, test lenses, or of trial frames is prima facie evidence of the
20practice of optometry.

21

SEC. 7.  

Section 3041.2 of the Business and Professions Code
22 is amended to read:

23

3041.2.  

(a) The State Board of Optometry shall, by regulation,
24establish educational and examination requirements for licensure
25to ensure the competence of optometrists to practice pursuant to
26subdivision (a) of Section 3041. Satisfactory completion of the
27educational and examination requirements shall be a condition for
28the issuance of an original optometrist license under this chapter,
29on and after January 1, 1980. Only those optometrists who have
30successfully completed educational and examination requirements
31as determined by the State Board of Optometry shall be permitted
32the use of pharmaceutical agents specified by subdivision (a) of
33Section 3041.

34(b) Nothing in this section shall authorize an optometrist issued
35an original optometrist license under this chapter before January
361, 1996, to use or prescribe therapeutic pharmaceutical agents
37specified in subdivision (d) of Section 3041 without otherwise
38meeting the requirements of Section 3041.3.

39

SEC. 8.  

Section 3051 of the Business and Professions Code is
40amended to read:

P7    1

3051.  

All applicants for examination for an optometrist license
2in accordance with the educational and examination requirements
3adopted pursuant to Section 3023.1 shall show the board by
4satisfactory evidence that he or she has received education in child
5abuse detection and the detection of alcoholism and other chemical
6substance dependency. This section shall apply only to applicants
7who matriculate in a school of optometry on or after September
81, 1997.

9

SEC. 9.  

Section 3057.5 of the Business and Professions Code
10 is amended to read:

11

3057.5.  

Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter,
12the board shall permit a graduate of a foreign university who meets
13all of the following requirements to take the examinations for an
14optometrist license:

15(a) Is over 18 years of age.

16(b) Is not subject to denial of a license under Section 480.

17(c) Has a degree as a doctor of optometry issued by a university
18located outside of the United States.

19

SEC. 10.  

Section 3077 of the Business and Professions Code
20 is amended to read:

21

3077.  

As used in this section, “office” means any office or
22other place for the practice of optometry.

23(a) No person, singly or in combination with others, may have
24an office unless he or she is licensed to practice optometry under
25this chapter.

26(b) An optometrist, or two or more optometrists jointly, may
27have one office without obtaining a branch office license from the
28board.

29(c) On and after October 1, 1959, no optometrist, and no two
30or more optometrists jointly, may have more than one office unless
31he or she or they comply with the provisions of this chapter as to
32an additional office. The additional office, for the purposes of this
33chapter, constitutes a branch office.

34(d) Any optometrist who has, or any two or more optometrists,
35jointly, who have, a branch office prior to January 1, 1957, and
36who desire to continue the branch office on or after that date shall
37notify the board in writing of that desire in a manner prescribed
38by the board.

39(e) On and after January 1, 1957, any optometrist, or any two
40or more optometrists, jointly, who desire to open a branch office
P8    1shall notify the board in writing in a manner prescribed by the
2board.

3(f) On and after January 1, 1957, no branch office may be
4opened or operated without a branch office license. Branch office
5licenses shall be valid for the calendar year in or for which they
6are issued and shall be renewable on January 1 of each year
7thereafter. Branch office licenses shall be issued or renewed only
8upon the payment of the fee therefor prescribed by this chapter.

9On or after October 1, 1959, no more than one branch office
10license shall be issued to any optometrist or to any two or more
11optometrists, jointly.

12(g) Any failure to comply with the provisions of this chapter
13relating to branch offices or branch office licenses as to any branch
14office shall work the suspension of the optometrist license of each
15optometrist who, individually or with others, has a branch office.
16An optometrist license so suspended shall not be restored except
17upon compliance with those provisions and the payment of the fee
18prescribed by this chapter for restoration of a license after
19suspension for failure to comply with the provisions of this chapter
20relating to branch offices.

21(h) The holder or holders of a branch office license shall pay
22the annual renewal fee therefor in the amount required by this
23chapter between the first day of January and the first day of
24February of each year. The failure to pay the fee in advance on or
25before February 1 of each year during the time it is in force shall
26ipso facto work the suspension of the branch office license. The
27license shall not be restored except upon written application and
28the payment of the penalty prescribed by this chapter, and, in
29addition, all delinquent branch office fees.

30(i) Nothing in this chapter shall limit or authorize the board to
31limit the number of branch offices that are in operation on October
321, 1959, and that conform to this chapter, nor prevent an
33optometrist from acquiring any branch office or offices of his or
34her parent. The sale after October 1, 1959, of any branch office
35shall terminate the privilege of operating the branch office, and
36no new branch office license shall be issued in place of the license
37issued for the branch office, unless the branch office is the only
38one operated by the optometrist or by two or more optometrists
39jointly.

P9    1Nothing in this chapter shall prevent an optometrist from owning,
2maintaining, or operating more than one branch office if he or she
3is in personal attendance at each of his or her offices 50 percent
4of the time during which the office is open for the practice of
5optometry.

6(j) The board shall have the power to adopt, amend, and repeal
7rules and regulations to carry out the provisions of this section.

8(k) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, neither
9an optometrist nor an individual practice association shall be
10deemed to have an additional office solely by reason of the
11optometrist’s participation in an individual practice association or
12the individual practice association’s creation or operation. As used
13in this subdivision, the term “individual practice association” means
14an entity that meets all of the following requirements:

15(1) Complies with the definition of an optometric corporation
16in Section 3160.

17(2) Operates primarily for the purpose of securing contracts
18with health care service plans or other third-party payers that make
19available eye/vision services to enrollees or subscribers through a
20panel of optometrists.

21(3) Contracts with optometrists to serve on the panel of
22optometrists, but does not obtain an ownership interest in, or
23otherwise exercise control over, the respective optometric practices
24of those optometrists on the panel.

25Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to exempt an
26optometrist who is a member of an individual practice association
27and who practices optometry in more than one physical location,
28from the requirement of obtaining a branch office license for each
29of those locations, as required by this section. However, an
30optometrist shall not be required to obtain a branch office license
31solely as a result of his or her participation in an individual practice
32association in which the members of the individual practice
33association practice optometry in a number of different locations,
34and each optometrist is listed as a member of that individual
35practice association.

36

SEC. 11.  

Section 3093 of the Business and Professions Code
37 is amended to read:

38

3093.  

Before setting aside the revocation or suspension of any
39optometrist license, the board may require the applicant to pass
P10   1the regular examination given for applicants for an optometrist
2license.

3

SEC. 12.  

Section 3098 of the Business and Professions Code
4 is amended to read:

5

3098.  

When the holder uses the title of “Doctor” or “Dr.” as a
6prefix to his or her name, without using the word “optometrist” as
7a suffix to his or her name or in connection with it, or, without
8holding a diploma from an accredited school of optometry, the
9letters “Opt. D.” or “O.D.” as a suffix to his or her name, it
10constitutes a cause to revoke or suspend his or her optometrist
11license.

12

SEC. 13.  

Section 3103 of the Business and Professions Code
13 is amended to read:

14

3103.  

It is unlawful to include in any advertisement relating
15to the sale or disposition of goggles, sunglasses, colored glasses,
16or occupational eye-protective devices, any words or figures that
17advertise or have a tendency to advertise the practice of optometry.

18This section does not prohibit the advertising of the practice of
19optometry by a licensed optometrist in the manner permitted by
20law.

21

SEC. 14.  

Section 3106 of the Business and Professions Code
22 is amended to read:

23

3106.  

Knowingly making or signing any license, certificate,
24or other document directly or indirectly related to the practice of
25optometry that falsely represents the existence or nonexistence of
26a state of facts constitutes unprofessional conduct.

27

SEC. 15.  

Section 3107 of the Business and Professions Code
28 is amended to read:

29

3107.  

It is unlawful to use or attempt to use any license or
30certificate issued by the board that has been purchased, fraudulently
31issued, counterfeited, or issued by mistake, as a valid license or
32certificate.

33

SEC. 16.  

Section 3109 of the Business and Professions Code
34 is amended to read:

35

3109.  

Directly or indirectly accepting employment to practice
36optometry from any person not having a valid, unrevoked license
37as an optometrist or from any company or corporation constitutes
38unprofessional conduct. Except as provided in this chapter, no
39optometrist may, singly or jointly with others, be incorporated or
40become incorporated when the purpose or a purpose of the
P11   1corporation is to practice optometry or to conduct the practice of
2optometry.

3The terms “accepting employment to practice optometry” as
4used in this section shall not be construed so as to prevent a
5licensed optometrist from practicing optometry upon an individual
6patient.

7Notwithstanding the provisions of this section or the provisions
8of any other law, a licensed optometrist may be employed to
9practice optometry by a physician and surgeon who holds a license
10under this division and who practices in the specialty of
11ophthalmology or by a health care service plan pursuant to the
12provisions of Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 1340) of
13Division 2 of the Health and Safety Code.

14

SEC. 17.  

Section 3163 of the Business and Professions Code
15 is amended to read:

16

3163.  

Except as provided in Section 3078, the name of an
17optometric corporation and any name or names under which it
18may be rendering professional services shall contain and be
19restricted to the name or the last name of one or more of the
20present, prospective, or former shareholders and shall include the
21words optometric corporation or wording or abbreviations denoting
22corporate existence, provided that the articles of incorporation
23shall be amended to delete the name of a former shareholder from
24the name of the corporation within two years from the date the
25former shareholder dies or otherwise ceases to be a shareholder.

26

SEC. 18.  

Section 4021.5 is added to the Business and
27Professions Code
, to read:

28

4021.5.  

“Correctional pharmacy” means a pharmacy, licensed
29by the board, located within a state correctional facility for the
30purpose of providing pharmaceutical care to inmates of the state
31correctional facility.

32

SEC. 19.  

Section 4053 of the Business and Professions Code
33 is amended to read:

34

4053.  

(a) Notwithstanding Section 4051, the board may issue
35a license as a designated representative to provide sufficient and
36qualified supervision in a wholesaler or veterinary food-animal
37drug retailer. The designated representative shall protect the public
38health and safety in the handling, storage, and shipment of
39dangerous drugs and dangerous devices in the wholesaler or
40veterinary food-animal drug retailer.

P12   1(b) An individual may apply for a designated representative
2license. In order to obtain and maintain that license, the individual
3shall meet all of the following requirements:

4(1) He or she shall be a high school graduate or possess a general
5education development certificate equivalent.

6(2) He or she shall have a minimum of one year of paid work
7experience in a licensed pharmacy, or with a drug wholesaler, drug
8distributor, or drug manufacturer, in the past three years, related
9to the distribution or dispensing of dangerous drugs or dangerous
10devices or meet all of the prerequisites to take the examination
11required for licensure as a pharmacist by the board.

12(3) He or she shall complete a training program approved by
13the board that, at a minimum, addresses each of the following
14subjects:

15(A) Knowledge and understanding of California law and federal
16law relating to the distribution of dangerous drugs and dangerous
17devices.

18(B) Knowledge and understanding of California law and federal
19law relating to the distribution of controlled substances.

20(C) Knowledge and understanding of quality control systems.

21(D) Knowledge and understanding of the United States
22Pharmacopoeia standards relating to the safe storage and handling
23of drugs.

24(E) Knowledge and understanding of prescription terminology,
25abbreviations, dosages and format.

26(4) The board may, by regulation, require training programs to
27include additional material.

28(5) The board may not issue a license as a designated
29 representative until the applicant provides proof of completion of
30the required training to the board.

31(c) The veterinary food-animal drug retailer or wholesaler shall
32not operate without a pharmacist or a designated representative
33on its premises.

34(d) Only a pharmacist or a designated representative shall
35prepare and affix the label to veterinary food-animal drugs.

36(e) Section 4051 shall not apply to any laboratory licensed under
37Section 351 of Title III of the Public Health Service Act (Public
38Law 78-410).

39

SEC. 20.  

Section 4107 of the Business and Professions Code
40 is amended to read:

P13   1

4107.  

(a) The board may not issue more than one site license
2to a single premises except as follows:

3(1) To issue a veterinary food-animal drug retailer license to a
4wholesaler pursuant to Section 4196.

5(2) To issue a license to compound sterile injectable drugs to a
6pharmacy pursuant to Section 4127.1.

7(3) To issue a centralized hospital packaging license pursuant
8to Section 4128.

9(b) For the purposes of this subdivision, “premises” means a
10location with its own address and an independent means of ingress
11and egress.

12

SEC. 21.  

Section 4980.36 of the Business and Professions
13Code
is amended to read:

14

4980.36.  

(a) This section shall apply to the following:

15(1) Applicants for licensure or registration who begin graduate
16study before August 1, 2012, and do not complete that study on
17or before December 31, 2018.

18(2) Applicants for licensure or registration who begin graduate
19study before August 1, 2012, and who graduate from a degree
20program that meets the requirements of this section.

21(3) Applicants for licensure or registration who begin graduate
22study on or after August 1, 2012.

23(b) To qualify for a license or registration, applicants shall
24possess a doctoral or master’s degree meeting the requirements of
25this section in marriage, family, and child counseling, marriage
26and family therapy, couple and family therapy, psychology, clinical
27psychology, counseling psychology, or counseling with an
28emphasis in either marriage, family, and child counseling or
29marriage and family therapy, obtained from a school, college, or
30university approved by the Bureau for Private Postsecondary
31Education or accredited by either the Commission on Accreditation
32for Marriage and Family Therapy Education or a regional
33accrediting agency recognized by the United States Department
34of Education. The board has the authority to make the final
35determination as to whether a degree meets all requirements,
36including, but not limited to, course requirements, regardless of
37accreditation or approval.

38(c) A doctoral or master’s degree program that qualifies for
39licensure or registration shall do the following:

40(1) Integrate all of the following throughout its curriculum:

P14   1(A) Marriage and family therapy principles.

2(B) The principles of mental health recovery-oriented care and
3methods of service delivery in recovery-oriented practice
4environments, among others.

5(C) An understanding of various cultures and the social and
6psychological implications of socioeconomic position, and an
7understanding of how poverty and social stress impact an
8individual’s mental health and recovery.

9(2) Allow for innovation and individuality in the education of
10marriage and family therapists.

11(3) Encourage students to develop the personal qualities that
12are intimately related to effective practice, including, but not
13limited to, integrity, sensitivity, flexibility, insight, compassion,
14and personal presence.

15(4) Permit an emphasis or specialization that may address any
16one or more of the unique and complex array of human problems,
17symptoms, and needs of Californians served by marriage and
18family therapists.

19(5) Provide students with the opportunity to meet with various
20consumers and family members of consumers of mental health
21services to enhance understanding of their experience of mental
22illness, treatment, and recovery.

23(d) The degree described in subdivision (b) shall contain no less
24than 60 semester or 90 quarter units of instruction that includes,
25but is not limited to, the following requirements:

26(1) Both of the following:

27(A) No less than 12 semester or 18 quarter units of coursework
28in theories, principles, and methods of a variety of
29psychotherapeutic orientations directly related to marriage and
30family therapy and marital and family systems approaches to
31treatment and how these theories can be applied therapeutically
32with individuals, couples, families, adults, including elder adults,
33children, adolescents, and groups to improve, restore, or maintain
34healthy relationships.

35(B) Practicum that involves direct client contact, as follows:

36(i) A minimum of six semester or nine quarter units of practicum
37in a supervised clinical placement that provides supervised
38fieldwork experience.

39(ii) A minimum of 150 hours of face-to-face experience
40counseling individuals, couples, families, or groups.

P15   1(iii) A student must be enrolled in a practicum course while
2counseling clients, except as specified in subdivision (c) of Section
34980.42.

4(iv) The practicum shall provide training in all of the following
5areas:

6(I) Applied use of theory and psychotherapeutic techniques.

7(II) Assessment, diagnosis, and prognosis.

8(III) Treatment of individuals and premarital, couple, family,
9and child relationships, including trauma and abuse, dysfunctions,
10healthy functioning, health promotion, illness prevention, and
11working with families.

12(IV) Professional writing, including documentation of services,
13treatment plans, and progress notes.

14(V) How to connect people with resources that deliver the
15quality of services and support needed in the community.

16(v) Educational institutions are encouraged to design the
17practicum required by this subparagraph to include marriage and
18family therapy experience in low income and multicultural mental
19health settings.

20(vi) In addition to the 150 hours required in clause (ii), 75 hours
21of either of the following:

22(I) Client centered advocacy, as defined in Section 4980.03.

23(II) Face-to-face experience counseling individuals, couples,
24families, or groups.

25(2) Instruction in all of the following:

26(A) Diagnosis, assessment, prognosis, and treatment of mental
27disorders, including severe mental disorders, evidence-based
28practices, psychological testing, psychopharmacology, and
29promising mental health practices that are evaluated in peer
30reviewed literature.

31(B) Developmental issues from infancy to old age, including
32instruction in all of the following areas:

33(i) The effects of developmental issues on individuals, couples,
34and family relationships.

35(ii) The psychological, psychotherapeutic, and health
36implications of developmental issues and their effects.

37(iii) Aging and its biological, social, cognitive, and
38psychological aspects.

39(iv) A variety of cultural understandings of human development.

P16   1(v) The understanding of human behavior within the social
2 context of socioeconomic status and other contextual issues
3affecting social position.

4(vi) The understanding of human behavior within the social
5context of a representative variety of the cultures found within
6California.

7(vii) The understanding of the impact that personal and social
8insecurity, social stress, low educational levels, inadequate housing,
9and malnutrition have on human development.

10(C) The broad range of matters and life events that may arise
11within marriage and family relationships and within a variety of
12California cultures, including instruction in all of the following:

13(i) A minimum of seven contact hours of training or coursework
14in child abuse assessment and reporting as specified in Section 28,
15and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

16(ii) Spousal or partner abuse assessment, detection, intervention
17strategies, and same gender abuse dynamics.

18(iii) Cultural factors relevant to abuse of partners and family
19members.

20(iv) Childbirth, child rearing, parenting, and stepparenting.

21(v) Marriage, divorce, and blended families.

22(vi) Long-term care.

23(vii) End of life and grief.

24(viii) Poverty and deprivation.

25(ix) Financial and social stress.

26(x) Effects of trauma.

27(xi) The psychological, psychotherapeutic, community, and
28health implications of the matters and life events described in
29clauses (i) to (x), inclusive.

30(D) Cultural competency and sensitivity, including a familiarity
31with the racial, cultural, linguistic, and ethnic backgrounds of
32persons living in California.

33(E) Multicultural development and cross-cultural interaction,
34including experiences of race, ethnicity, class, spirituality, sexual
35orientation, gender, and disability, and their incorporation into the
36psychotherapeutic process.

37(F) The effects of socioeconomic status on treatment and
38available resources.

P17   1(G) Resilience, including the personal and community qualities
2that enable persons to cope with adversity, trauma, tragedy, threats,
3or other stresses.

4(H) Human sexuality, including the study of physiological,
5psychological, and social cultural variables associated with sexual
6behavior and gender identity, and the assessment and treatment of
7psychosexual dysfunction.

8(I) Substance use disorders, co-occurring disorders, and
9addiction, including, but not limited to, instruction in all of the
10following:

11(i) The definition of substance use disorders, co-occurring
12disorders, and addiction. For purposes of this subparagraph,
13“co-occurring disorders” means a mental illness and substance
14abuse diagnosis occurring simultaneously in an individual.

15(ii) Medical aspects of substance use disorders and co-occurring
16disorders.

17(iii) The effects of psychoactive drug use.

18(iv) Current theories of the etiology of substance abuse and
19addiction.

20(v) The role of persons and systems that support or compound
21substance abuse and addiction.

22(vi) Major approaches to identification, evaluation, and treatment
23of substance use disorders, co-occurring disorders, and addiction,
24including, but not limited to, best practices.

25(vii) Legal aspects of substance abuse.

26(viii) Populations at risk with regard to substance use disorders
27and co-occurring disorders.

28(ix) Community resources offering screening, assessment,
29treatment, and followup for the affected person and family.

30(x) Recognition of substance use disorders, co-occurring
31disorders, and addiction, and appropriate referral.

32(xi) The prevention of substance use disorders and addiction.

33(J) California law and professional ethics for marriage and
34family therapists, including instruction in all of the following areas
35of study:

36(i) Contemporary professional ethics and statutory, regulatory,
37and decisional laws that delineate the scope of practice of marriage
38and family therapy.

P18   1(ii) The therapeutic, clinical, and practical considerations
2involved in the legal and ethical practice of marriage and family
3therapy, including, but not limited to, family law.

4(iii) The current legal patterns and trends in the mental health
5professions.

6(iv) The psychotherapist-patient privilege, confidentiality, the
7patient dangerous to self or others, and the treatment of minors
8with and without parental consent.

9(v) A recognition and exploration of the relationship between
10a practitioner’s sense of self and human values and his or her
11professional behavior and ethics.

12(vi) Differences in legal and ethical standards for different types
13of work settings.

14(vii) Licensing law and licensing process.

15(e) The degree described in subdivision (b) shall, in addition to
16meeting the requirements of subdivision (d), include instruction
17in case management, systems of care for the severely mentally ill,
18public and private services and supports available for the severely
19mentally ill, community resources for persons with mental illness
20and for victims of abuse, disaster and trauma response, advocacy
21for the severely mentally ill, and collaborative treatment. This
22instruction may be provided either in credit level coursework or
23through extension programs offered by the degree-granting
24institution.

25(f) The changes made to law by this section are intended to
26improve the educational qualifications for licensure in order to
27better prepare future licentiates for practice, and are not intended
28to expand or restrict the scope of practice for marriage and family
29therapists.

30begin insert

begin insertSEC. 22.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4980.397 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
31Code
end insert
begin insert is amended to read:end insert

32

4980.397.  

(a) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert an applicant
33for licensure as a marriage and family therapist shall pass the
34following two examinations as prescribed by the board:

35(1) A California law and ethics examination.

36(2) A clinical examination.

37(b) Upon registration with the board, a marriage and family
38therapist intern shall, within the first year of registration, take an
39examination on California law and ethics.

P19   1(c) A registrant may take the clinical examination only upon
2meeting all of the following requirements:

3(1) Completion of all required supervised work experience.

4(2) Completion of all education requirements.

5(3) Passage of the California law and ethics examination.

6(d) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014end delete
7begin insert 2016end insert.

8begin insert

begin insertSEC. 23.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4980.398 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
9Code
end insert
begin insert is amended to read:end insert

10

4980.398.  

(a) Each applicant who had previously taken and
11passed the standard written examination but had not passed the
12clinical vignette examination shall also obtain a passing score on
13the clinical examination in order to be eligible for licensure.

14(b) An applicant who had previously failed to obtain a passing
15score on the standard written examination shall obtain a passing
16score on the California law and ethics examination and the clinical
17examination.

18(c) An applicant who had obtained eligibility for the standard
19written examination shall take the California law and ethics
20examination and the clinical examination.

21(d) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
22begin insert 2016.end insert

23begin insert

begin insertSEC. 24.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4980.399 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
24Code
end insert
begin insert is amended to read:end insert

25

4980.399.  

(a) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section
264980.398, each applicant and registrant shall obtain a passing score
27on a board-administered California law and ethics examination in
28order to qualify for licensure.

29(b) A registrant shall participate in a board-administered
30California law and ethics examination prior to his or her registration
31renewal.

32(c) If an applicant fails the California law and ethics
33examination, he or she may retake the examination, upon payment
34of the required fees, without further application except as provided
35in subdivision (d).

36(d) If a registrant fails to obtain a passing score on the California
37 law and ethics examination described in subdivision (a) within his
38or her first renewal period on or after the operative date of this
39section, he or she shall complete, at a minimum, a 12-hour course
40in California law and ethics in order to be eligible to participate
P20   1in the California law and ethics examination. Registrants shall only
2take the 12-hour California law and ethics course once during a
3renewal period. The 12-hour law and ethics course required by the
4section shall be taken through a board-approved continuing
5education provider, a county, state or governmental entity, or a
6college or university.

7(e) The board shall not issue a subsequent registration number
8unless the registrant has passed the California law and ethics
9examination.

10(f) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
11begin insert 2016.end insert

12begin insert

begin insertSEC. 25.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4980.40 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
13Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 29 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
142012, is amended to read:end insert

15

4980.40.  

To qualify for a license, an applicant shall have all
16of the following qualifications:

17(a) Meet the educational requirements of Section 4980.36 or
18both Sections 4980.37 and 4980.41, as applicable.

19(b) Be at least 18 years of age.

20(c) Have at least two years of experience that meet the
21requirements of Section 4980.43.

22(d) Pass a board administered written or oral examination or
23both types of examinations, except that an applicant who passed
24a written examination and who has not taken and passed an oral
25examination shall instead be required to take and pass a clinical
26vignette written examination.

27(e) Not have committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for
28denial of licensure under Section 480. The board shall not issue a
29registration or license to any person who has been convicted of a
30crime in this or another state or in a territory of the United States
31that involves sexual abuse of children or who is required to register
32pursuant to Section 290 of the Penal Code or the equivalent in
33another state or territory.

34(f) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
35begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
36that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
37that date.

38begin insert

begin insertSEC. 26.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4980.40 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
39Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 30 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
402012, is amended to read:end insert

P21   1

4980.40.  

To qualify for a license, an applicant shall have all
2of the following qualifications:

3(a) Meet the educational requirements of Section 4980.36 or
4both Sections 4980.37 and 4980.41, as applicable.

5(b) Be at least 18 years of age.

6(c) Have at least two years of experience that meet the
7requirements of Section 4980.43.

8(d) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert successfully pass a
9California law and ethics examination and a clinical examination.
10An applicant who has successfully passed a previously
11administered written examination may be subsequently required
12to take and pass another written examination.

13(e) Not have committed acts or crimes constituting grounds for
14denial of licensure under Section 480. The board shall not issue a
15registration or license to any person who has been convicted of a
16crime in this or another state or in a territory of the United States
17that involves sexual abuse of children or who is required to register
18pursuant to Section 290 of the Penal Code or the equivalent in
19another state or territory.

20(f) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
21begin insert 2016.end insert

22

begin deleteSEC. 22.end delete
23begin insertSEC. 27.end insert  

Section 4980.43 of the Business and Professions Code
24 is amended to read:

25

4980.43.  

(a) Prior to applying for licensure examinations, each
26applicant shall complete experience that shall comply with the
27following:

28(1) A minimum of 3,000 hours completed during a period of at
29least 104 weeks.

30(2) Not more than 40 hours in any seven consecutive days.

31(3) Not less than 1,700 hours of supervised experience
32completed subsequent to the granting of the qualifying master’s
33or doctoral degree.

34(4) Not more than 1,300 hours of supervised experience obtained
35prior to completing a master’s or doctoral degree.

36The applicant shall not be credited with more than 750 hours of
37counseling and direct supervisor contact prior to completing the
38master’s or doctoral degree.

P22   1(5) No hours of experience may be gained prior to completing
2either 12 semester units or 18 quarter units of graduate instruction
3and becoming a trainee except for personal psychotherapy.

4(6) No hours of experience may be gained more than six years
5prior to the date the application for examination eligibility was
6filed, except that up to 500 hours of clinical experience gained in
7the supervised practicum required by subdivision (c) of Section
84980.37 and subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d)
9of Section 4980.36 shall be exempt from this six-year requirement.

10(7) Not more than a combined total of 1,000 hours of experience
11in the following:

12(A) Direct supervisor contact.

13(B) Professional enrichment activities. For purposes of this
14chapter, “professional enrichment activities” include the following:

15(i) Workshops, seminars, training sessions, or conferences
16directly related to marriage and family therapy attended by the
17applicant that are approved by the applicant’s supervisor. An
18applicant shall have no more than 250 hours of verified attendance
19at these workshops, seminars, training sessions, or conferences.

20(ii) Participation by the applicant in personal psychotherapy,
21which includes group, marital or conjoint, family, or individual
22psychotherapy by an appropriately licensed professional. An
23applicant shall have no more than 100 hours of participation in
24personal psychotherapy. The applicant shall be credited with three
25hours of experience for each hour of personal psychotherapy.

26(8) Not more than 500 hours of experience providing group
27therapy or group counseling.

28(9) For all hours gained on or after January 1, 2012, not more
29than 500 hours of experience in the following:

30(A) Experience administering and evaluating psychological
31tests, writing clinical reports, writing progress notes, or writing
32process notes.

33(B) Client centered advocacy.

34(10) Not less than 500 total hours of experience in diagnosing
35and treating couples, families, and children. For up to 150 hours
36of treating couples and families in conjoint therapy, the applicant
37shall be credited with two hours of experience for each hour of
38therapy provided.

P23   1(11) Not more than 375 hours of experience providing personal
2psychotherapy, crisis counseling, or other counseling services via
3telehealth in accordance with Section 2290.5.

4(12) It is anticipated and encouraged that hours of experience
5will include working with elders and dependent adults who have
6physical or mental limitations that restrict their ability to carry out
7normal activities or protect their rights.

8This subdivision shall only apply to hours gained on and after
9January 1, 2010.

10(b) All applicants, trainees, and registrants shall be at all times
11under the supervision of a supervisor who shall be responsible for
12ensuring that the extent, kind, and quality of counseling performed
13is consistent with the training and experience of the person being
14supervised, and who shall be responsible to the board for
15compliance with all laws, rules, and regulations governing the
16practice of marriage and family therapy. Supervised experience
17shall be gained by interns and trainees only as an employee or as
18a volunteer. The requirements of this chapter regarding gaining
19hours of experience and supervision are applicable equally to
20employees and volunteers. Experience shall not be gained by
21 interns or trainees for work performed as an independent contractor
22or reported on an IRS Form 1099.

23(1) If employed, an intern shall provide the board with copies
24of the corresponding W-2 tax forms for each year of experience
25claimed upon application for licensure.

26(2) If volunteering, an intern shall provide the board with a letter
27from his or her employer verifying the intern’s employment as a
28volunteer upon application for licensure.

29(c) Except for experience gained pursuant to subparagraph (B)
30of paragraph (7) of subdivision (a), supervision shall include at
31least one hour of direct supervisor contact in each week for which
32experience is credited in each work setting, as specified:

33(1) A trainee shall receive an average of at least one hour of
34direct supervisor contact for every five hours of client contact in
35each setting.

36(2) An individual supervised after being granted a qualifying
37degree shall receive at least one additional hour of direct supervisor
38contact for every week in which more than 10 hours of client
39contact is gained in each setting. No more than five hours of
P24   1supervision, whether individual or group, shall be credited during
2any single week.

3(3) For purposes of this section, “one hour of direct supervisor
4contact” means one hour per week of face-to-face contact on an
5individual basis or two hours per week of face-to-face contact in
6a group.

7(4) Direct supervisor contact shall occur within the same week
8as the hours claimed.

9(5) Direct supervisor contact provided in a group shall be
10provided in a group of not more than eight supervisees and in
11segments lasting no less than one continuous hour.

12(6) Notwithstanding paragraph (3), an intern working in a
13governmental entity, a school, a college, or a university, or an
14institution that is both nonprofit and charitable may obtain the
15required weekly direct supervisor contact via two-way, real-time
16videoconferencing. The supervisor shall be responsible for ensuring
17that client confidentiality is upheld.

18(7) All experience gained by a trainee shall be monitored by the
19supervisor as specified by regulation.

20(d) (1) A trainee may be credited with supervised experience
21completed in any setting that meets all of the following:

22(A) Lawfully and regularly provides mental health counseling
23or psychotherapy.

24(B) Provides oversight to ensure that the trainee’s work at the
25setting meets the experience and supervision requirements set forth
26in this chapter and is within the scope of practice for the profession
27as defined in Section 4980.02.

28(C) Is not a private practice owned by a licensed marriage and
29family therapist, a licensed psychologist, a licensed clinical social
30worker, a licensed physician and surgeon, or a professional
31corporation of any of those licensed professions.

32(2) Experience may be gained by the trainee solely as part of
33the position for which the trainee volunteers or is employed.

34(e) (1) An intern may be credited with supervised experience
35completed in any setting that meets both of the following:

36(A) Lawfully and regularly provides mental health counseling
37or psychotherapy.

38(B) Provides oversight to ensure that the intern’s work at the
39setting meets the experience and supervision requirements set forth
P25   1in this chapter and is within the scope of practice for the profession
2as defined in Section 4980.02.

3(2) An applicant shall not be employed or volunteer in a private
4practice, as defined in subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of
5subdivision (d), until registered as an intern.

6(3) While an intern may be either a paid employee or a
7volunteer, employers are encouraged to provide fair remuneration
8to interns.

9(4) Except for periods of time during a supervisor’s vacation or
10sick leave, an intern who is employed or volunteering in private
11practice shall be under the direct supervision of a licensee that has
12satisfied the requirements of subdivision (g) of Section 4980.03.
13The supervising licensee shall either be employed by and practice
14at the same site as the intern’s employer, or shall be an owner or
15shareholder of the private practice. Alternative supervision may
16be arranged during a supervisor’s vacation or sick leave if the
17supervision meets the requirements of this section.

18(5) Experience may be gained by the intern solely as part of the
19position for which the intern volunteers or is employed.

20(f) Except as provided in subdivision (g), all persons shall
21register with the board as an intern in order to be credited for
22postdegree hours of supervised experience gained toward licensure.

23(g) Except when employed in a private practice setting, all
24postdegree hours of experience shall be credited toward licensure
25so long as the applicant applies for the intern registration within
2690 days of the granting of the qualifying master’s or doctoral
27degree and is thereafter granted the intern registration by the board.

28(h) Trainees, interns, and applicants shall not receive any
29remuneration from patients or clients, and shall only be paid by
30their employers.

31(i) Trainees, interns, and applicants shall only perform services
32at the place where their employers regularly conduct business,
33which may include performing services at other locations, so long
34as the services are performed under the direction and control of
35their employer and supervisor, and in compliance with the laws
36and regulations pertaining to supervision. Trainees and interns
37shall have no proprietary interest in their employers’ businesses
38and shall not lease or rent space, pay for furnishings, equipment,
39or supplies, or in any other way pay for the obligations of their
40employers.

P26   1(j) Trainees, interns, or applicants who provide volunteered
2services or other services, and who receive no more than a total,
3from all work settings, of five hundred dollars ($500) per month
4as reimbursement for expenses actually incurred by those trainees,
5interns, or applicants for services rendered in any lawful work
6setting other than a private practice shall be considered an
7employee and not an independent contractor. The board may audit
8applicants who receive reimbursement for expenses, and the
9applicants shall have the burden of demonstrating that the payments
10received were for reimbursement of expenses actually incurred.

11(k) Each educational institution preparing applicants for
12licensure pursuant to this chapter shall consider requiring, and
13shall encourage, its students to undergo individual, marital or
14conjoint, family, or group counseling or psychotherapy, as
15appropriate. Each supervisor shall consider, advise, and encourage
16his or her interns and trainees regarding the advisability of
17undertaking individual, marital or conjoint, family, or group
18counseling or psychotherapy, as appropriate. Insofar as it is deemed
19appropriate and is desired by the applicant, the educational
20institution and supervisors are encouraged to assist the applicant
21in locating that counseling or psychotherapy at a reasonable cost.

22begin insert

begin insertSEC. 28.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4980.50 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
23Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 1 of Chapter 800 of the Statutes of
242012, is amended to read:end insert

25

4980.50.  

(a) Every applicant who meets the educational and
26experience requirements and applies for a license as a marriage
27and family therapist shall be examined by the board. The
28examinations shall be as set forth in subdivision (d) of Section
294980.40. The examinations shall be given at least twice a year at
30a time and place and under supervision as the board may determine.
31The board shall examine the candidate with regard to his or her
32knowledge and professional skills and his or her judgment in the
33utilization of appropriate techniques and methods.

34(b) The board shall not deny any applicant, who has submitted
35a complete application for examination, admission to the licensure
36examinations required by this section if the applicant meets the
37educational and experience requirements of this chapter, and has
38not committed any acts or engaged in any conduct that would
39constitute grounds to deny licensure.

P27   1(c) The board shall not deny any applicant, whose application
2for licensure is complete, admission to the standard written
3examination, nor shall the board postpone or delay any applicant’s
4standard written examination or delay informing the candidate of
5the results of the standard written examination, solely upon the
6receipt by the board of a complaint alleging acts or conduct that
7would constitute grounds to deny licensure.

8(d) If an applicant for examination who has passed the standard
9written examination is the subject of a complaint or is under board
10investigation for acts or conduct that, if proven to be true, would
11constitute grounds for the board to deny licensure, the board shall
12permit the applicant to take the clinical vignette written
13 examination for licensure, but may withhold the results of the
14examination or notify the applicant that licensure will not be
15granted pending completion of the investigation.

16(e) Notwithstanding Section 135, the board may deny any
17applicant who has previously failed either the standard written or
18clinical vignette written examination permission to retake either
19examination pending completion of the investigation of any
20complaints against the applicant. Nothing in this section shall
21prohibit the board from denying an applicant admission to any
22examination, withholding the results, or refusing to issue a license
23to any applicant when an accusation or statement of issues has
24been filed against the applicant pursuant to Sections 11503 and
2511504 of the Government Code, respectively, or the applicant has
26been denied in accordance with subdivision (b) of Section 485.

27(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the board may
28destroy all examination materials two years following the date of
29an examination.

30(g) On or after January 1, 2002, no applicant shall be eligible
31to participate in a clinical vignette written examination if his or
32her passing score on the standard written examination occurred
33more than seven years before.

34(h) An applicant who has qualified pursuant to this chapter shall
35be issued a license as a marriage and family therapist in the form
36that the board may deem appropriate.

37(i) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
38begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
39that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
40that date.

P28   1begin insert

begin insertSEC. 29.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4980.50 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
2Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 2 of Chapter 800 of the Statutes of
32012, is amended to read:end insert

4

4980.50.  

Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert the following shall
5apply:

6(a) Every applicant who meets the educational and experience
7requirements and applies for a license as a marriage and family
8therapist shall be examined by the board. The examinations shall
9be as set forth in subdivision (d) of Section 4980.40. The
10examinations shall be given at least twice a year at a time and place
11and under supervision as the board may determine. The board shall
12examine the candidate with regard to his or her knowledge and
13professional skills and his or her judgment in the utilization of
14appropriate techniques and methods.

15(b) The board shall not deny any applicant, who has submitted
16a complete application for examination, admission to the licensure
17examinations required by this section if the applicant meets the
18educational and experience requirements of this chapter, and has
19not committed any acts or engaged in any conduct that would
20constitute grounds to deny licensure.

21(c) The board shall not deny any applicant, whose application
22for licensure is complete, admission to the clinical examination,
23nor shall the board postpone or delay any applicant’s clinical
24examination or delay informing the candidate of the results of the
25clinical examination, solely upon the receipt by the board of a
26complaint alleging acts or conduct that would constitute grounds
27to deny licensure.

28(d) If an applicant for examination who has passed the California
29law and ethics examination is the subject of a complaint or is under
30board investigation for acts or conduct that, if proven to be true,
31would constitute grounds for the board to deny licensure, the board
32shall permit the applicant to take the clinical examination for
33licensure, but may withhold the results of the examination or notify
34the applicant that licensure will not be granted pending completion
35of the investigation.

36(e) Notwithstanding Section 135, the board may deny any
37applicant who has previously failed either the California law and
38ethics examination or the clinical examination permission to retake
39either examination pending completion of the investigation of any
40complaints against the applicant. Nothing in this section shall
P29   1prohibit the board from denying an applicant admission to any
2examination, withholding the results, or refusing to issue a license
3to any applicant when an accusation or statement of issues has
4been filed against the applicant pursuant to Sections 11503 and
511504 of the Government Code, respectively, or the applicant has
6been denied in accordance with subdivision (b) of Section 485.

7(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the board may
8destroy all examination materials two years following the date of
9an examination.

10(g) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert no applicant shall be
11eligible to participate in the clinical examination if he or she fails
12to obtain a passing score on the clinical examination within seven
13years from his or her initial attempt, unless he or she takes and
14obtains a passing score on the current version of the California
15law and ethics examination.

16(h) A passing score on the clinical examination shall be accepted
17by the board for a period of seven years from the date the
18examination was taken.

19(i) An applicant who has qualified pursuant to this chapter shall
20be issued a license as a marriage and family therapist in the form
21that the board may deem appropriate.

22(j) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
23begin insert 2016.end insert

24

begin deleteSEC. 23.end delete
25begin insertSEC. 30.end insert  

Section 4980.72 of the Business and Professions Code
26 is amended to read:

27

4980.72.  

(a) This section applies to persons who are licensed
28outside of California and apply for licensure on or after January
291, 2014.

30(b) The board may issue a license to a person who, at the time
31of submitting an application for a license pursuant to this chapter,
32holds a valid license in good standing issued by a board of marriage
33counselor examiners, board of marriage and family therapists, or
34corresponding authority, of any state or country, if all of the
35following conditions are satisfied:

36(1) The applicant’s education is substantially equivalent, as
37defined in Section 4980.78. The applicant’s degree title need not
38be identical to that required by Section 4980.36 or 4980.37.

39(2) The applicant complies with Section 4980.76, if applicable.

P30   1(3) The applicant’s supervised experience is substantially
2equivalent to that required for a license under this chapter. If the
3applicant has less than 3,000 hours of qualifying supervised
4experience, time actively licensed as a marriage and family
5therapist shall be accepted at a rate of 100 hours per month up to
6a maximum of 1,200 hours.

7(4) The applicant passes the California law and ethics
8examination.

9(5) The applicant passes a clinical examination designated by
10the board. An applicant who obtained his or her license or
11registration under another jurisdiction may apply for licensure with
12the board without taking the clinical examination if both of the
13following conditions are met:

14(A) The applicant obtained a passing score on the licensing
15examination set forth in regulation as accepted by the board.

16(B) The applicant’s license or registration in that jurisdiction is
17in good standing at the time of his or her application and has not
18been revoked, suspended, surrendered, denied, or otherwise
19restricted or encumbered as a result of any disciplinary proceeding
20brought by the licensing authority of that jurisdiction.

21begin insert

begin insertSEC. 31.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4984.01 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
22Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 38 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
232012, is amended to read:end insert

24

4984.01.  

(a) The marriage and family therapist intern
25registration shall expire one year from the last day of the month
26in which it was issued.

27(b) To renew the registration, the registrant shall, on or before
28the expiration date of the registration, complete all of the following
29actions:

30(1) Apply for renewal on a form prescribed by the board.

31(2) Pay a renewal fee prescribed by the board.

32(3) Notify the board whether he or she has been convicted, as
33defined in Section 490, of a misdemeanor or felony, and whether
34any disciplinary action has been taken against him or her by a
35 regulatory or licensing board in this or any other state subsequent
36to the last renewal of the registration.

37(c) The registration may be renewed a maximum of five times.
38No registration shall be renewed or reinstated beyond six years
39from the last day of the month during which it was issued,
40regardless of whether it has been revoked. When no further
P31   1renewals are possible, an applicant may apply for and obtain a new
2intern registration if the applicant meets the educational
3requirements for registration in effect at the time of the application
4for a new intern registration. An applicant who is issued a
5subsequent intern registration pursuant to this subdivision may be
6employed or volunteer in any allowable work setting except private
7practice.

8(d) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
9begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
10that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
11that date.

12begin insert

begin insertSEC. 32.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4984.01 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
13Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 39 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
142012, is amended to read:end insert

15

4984.01.  

(a) The marriage and family therapist intern
16registration shall expire one year from the last day of the month
17in which it was issued.

18(b) To renew the registration, the registrant shall, on or before
19the expiration date of the registration, complete all of the following
20actions:

21(1) Apply for renewal on a form prescribed by the board.

22(2) Pay a renewal fee prescribed by the board.

23(3) Participate in the California law and ethics examination
24pursuant to Section 4980.399 each year until successful completion
25of this examination.

26(4) Notify the board whether he or she has been convicted, as
27defined in Section 490, of a misdemeanor or felony, and whether
28any disciplinary action has been taken against him or her by a
29regulatory or licensing board in this or any other state subsequent
30to the last renewal of the registration.

31(c) The registration may be renewed a maximum of five times.
32No registration shall be renewed or reinstated beyond six years
33from the last day of the month during which it was issued,
34regardless of whether it has been revoked. When no further
35renewals are possible, an applicant may apply for and obtain a new
36intern registration if the applicant meets the educational
37requirements for registration in effect at the time of the application
38for a new intern registration and has passed the California law and
39ethics examination described in Section 4980.399. An applicant
40who is issued a subsequent intern registration pursuant to this
P32   1subdivision may be employed or volunteer in any allowable work
2setting except private practice.

3(d) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
4begin insert 2016.end insert

5begin insert

begin insertSEC. 33.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4984.7 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
6as amended by Section 41 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of 2012,
7is amended to read:end insert

8

4984.7.  

(a) The board shall assess the following fees relating
9to the licensure of marriage and family therapists:

10(1) The application fee for an intern registration shall be
11seventy-five dollars ($75).

12(2) The renewal fee for an intern registration shall be
13seventy-five dollars ($75).

14(3) The fee for the application for examination eligibility shall
15be one hundred dollars ($100).

16(4) The fee for the standard written examination shall be one
17hundred dollars ($100). The fee for the clinical vignette
18examination shall be one hundred dollars ($100).

19(A) An applicant who fails to appear for an examination, after
20having been scheduled to take the examination, shall forfeit the
21examination fee.

22(B) The amount of the examination fees shall be based on the
23actual cost to the board of developing, purchasing, and grading
24each examination and the actual cost to the board of administering
25each examination. The examination fees shall be adjusted
26periodically by regulation to reflect the actual costs incurred by
27the board.

28(5) The fee for rescoring an examination shall be twenty dollars
29($20).

30(6) The fee for issuance of an initial license shall be a maximum
31of one hundred eighty dollars ($180).

32(7) The fee for license renewal shall be a maximum of one
33hundred eighty dollars ($180).

34(8) The fee for inactive license renewal shall be a maximum of
35ninety dollars ($90).

36(9) The renewal delinquency fee shall be a maximum of ninety
37dollars ($90). A person who permits his or her license to expire is
38subject to the delinquency fee.

39(10) The fee for issuance of a replacement registration, license,
40or certificate shall be twenty dollars ($20).

P33   1(11) The fee for issuance of a certificate or letter of good
2standing shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

3(12) The fee for issuance of a retired license shall be forty dollars
4($40).

5(b) With regard to license, examination, and other fees, the
6board shall establish fee amounts at or below the maximum
7amounts specified in this chapter.

8(c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
9begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
10that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
11that date.

12begin insert

begin insertSEC. 34.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4984.7 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
13as amended by Section 42 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of 2012,
14is amended to read:end insert

15

4984.7.  

(a) The board shall assess the following fees relating
16to the licensure of marriage and family therapists:

17(1) The application fee for an intern registration shall be
18seventy-five dollars ($75).

19(2) The renewal fee for an intern registration shall be
20seventy-five dollars ($75).

21(3) The fee for the application for examination eligibility shall
22be one hundred dollars ($100).

23(4) The fee for the clinical examination shall be one hundred
24dollars ($100). The fee for the California law and ethics
25examination shall be one hundred dollars ($100).

26(A) An applicant who fails to appear for an examination, after
27having been scheduled to take the examination, shall forfeit the
28examination fee.

29(B) The amount of the examination fees shall be based on the
30actual cost to the board of developing, purchasing, and grading
31each examination and the actual cost to the board of administering
32each examination. The examination fees shall be adjusted
33periodically by regulation to reflect the actual costs incurred by
34the board.

35(5) The fee for rescoring an examination shall be twenty dollars
36($20).

37(6) The fee for issuance of an initial license shall be a maximum
38of one hundred eighty dollars ($180).

39(7) The fee for license renewal shall be a maximum of one
40hundred eighty dollars ($180).

P34   1(8) The fee for inactive license renewal shall be a maximum of
2ninety dollars ($90).

3(9) The renewal delinquency fee shall be a maximum of ninety
4dollars ($90). A person who permits his or her license to expire is
5subject to the delinquency fee.

6(10) The fee for issuance of a replacement registration, license,
7or certificate shall be twenty dollars ($20).

8(11) The fee for issuance of a certificate or letter of good
9standing shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

10(12) The fee for issuance of a retired license shall be forty dollars
11($40).

12(b) With regard to license, examination, and other fees, the
13board shall establish fee amounts at or below the maximum
14amounts specified in this chapter.

15(c) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014end delete
16begin insert 2016end insert.

17begin insert

begin insertSEC. 35.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4984.72 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
18Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 43 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
192012, is amended to read:end insert

20

4984.72.  

(a) An applicant who fails a standard or clinical
21vignette written examination may, within one year from the
22notification date of that failure, retake the examination as regularly
23scheduled without further application upon payment of the fee for
24the examination. Thereafter, the applicant shall not be eligible for
25further examination until he or she files a new application, meets
26all requirements in effect on the date of application, and pays all
27required fees.

28(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
29begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
30that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
31that date.

32begin insert

begin insertSEC. 36.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4984.72 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
33Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 44 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
342012, is amended to read:end insert

35

4984.72.  

(a) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert an applicant
36who fails the clinical examination may, within one year from the
37notification date of that failure, retake the examination as regularly
38scheduled without further application upon payment of the fee for
39the examination. Thereafter, the applicant shall not be eligible for
40further examination until he or she files a new application, meets
P35   1all requirements in effect on the date of application, and pays all
2required fees.

3(b) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
4begin insert 2016.end insert

5

begin deleteSEC. 24.end delete
6begin insertSEC. 37.end insert  

Section 4989.68 of the Business and Professions Code
7 is amended to read:

8

4989.68.  

(a) The board shall assess the following fees relating
9to the licensure of educational psychologists:

10(1) The application fee for examination eligibility shall be one
11hundred dollars ($100).

12(2) The fee for issuance of the initial license shall be a maximum
13amount of one hundred fifty dollars ($150).

14(3) The fee for license renewal shall be a maximum amount of
15one hundred fifty dollars ($150).

16(4) The delinquency fee shall be a maximum amount of
17seventy-five dollars ($75). A person who permits his or her license
18to become delinquent may have it restored only upon payment of
19all the fees that he or she would have paid if the license had not
20become delinquent, plus the payment of any and all delinquency
21fees.

22(5) The written examination fee shall be one hundred dollars
23($100). An applicant who fails to appear for an examination, once
24having been scheduled, shall forfeit any examination fees he or
25she paid.

26(6) The fee for rescoring a written examination shall be twenty
27dollars ($20).

28(7) The fee for issuance of a replacement registration, license,
29or certificate shall be twenty dollars ($20).

30(8) The fee for issuance of a certificate or letter of good standing
31shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

32(9) The fee for issuance of a retired license shall be forty dollars
33($40).

34(b) With regard to all license, examination, and other fees, the
35board shall establish fee amounts at or below the maximum
36amounts specified in this chapter.

37begin insert

begin insertSEC. 38.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4992.05 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
38begin insert is amended to read:end insert

P36   1

4992.05.  

(a) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert an applicant for
2licensure as a clinical social worker shall pass the following two
3examinations as prescribed by the board:

4(1) A California law and ethics examination.

5(2) A clinical examination.

6(b) Upon registration with the board, an associate social worker
7registrant shall, within the first year of registration, take an
8examination on California law and ethics.

9(c) A registrant may take the clinical examination only upon
10meeting all of the following requirements:

11(1) Completion of all education requirements.

12(2) Passage of the California law and ethics examination.

13(3) Completion of all required supervised work experience.

14(d) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
15begin insert 2016.end insert

16begin insert

begin insertSEC. 39.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4992.07 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
17begin insert is amended to read:end insert

18

4992.07.  

(a) An applicant who had previously taken and passed
19the standard written examination but had not passed the clinical
20vignette examination shall also obtain a passing score on the
21clinical examination in order to be eligible for licensure.

22(b) An applicant who had previously failed to obtain a passing
23score on the standard written examination shall obtain a passing
24score on the California law and ethics examination and the clinical
25examination.

26(c) An applicant who had obtained eligibility for the standard
27written examination shall take the California law and ethics
28examination and the clinical examination.

29(d) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
30begin insert 2016.end insert

31begin insert

begin insertSEC. 40.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4992.09 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
32begin insert is amended to read:end insert

33

4992.09.  

(a) Except as provided in subdivision (a) of Section
344992.07, an applicant and registrant shall obtain a passing score
35on a board-administered California law and ethics examination in
36order to qualify for licensure.

37(b) A registrant shall participate in a board-administered
38California law and ethics examination prior to his or her registration
39renewal.

P37   1(c) If an applicant fails the California law and ethics
2examination, he or she may retake the examination, upon payment
3of the required fees, without further application except for as
4provided in subdivision (d).

5(d) If a registrant fails to obtain a passing score on the California
6 law and ethics examination described in subdivision (a) within his
7or her first renewal period on or after the operative date of this
8section, he or she shall complete, at a minimum, a 12-hour course
9in California law and ethics in order to be eligible to participate
10in the California law and ethics examination. Registrants shall only
11take the 12-hour California law and ethics course once during a
12renewal period. The 12-hour law and ethics course required by the
13section shall be taken through a board-approved continuing
14education provider, a county, state or governmental entity, or a
15college or university.

16(e) The board shall not issue a subsequent registration number
17unless the registrant has passed the California law and ethics
18examination.

19(f) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
20begin insert 2016.end insert

21begin insert

begin insertSEC. 41.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4992.1 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
22as amended by Section 4 of Chapter 800 of the Statutes of 2012,
23is amended to read:end insert

24

4992.1.  

(a) Only individuals who have the qualifications
25prescribed by the board under this chapter are eligible to take the
26examination.

27(b) Every applicant who is issued a clinical social worker license
28shall be examined by the board.

29(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the board may
30destroy all examination materials two years following the date of
31an examination.

32(d) The board shall not deny any applicant, whose application
33for licensure is complete, admission to the standard written
34examination, nor shall the board postpone or delay any applicant’s
35standard written examination or delay informing the candidate of
36the results of the standard written examination, solely upon the
37receipt by the board of a complaint alleging acts or conduct that
38would constitute grounds to deny licensure.

39(e) If an applicant for examination who has passed the standard
40written examination is the subject of a complaint or is under board
P38   1investigation for acts or conduct that, if proven to be true, would
2constitute grounds for the board to deny licensure, the board shall
3permit the applicant to take the clinical vignette written
4examination for licensure, but may withhold the results of the
5examination or notify the applicant that licensure will not be
6granted pending completion of the investigation.

7(f) Notwithstanding Section 135, the board may deny any
8applicant who has previously failed either the standard written or
9clinical vignette written examination permission to retake either
10examination pending completion of the investigation of any
11complaint against the applicant. Nothing in this section shall
12prohibit the board from denying an applicant admission to any
13examination, withholding the results, or refusing to issue a license
14to any applicant when an accusation or statement of issues has
15been filed against the applicant pursuant to Section 11503 or 11504
16of the Government Code, or the applicant has been denied in
17accordance with subdivision (b) of Section 485.

18(g) On or after January 1, 2002, no applicant shall be eligible
19to participate in a clinical vignette written examination if his or
20her passing score on the standard written examination occurred
21more than seven years before.

22(h) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
23begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
24that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
25that date.

26begin insert

begin insertSEC. 42.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4992.1 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
27as amended by Section 5 of Chapter 800 of the Statutes of 2012,
28is amended to read:end insert

29

4992.1.  

(a) Only individuals who have the qualifications
30prescribed by the board under this chapter are eligible to take an
31examination under this chapter.

32(b) Every applicant who is issued a clinical social worker license
33shall be examined by the board.

34(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the board may
35destroy all examination materials two years following the date of
36an examination.

37(d) The board shall not deny any applicant, whose application
38for licensure is complete, admission to the clinical examination,
39nor shall the board postpone or delay any applicant’s clinical
40examination or delay informing the candidate of the results of the
P39   1clinical examination, solely upon the receipt by the board of a
2complaint alleging acts or conduct that would constitute grounds
3to deny licensure.

4(e) If an applicant for examination who has passed the California
5law and ethics examination is the subject of a complaint or is under
6board investigation for acts or conduct that, if proven to be true,
7would constitute grounds for the board to deny licensure, the board
8shall permit the applicant to take the clinical examination for
9licensure, but may withhold the results of the examination or notify
10the applicant that licensure will not be granted pending completion
11of the investigation.

12(f) Notwithstanding Section 135, the board may deny any
13applicant who has previously failed either the California law and
14ethics examination or the clinical examination permission to retake
15either examination pending completion of the investigation of any
16complaint against the applicant. Nothing in this section shall
17prohibit the board from denying an applicant admission to any
18examination, withholding the results, or refusing to issue a license
19to any applicant when an accusation or statement of issues has
20been filed against the applicant pursuant to Section 11503 or 11504
21of the Government Code, or the applicant has been denied in
22accordance with subdivision (b) of Section 485.

23(g) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert no applicant shall be
24eligible to participate in the clinical examination if he or she fails
25to obtain a passing score on the clinical examination within seven
26years from his or her initial attempt, unless he or she takes and
27obtains a passing score on the current version of the California
28law and ethics examination.

29(h) A passing score on the clinical examination shall be accepted
30by the board for a period of seven years from the date the
31examination was taken.

32(i) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
33begin insert 2016.end insert

34begin insert

begin insertSEC. 43.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4996.1 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
35as amended by Section 52 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of 2012,
36is amended to read:end insert

37

4996.1.  

(a) The board shall issue a clinical social worker
38license to each applicant who qualifies pursuant to this article and
39successfully passes a board-administered written or oral
40examination or both examinations. An applicant who has
P40   1successfully passed a previously administered written examination
2may be subsequently required to take and pass another written
3examination.

4(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
5begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
6that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
7that date.

8begin insert

begin insertSEC. 44.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4996.1 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
9as amended by Section 53 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of 2012,
10is amended to read:end insert

11

4996.1.  

(a) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert the board shall
12issue a clinical social worker license to each applicant who qualifies
13pursuant to this article and who successfully passes a California
14law and ethics examination and a clinical examination. An
15applicant who has successfully passed a previously administered
16written examination may be subsequently required to take and pass
17another written examination.

18(b) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
19begin insert 2016.end insert

20begin insert

begin insertSEC. 45.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4996.3 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
21 as amended by Section 54 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of 2012,
22is amended to read:end insert

23

4996.3.  

(a) The board shall assess the following fees relating
24to the licensure of clinical social workers:

25(1) The application fee for registration as an associate clinical
26social worker shall be seventy-five dollars ($75).

27(2) The fee for renewal of an associate clinical social worker
28registration shall be seventy-five dollars ($75).

29(3) The fee for application for examination eligibility shall be
30one hundred dollars ($100).

31(4) The fee for the standard written examination shall be a
32maximum of one hundred fifty dollars ($150). The fee for the
33clinical vignette examination shall be one hundred dollars ($100).

34(A) An applicant who fails to appear for an examination, after
35having been scheduled to take the examination, shall forfeit the
36examination fees.

37(B) The amount of the examination fees shall be based on the
38actual cost to the board of developing, purchasing, and grading
39each examination and the actual cost to the board of administering
40each examination. The written examination fees shall be adjusted
P41   1periodically by regulation to reflect the actual costs incurred by
2the board.

3(5) The fee for rescoring an examination shall be twenty dollars
4($20).

5(6) The fee for issuance of an initial license shall be a maximum
6of one hundred fifty-five dollars ($155).

7(7) The fee for license renewal shall be a maximum of one
8hundred fifty-five dollars ($155).

9(8) The fee for inactive license renewal shall be a maximum of
10seventy-seven dollars and fifty cents ($77.50).

11(9) The renewal delinquency fee shall be seventy-five dollars
12($75). A person who permits his or her license to expire is subject
13to the delinquency fee.

14(10) The fee for issuance of a replacement registration, license,
15or certificate shall be twenty dollars ($20).

16(11) The fee for issuance of a certificate or letter of good
17standing shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

18(12) The fee for issuance of a retired license shall be forty dollars
19($40).

20(b) With regard to license, examination, and other fees, the
21board shall establish fee amounts at or below the maximum
22amounts specified in this chapter.

23(c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014end delete
24begin insert 2016end insert, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
25that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014end deletebegin insert 2016end insert, deletes or extends
26that date.

27

begin deleteSEC. 25.end delete
28begin insertSEC. 46.end insert  

Section 4996.3 of the Business and Professions Code,
29as amended by Section 55 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of 2012,
30is amended to read:

31

4996.3.  

(a) The board shall assess the following fees relating
32to the licensure of clinical social workers:

33(1) The application fee for registration as an associate clinical
34social worker shall be seventy-five dollars ($75).

35(2) The fee for renewal of an associate clinical social worker
36registration shall be seventy-five dollars ($75).

37(3) The fee for application for examination eligibility shall be
38one hundred dollars ($100).

P42   1(4) The fee for the clinical examination shall be one hundred
2dollars ($100). The fee for the California law and ethics
3examination shall be one hundred dollars ($100).

4(A) An applicant who fails to appear for an examination, after
5having been scheduled to take the examination, shall forfeit the
6examination fees.

7(B) The amount of the examination fees shall be based on the
8actual cost to the board of developing, purchasing, and grading
9each examination and the actual cost to the board of administering
10each examination. The written examination fees shall be adjusted
11periodically by regulation to reflect the actual costs incurred by
12the board.

13(5) The fee for rescoring an examination shall be twenty dollars
14($20).

15(6) The fee for issuance of an initial license shall be a maximum
16of one hundred fifty-five dollars ($155).

17(7) The fee for license renewal shall be a maximum of one
18hundred fifty-five dollars ($155).

19(8) The fee for inactive license renewal shall be a maximum of
20seventy-seven dollars and fifty cents ($77.50).

21(9) The renewal delinquency fee shall be a maximum of
22seventy-five dollars ($75). A person who permits his or her license
23to expire is subject to the delinquency fee.

24(10) The fee for issuance of a replacement registration, license,
25or certificate shall be twenty dollars ($20).

26(11) The fee for issuance of a certificate or letter of good
27standing shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

28(12) The fee for issuance of a retired license shall be forty dollars
29($40).

30(b) With regard to license, examination, and other fees, the
31board shall establish fee amounts at or below the maximum
32amounts specified in this chapter.

33(c) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
34begin insert 2016.end insert

35begin insert

begin insertSEC. 47.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4996.4 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
36as amended by Section 56 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of 2012,
37is amended to read:end insert

38

4996.4.  

(a) An applicant who fails a standard or clinical
39vignette written examination may, within one year from the
40notification date of failure, retake that examination as regularly
P43   1scheduled, without further application, upon payment of the
2required examination fees. Thereafter, the applicant shall not be
3eligible for further examination until he or she files a new
4application, meets all current requirements, and pays all required
5fees.

6(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
7begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
8that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
9that date.

10begin insert

begin insertSEC. 48.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4996.4 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insertbegin insert,
11as amended by Section 57 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of 2012,
12is amended to read:end insert

13

4996.4.  

(a) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert an applicant who
14fails the clinical examination may, within one year from the
15notification date of failure, retake that examination as regularly
16scheduled, without further application, upon payment of the
17required examination fees. Thereafter, the applicant shall not be
18eligible for further examination until he or she files a new
19application, meets all current requirements, and pays all required
20fees.

21(b) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
22begin insert 2016.end insert

23

begin deleteSEC. 26.end delete
24begin insertSEC. 49.end insert  

Section 4996.9 of the Business and Professions Code
25 is amended to read:

26

4996.9.  

The practice of clinical social work is defined as a
27service in which a special knowledge of social resources, human
28capabilities, and the part that unconscious motivation plays in
29determining behavior, is directed at helping people to achieve more
30adequate, satisfying, and productive social adjustments. The
31application of social work principles and methods includes, but is
32not restricted to, counseling and using applied psychotherapy of
33a nonmedical nature with individuals, families, or groups; providing
34information and referral services; providing or arranging for the
35provision of social services; explaining or interpreting the
36psychosocial aspects in the situations of individuals, families, or
37groups; helping communities to organize, to provide, or to improve
38social or health services; doing research related to social work;
39and the use, application, and integration of the coursework and
40experience required by Sections 4996.2 and 4996.23.

P44   1Psychotherapy, within the meaning of this chapter, is the use of
2psychosocial methods within a professional relationship, to assist
3the person or persons to achieve a better psychosocial adaptation,
4to acquire greater human realization of psychosocial potential and
5adaptation, and to modify internal and external conditions which
6affect individuals, groups, or communities in respect to behavior,
7 emotions, and thinking, in respect to their intrapersonal and
8interpersonal processes.

9begin insert

begin insertSEC. 50.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4996.17 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
10begin insert is amended to read:end insert

11

4996.17.  

(a) (1) Experience gained outside of California shall
12be accepted toward the licensure requirements if it is substantially
13the equivalent of the requirements of this chapter.

14(2) Commencing January 1, 2014, an applicant with experience
15gained outside of California shall complete an 18-hour course in
16California law and professional ethics. The content of the course
17shall include, but not be limited to, the following: advertising,
18scope of practice, scope of competence, treatment of minors,
19confidentiality, dangerous patients, psychotherapist-patient
20privilege, recordkeeping, patient access to records, state and federal
21laws related to confidentiality of patient health information, dual
22relationships, child abuse, elder and dependent adult abuse, online
23therapy, insurance reimbursement, civil liability, disciplinary
24actions and unprofessional conduct, ethics complaints and ethical
25standards, termination of therapy, standards of care, relevant family
26law, therapist disclosures to patients, differences in legal and ethical
27standards in different types of work settings, and licensing law
28and process.

29(b) The board may issue a license to any person who, at the time
30of application, holds a valid active clinical social work license
31issued by a board of clinical social work examiners or
32corresponding authority of any state, if the person passes, or has
33passed, the licensing examinations as specified in Section 4996.1
34and pays the required fees. Issuance of the license is conditioned
35upon all of the following:

36(1) The applicant has supervised experience that is substantially
37the equivalent of that required by this chapter. If the applicant has
38less than 3,200 hours of qualifying supervised experience, time
39actively licensed as a clinical social worker shall be accepted at a
40rate of 100 hours per month up to a maximum of 1,200 hours.

P45   1(2) Completion of the following coursework or training in or
2out of this state:

3(A) A minimum of seven contact hours of training or coursework
4in child abuse assessment and reporting as specified in Section 28,
5and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

6(B) A minimum of 10 contact hours of training or coursework
7in human sexuality as specified in Section 25, and any regulations
8promulgated thereunder.

9(C) A minimum of 15 contact hours of training or coursework
10in alcoholism and other chemical substance dependency, as
11specified by regulation.

12(D) A minimum of 15 contact hours of coursework or training
13in spousal or partner abuse assessment, detection, and intervention
14strategies.

15(3) Commencing January 1, 2014, completion of an 18-hour
16course in California law and professional ethics. The content of
17the course shall include, but not be limited to, the following:
18advertising, scope of practice, scope of competence, treatment of
19minors, confidentiality, dangerous patients, psychotherapist-patient
20privilege, recordkeeping, patient access to records, state and federal
21laws related to confidentiality of patient health information, dual
22relationships, child abuse, elder and dependent adult abuse, online
23therapy, insurance reimbursement, civil liability, disciplinary
24actions and unprofessional conduct, ethics complaints and ethical
25standards, termination of therapy, standards of care, relevant family
26law, therapist disclosures to patients, differences in legal and ethical
27standards in different types of work settings, and licensing law
28and process.

29(4) The applicant’s license is not suspended, revoked, restricted,
30sanctioned, or voluntarily surrendered in any state.

31(5) The applicant is not currently under investigation in any
32other state, and has not been charged with an offense for any act
33substantially related to the practice of social work by any public
34agency, entered into any consent agreement or been subject to an
35administrative decision that contains conditions placed by an
36agency upon an applicant’s professional conduct or practice,
37including any voluntary surrender of license, or been the subject
38of an adverse judgment resulting from the practice of social work
39that the board determines constitutes evidence of a pattern of
40incompetence or negligence.

P46   1(6) The applicant shall provide a certification from each state
2where he or she holds a license pertaining to licensure, disciplinary
3action, and complaints pending.

4(7) The applicant is not subject to denial of licensure under
5Section 480, 4992.3, 4992.35, or 4992.36.

6(c) The board may issue a license to any person who, at the time
7of application, holds a valid, active clinical social work license
8issued by a board of clinical social work examiners or a
9corresponding authority of any state, if the person has held that
10license for at least four years immediately preceding the date of
11application, the person passes, or has passed, the licensing
12examinations as specified in Section 4996.1, and the person pays
13the required fees. Issuance of the license is conditioned upon all
14of the following:

15(1) Completion of the following coursework or training in or
16out of state:

17(A) A minimum of seven contact hours of training or coursework
18in child abuse assessment and reporting as specified in Section 28,
19and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

20(B) A minimum of 10 contact hours of training or coursework
21in human sexuality as specified in Section 25, and any regulations
22promulgated thereunder.

23(C) A minimum of 15 contact hours of training or coursework
24in alcoholism and other chemical substance dependency, as
25specified by regulation.

26(D) A minimum of 15 contact hours of coursework or training
27in spousal or partner abuse assessment, detection, and intervention
28strategies.

29(2) Commencing January 1, 2014, completion of an 18-hour
30course in California law and professional ethics. The content of
31the course shall include, but not be limited to, the following:
32advertising, scope of practice, scope of competence, treatment of
33minors, confidentiality, dangerous patients, psychotherapist-patient
34privilege, recordkeeping, patient access to records, state and federal
35laws related to confidentiality of patient health information, dual
36relationships, child abuse, elder and dependent adult abuse, online
37therapy, insurance reimbursement, civil liability, disciplinary
38actions and unprofessional conduct, ethics complaints and ethical
39standards, termination of therapy, standards of care, relevant family
40law, therapist disclosures to patients, differences in legal and ethical
P47   1standards in different types of work settings, and licensing law
2and process.

3(3) The applicant has been licensed as a clinical social worker
4continuously for a minimum of four years prior to the date of
5application.

6(4) The applicant’s license is not suspended, revoked, restricted,
7sanctioned, or voluntarily surrendered in any state.

8(5) The applicant is not currently under investigation in any
9other state, and has not been charged with an offense for any act
10substantially related to the practice of social work by any public
11agency, entered into any consent agreement or been subject to an
12administrative decision that contains conditions placed by an
13agency upon an applicant’s professional conduct or practice,
14including any voluntary surrender of license, or been the subject
15of an adverse judgment resulting from the practice of social work
16that the board determines constitutes evidence of a pattern of
17incompetence or negligence.

18(6) The applicant provides a certification from each state where
19he or she holds a license pertaining to licensure, disciplinary action,
20and complaints pending.

21(7) The applicant is not subject to denial of licensure under
22Section 480, 4992.3, 4992.35, or 4992.36.

23(d) Commencing January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert an applicant who
24obtained his or her license or registration under another jurisdiction
25may apply for licensure with the board without taking the clinical
26examination specified in Section 4996.1 if the applicant obtained
27a passing score on the licensing examination set forth in regulation
28as accepted by the board.

29

begin deleteSEC. 27.end delete
30begin insertSEC. 51.end insert  

Section 4996.18 of the Business and Professions Code
31 is amended to read:

32

4996.18.  

(a) A person who wishes to be credited with
33experience toward licensure requirements shall register with the
34board as an associate clinical social worker prior to obtaining that
35experience. The application shall be made on a form prescribed
36by the board.

37(b) An applicant for registration shall satisfy the following
38requirements:

39(1) Possess a master’s degree from an accredited school or
40department of social work.

P48   1(2) Have committed no crimes or acts constituting grounds for
2denial of licensure under Section 480.

3(3) Commencing January 1, 2014, have completed training or
4 coursework, which may be embedded within more than one course,
5in California law and professional ethics for clinical social workers,
6including instruction in all of the following areas of study:

7(A) Contemporary professional ethics and statutes, regulations,
8and court decisions that delineate the scope of practice of clinical
9social work.

10(B) The therapeutic, clinical, and practical considerations
11involved in the legal and ethical practice of clinical social work,
12including, but not limited to, family law.

13(C) The current legal patterns and trends in the mental health
14professions.

15(D) The psychotherapist-patient privilege, confidentiality,
16dangerous patients, and the treatment of minors with and without
17parental consent.

18(E) A recognition and exploration of the relationship between
19a practitioner’s sense of self and human values, and his or her
20professional behavior and ethics.

21(F) Differences in legal and ethical standards for different types
22of work settings.

23(G) Licensing law and process.

24(c) An applicant who possesses a master’s degree from a school
25or department of social work that is a candidate for accreditation
26by the Commission on Accreditation of the Council on Social
27Work Education shall be eligible, and shall be required, to register
28as an associate clinical social worker in order to gain experience
29toward licensure if the applicant has not committed any crimes or
30acts that constitute grounds for denial of licensure under Section
31480. That applicant shall not, however, be eligible for examination
32until the school or department of social work has received
33accreditation by the Commission on Accreditation of the Council
34on Social Work Education.

35(d) All applicants and registrants shall be at all times under the
36supervision of a supervisor who shall be responsible for ensuring
37that the extent, kind, and quality of counseling performed is
38consistent with the training and experience of the person being
39supervised, and who shall be responsible to the board for
P49   1compliance with all laws, rules, and regulations governing the
2practice of clinical social work.

3(e) Any experience obtained under the supervision of a spouse
4or relative by blood or marriage shall not be credited toward the
5required hours of supervised experience. Any experience obtained
6under the supervision of a supervisor with whom the applicant has
7a personal relationship that undermines the authority or
8effectiveness of the supervision shall not be credited toward the
9required hours of supervised experience.

10(f) An applicant who possesses a master’s degree from an
11accredited school or department of social work shall be able to
12apply experience the applicant obtained during the time the
13accredited school or department was in candidacy status by the
14Commission on Accreditation of the Council on Social Work
15Education toward the licensure requirements, if the experience
16meets the requirements of Section 4996.23. This subdivision shall
17apply retroactively to persons who possess a master’s degree from
18an accredited school or department of social work and who
19obtained experience during the time the accredited school or
20department was in candidacy status by the Commission on
21Accreditation of the Council on Social Work Education.

22(g) An applicant for registration or licensure trained in an
23educational institution outside the United States shall demonstrate
24to the satisfaction of the board that he or she possesses a master’s
25of social work degree that is equivalent to a master’s degree issued
26from a school or department of social work that is accredited by
27the Commission on Accreditation of the Council on Social Work
28Education. These applicants shall provide the board with a
29comprehensive evaluation of the degree and shall provide any
30other documentation the board deems necessary. The board has
31the authority to make the final determination as to whether a degree
32meets all requirements, including, but not limited to, course
33requirements regardless of evaluation or accreditation.

34(h) A registrant shall not provide clinical social work services
35to the public for a fee, monetary or otherwise, except as an
36employee.

37(i) A registrant shall inform each client or patient prior to
38performing any professional services that he or she is unlicensed
39and is under the supervision of a licensed professional.

P50   1

begin deleteSEC. 28.end delete
2begin insertSEC. 52.end insert  

Section 4996.23 of the Business and Professions Code
3 is amended to read:

4

4996.23.  

The experience required by subdivision (c) of Section
54996.2 shall meet the following criteria:

6(a) All persons registered with the board on and after January
71, 2002, shall have at least 3,200 hours of post-master’s degree
8supervised experience providing clinical social work services as
9permitted by Section 4996.9. At least 1,700 hours shall be gained
10under the supervision of a licensed clinical social worker. The
11remaining required supervised experience may be gained under
12the supervision of a licensed mental health professional acceptable
13to the board as defined by a regulation adopted by the board. This
14experience shall consist of the following:

15(1) A minimum of 2,000 hours in clinical psychosocial
16diagnosis, assessment, and treatment, including psychotherapy or
17counseling.

18(2) A maximum of 1,200 hours in client centered advocacy,
19consultation, evaluation, and research.

20(3) Of the 2,000 clinical hours required in paragraph (1), no less
21than 750 hours shall be face-to-face individual or group
22psychotherapy provided to clients in the context of clinical social
23work services.

24(4) A minimum of two years of supervised experience is required
25to be obtained over a period of not less than 104 weeks and shall
26have been gained within the six years immediately preceding the
27date on which the application for licensure was filed.

28(5) Experience shall not be credited for more than 40 hours in
29any week.

30(b) “Supervision” means responsibility for, and control of, the
31quality of clinical social work services being provided.
32Consultation or peer discussion shall not be considered to be
33supervision.

34(c) (1) Prior to the commencement of supervision, a supervisor
35shall comply with all requirements enumerated in Section 1870 of
36Title 16 of the California Code of Regulations and shall sign under
37penalty of perjury the “Responsibility Statement for Supervisors
38of an Associate Clinical Social Worker” form.

39(2) Supervised experience shall include at least one hour of
40direct supervisor contact for a minimum of 104 weeks. For
P51   1purposes of this subdivision, “one hour of direct supervisor contact”
2means one hour per week of face-to-face contact on an individual
3basis or two hours of face-to-face contact in a group conducted
4within the same week as the hours claimed.

5(3) An associate shall receive at least one additional hour of
6direct supervisor contact for every week in which more than 10
7hours of face-to-face psychotherapy is performed in each setting
8in which experience is gained. No more than five hours of
9supervision, whether individual or group, shall be credited during
10any single week.

11(4) Group supervision shall be provided in a group of not more
12than eight supervisees and shall be provided in segments lasting
13no less than one continuous hour.

14(5) Of the 104 weeks of required supervision, 52 weeks shall
15be individual supervision, and of the 52 weeks of required
16individual supervision, not less than 13 weeks shall be supervised
17by a licensed clinical social worker.

18(6) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), an associate clinical social
19worker working for a governmental entity, school, college, or
20university, or an institution that is both a nonprofit and charitable
21institution, may obtain the required weekly direct supervisor
22contact via live two-way videoconferencing. The supervisor shall
23be responsible for ensuring that client confidentiality is preserved.

24(d) The supervisor and the associate shall develop a supervisory
25plan that describes the goals and objectives of supervision. These
26goals shall include the ongoing assessment of strengths and
27limitations and the assurance of practice in accordance with the
28laws and regulations. The associate shall submit to the board the
29initial original supervisory plan upon application for licensure.

30(e) Experience shall only be gained in a setting that meets both
31of the following:

32(1) Lawfully and regularly provides clinical social work, mental
33health counseling, or psychotherapy.

34(2) Provides oversight to ensure that the associate’s work at the
35setting meets the experience and supervision requirements set forth
36in this chapter and is within the scope of practice for the profession
37as defined in Section 4996.9.

38(f) Experience shall not be gained until the applicant has been
39registered as an associate clinical social worker.

P52   1(g) Employment in a private practice as defined in subdivision
2(h) shall not commence until the applicant has been registered as
3an associate clinical social worker.

4(h) A private practice setting is a setting that is owned by a
5licensed clinical social worker, a licensed marriage and family
6 therapist, a licensed psychologist, a licensed physician and surgeon,
7or a professional corporation of any of those licensed professions.

8(i) Experience shall not be gained bybegin delete interns or traineesend deletebegin insert an
9associateend insert
for work performed as an independent contractor or
10reported on an IRS Formbegin delete 1099.00end deletebegin insert 1099end insert.

11(j) If volunteering, the associate shall provide the board with a
12letter from his or her employer verifying his or her voluntary status
13upon application for licensure.

14(k) If employed, the associate shall provide the board with copies
15of his or her W-2 tax forms for each year of experience claimed
16upon application for licensure.

17(l) While an associate may be either a paid employee or
18volunteer, employers are encouraged to provide fair remuneration
19to associates.

20(m) An associate shall not do the following:

21(1) Receive any remuneration from patients or clients and shall
22only be paid by his or her employer.

23(2) Have any proprietary interest in the employer’s business.

24(3) Lease or rent space, pay for furnishings, equipment, or
25supplies, or in any other way pay for the obligations of his or her
26employer.

27(n) An associate, whether employed or volunteering, may obtain
28supervision from a person not employed by the associate’s
29employer if that person has signed a written agreement with the
30employer to take supervisory responsibility for the associate’s
31social work services.

32(o) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, associates and
33applicants for examination shall receive a minimum of one hour
34of supervision per week for each setting in which he or she is
35working.

36begin insert

begin insertSEC. 53.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4996.28 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
37begin insert is amended to read:end insert

38

4996.28.  

(a) Registration as an associate clinical social worker
39shall expire one year from the last day of the month during which
40it was issued. To renew a registration, the registrant shall, on or
P53   1before the expiration date of the registration, complete all of the
2following actions:

3(1) Apply for renewal on a form prescribed by the board.

4(2) Pay a renewal fee prescribed by the board.

5(3) Notify the board whether he or she has been convicted, as
6defined in Section 490, of a misdemeanor or felony, and whether
7any disciplinary action has been taken by a regulatory or licensing
8board in this or any other state, subsequent to the last renewal of
9the registration.

10(4) On and after January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert obtain a passing score
11on the California law and ethics examination pursuant to Section
124992.09.

13(b) A registration as an associate clinical social worker may be
14renewed a maximum of five times. When no further renewals are
15possible, an applicant may apply for and obtain a new associate
16clinical social worker registration if the applicant meets all
17requirements for registration in effect at the time of his or her
18application for a new associate clinical social worker registration.
19An applicant issued a subsequent associate registration pursuant
20to this subdivision may be employed or volunteer in any allowable
21work setting except private practice.

22

begin deleteSEC. 29.end delete
23begin insertSEC. 54.end insert  

Section 4999.20 of the Business and Professions Code
24 is amended to read:

25

4999.20.  

(a) (1) “Professional clinical counseling” means the
26application of counseling interventions and psychotherapeutic
27techniques to identify and remediate cognitive, mental, and
28emotional issues, including personal growth, adjustment to
29disability, crisis intervention, and psychosocial and environmental
30problems, and the use, application, and integration of the
31coursework and training required by Sections 4999.32 and 4999.33.
32“Professional clinical counseling” includes conducting assessments
33for the purpose of establishing counseling goals and objectives to
34empower individuals to deal adequately with life situations, reduce
35stress, experience growth, change behavior, and make
36well-informed, rational decisions.

37(2) “Professional clinical counseling” is focused exclusively on
38the application of counseling interventions and psychotherapeutic
39techniques for the purposes of improving mental health, and is not
40intended to capture other, nonclinical forms of counseling for the
P54   1purposes of licensure. For purposes of this paragraph, “nonclinical”
2means nonmental health.

3(3) “Professional clinical counseling” does not include the
4assessment or treatment of couples or families unless the
5professional clinical counselor has completed all of the following
6additional training and education, beyond the minimum training
7and education required for licensure:

8(A) One of the following:

9(i) Six semester units or nine quarter units specifically focused
10on the theory and application of marriage and family therapy.

11(ii) A named specialization or emphasis area on the qualifying
12degree in marriage and family therapy; marital and family therapy;
13marriage, family, and child counseling; or couple and family
14therapy.

15(B) No less than 500 hours of documented supervised experience
16working directly with couples, families, or children.

17(C) A minimum of six hours of continuing education specific
18to marriage and family therapy, completed in each license renewal
19cycle.

20(4) “Professional clinical counseling” does not include the
21provision of clinical social work services.

22(b) “Counseling interventions and psychotherapeutic techniques”
23means the application of cognitive, affective, verbal or nonverbal,
24systemic or holistic counseling strategies that include principles
25of development, wellness, and maladjustment that reflect a
26pluralistic society. These interventions and techniques are
27specifically implemented in the context of a professional clinical
28counseling relationship and use a variety of counseling theories
29and approaches.

30(c) “Assessment” means selecting, administering, scoring, and
31interpreting tests, instruments, and other tools and methods
32designed to measure an individual’s attitudes, abilities, aptitudes,
33achievements, interests, personal characteristics, disabilities, and
34mental, emotional, and behavioral concerns and development and
35the use of methods and techniques for understanding human
36behavior in relation to coping with, adapting to, or ameliorating
37changing life situations, as part of the counseling process.
38“Assessment” shall not include the use of projective techniques
39in the assessment of personality, individually administered
40intelligence tests, neuropsychological testing, or utilization of a
P55   1battery of three or more tests to determine the presence of
2psychosis, dementia, amnesia, cognitive impairment, or criminal
3behavior.

4(d) Professional clinical counselors shall refer clients to other
5licensed health care professionals when they identify issues beyond
6their own scope of education, training, and experience.

7

begin deleteSEC. 30.end delete
8begin insertSEC. 55.end insert  

Section 4999.33 of the Business and Professions Code
9 is amended to read:

10

4999.33.  

(a) This section shall apply to the following:

11(1) Applicants for examination eligibility or registration who
12begin graduate study before August 1, 2012, and do not complete
13that study on or before December 31, 2018.

14(2) Applicants for examination eligibility or registration who
15begin graduate study before August 1, 2012, and who graduate
16from a degree program that meets the requirements of this section.

17(3) Applicants for examination eligibility or registration who
18begin graduate study on or after August 1, 2012.

19(b) To qualify for examination eligibility or registration,
20 applicants shall possess a master’s or doctoral degree that is
21counseling or psychotherapy in content and that meets the
22requirements of this section, obtained from an accredited or
23approved institution, as defined in Section 4999.12. For purposes
24of this subdivision, a degree is “counseling or psychotherapy in
25content” if it contains the supervised practicum or field study
26experience described in paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) and, except
27as provided in subdivision (f), the coursework in the core content
28areas listed in subparagraphs (A) to (M), inclusive, of paragraph
29(1) of subdivision (c).

30(c) The degree described in subdivision (b) shall contain not
31less than 60 graduate semester or 90 graduate quarter units of
32instruction, which shall, except as provided in subdivision (f),
33include all of the following:

34(1) The equivalent of at least three semester units or four and
35 one-half quarter units of graduate study in all of the following core
36content areas:

37(A) Counseling and psychotherapeutic theories and techniques,
38including the counseling process in a multicultural society, an
39orientation to wellness and prevention, counseling theories to assist
40in selection of appropriate counseling interventions, models of
P56   1counseling consistent with current professional research and
2practice, development of a personal model of counseling, and
3multidisciplinary responses to crises, emergencies, and disasters.

4(B) Human growth and development across the lifespan,
5including normal and abnormal behavior and an understanding of
6developmental crises, disability, psychopathology, and situational
7and environmental factors that affect both normal and abnormal
8behavior.

9(C) Career development theories and techniques, including
10career development decisionmaking models and interrelationships
11among and between work, family, and other life roles and factors,
12including the role of multicultural issues in career development.

13(D) Group counseling theories and techniques, including
14principles of group dynamics, group process components, group
15developmental stage theories, therapeutic factors of group work,
16group leadership styles and approaches, pertinent research and
17literature, group counseling methods, and evaluation of
18effectiveness.

19(E) Assessment, appraisal, and testing of individuals, including
20basic concepts of standardized and nonstandardized testing and
21other assessment techniques, norm-referenced and
22criterion-referenced assessment, statistical concepts, social and
23cultural factors related to assessment and evaluation of individuals
24and groups, and ethical strategies for selecting, administering, and
25interpreting assessment instruments and techniques in counseling.

26(F) Multicultural counseling theories and techniques, including
27counselors’ roles in developing cultural self-awareness, identity
28development, promoting cultural social justice, individual and
29community strategies for working with and advocating for diverse
30populations, and counselors’ roles in eliminating biases and
31prejudices, and processes of intentional and unintentional
32oppression and discrimination.

33(G) Principles of the diagnostic process, including differential
34diagnosis, and the use of current diagnostic tools, such as the
35current edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, the impact
36of co-occurring substance use disorders or medical psychological
37disorders, established diagnostic criteria for mental or emotional
38disorders, and the treatment modalities and placement criteria
39within the continuum of care.

P57   1(H) Research and evaluation, including studies that provide an
2understanding of research methods, statistical analysis, the use of
3research to inform evidence-based practice, the importance of
4research in advancing the profession of counseling, and statistical
5methods used in conducting research, needs assessment, and
6program evaluation.

7(I) Professional orientation, ethics, and law in counseling,
8including California law and professional ethics for professional
9clinical counselors, professional ethical standards and legal
10considerations, licensing law and process, regulatory laws that
11delineate the profession’s scope of practice, counselor-client
12privilege, confidentiality, the client dangerous to self or others,
13treatment of minors with or without parental consent, relationship
14between practitioner’s sense of self and human values, functions
15and relationships with other human service providers, strategies
16for collaboration, and advocacy processes needed to address
17institutional and social barriers that impede access, equity, and
18success for clients.

19(J) Psychopharmacology, including the biological bases of
20behavior, basic classifications, indications, and contraindications
21of commonly prescribed psychopharmacological medications so
22that appropriate referrals can be made for medication evaluations
23and so that the side effects of those medications can be identified.

24(K) Addictions counseling, including substance abuse,
25co-occurring disorders, and addiction, major approaches to
26identification, evaluation, treatment, and prevention of substance
27abuse and addiction, legal and medical aspects of substance abuse,
28populations at risk, the role of support persons, support systems,
29and community resources.

30(L) Crisis or trauma counseling, including crisis theory;
31multidisciplinary responses to crises, emergencies, or disasters;
32cognitive, affective, behavioral, and neurological effects associated
33with trauma; brief, intermediate, and long-term approaches; and
34assessment strategies for clients in crisis and principles of
35intervention for individuals with mental or emotional disorders
36during times of crisis, emergency, or disaster.

37(M) Advanced counseling and psychotherapeutic theories and
38techniques, including the application of counseling constructs,
39assessment and treatment planning, clinical interventions,
40therapeutic relationships, psychopathology, or other clinical topics.

P58   1(2) In addition to the course requirements described in paragraph
2(1), 15 semester units or 22.5 quarter units of advanced coursework
3to develop knowledge of specific treatment issues or special
4populations.

5(3) Not less than six semester units or nine quarter units of
6supervised practicum or field study experience, or the equivalent,
7in a clinical setting that provides a range of professional clinical
8counseling experience, including the following:

9(A) Applied psychotherapeutic techniques.

10(B) Assessment.

11(C) Diagnosis.

12(D) Prognosis.

13(E) Treatment.

14(F) Issues of development, adjustment, and maladjustment.

15(G) Health and wellness promotion.

16(H) Professional writing including documentation of services,
17treatment plans, and progress notes.

18(I) How to find and use resources.

19(J) Other recognized counseling interventions.

20(K) A minimum of 280 hours of face-to-face supervised clinical
21experience counseling individuals, families, or groups.

22(d) The 60 graduate semester units or 90 graduate quarter units
23of instruction required pursuant to subdivision (c) shall, in addition
24to meeting the requirements of subdivision (c), include instruction
25in all of the following:

26(1) The understanding of human behavior within the social
27context of socioeconomic status and other contextual issues
28affecting social position.

29(2) The understanding of human behavior within the social
30context of a representative variety of the cultures found within
31California.

32(3) Cultural competency and sensitivity, including a familiarity
33with the racial, cultural, linguistic, and ethnic backgrounds of
34persons living in California.

35(4) An understanding of the effects of socioeconomic status on
36treatment and available resources.

37(5) Multicultural development and cross-cultural interaction,
38including experiences of race, ethnicity, class, spirituality, sexual
39orientation, gender, and disability and their incorporation into the
40psychotherapeutic process.

P59   1(6) Case management, systems of care for the severely mentally
2ill, public and private services for the severely mentally ill,
3community resources for victims of abuse, disaster and trauma
4response, advocacy for the severely mentally ill, and collaborative
5treatment. The instruction required in this paragraph may be
6provided either in credit level coursework or through extension
7programs offered by the degree-granting institution.

8(7) Human sexuality, including the study of the physiological,
9psychological, and social cultural variables associated with sexual
10behavior, gender identity, and the assessment and treatment of
11psychosexual dysfunction.

12(8) Spousal or partner abuse assessment, detection, intervention
13strategies, and same gender abuse dynamics.

14(9) A minimum of seven contact hours of training or coursework
15in child abuse assessment and reporting, as specified in Section
1628, and any regulations promulgated thereunder.

17(10) Aging and long-term care, including biological, social,
18cognitive, and psychological aspects of aging. This coursework
19shall include instruction on the assessment and reporting of, as
20well as treatment related to, elder and dependent adult abuse and
21neglect.

22(e) A degree program that qualifies for licensure under this
23section shall do all of the following:

24(1) Integrate the principles of mental health recovery-oriented
25care and methods of service delivery in recovery-oriented practice
26environments.

27(2) Integrate an understanding of various cultures and the social
28and psychological implications of socioeconomic position.

29(3) Provide the opportunity for students to meet with various
30consumers and family members of consumers of mental health
31services to enhance understanding of their experience of mental
32illness, treatment, and recovery.

33(f) (1) An applicant whose degree is deficient in no more than
34three of the required areas of study listed in subparagraphs (A) to
35(M), inclusive, of paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) may satisfy
36those deficiencies by successfully completing post-master’s or
37postdoctoral degree coursework at an accredited or approved
38institution, as defined in Section 4999.12.

39(2) Coursework taken to meet deficiencies in the required areas
40of study listed in subparagraphs (A) to (M), inclusive, of paragraph
P60   1(1) of subdivision (c) shall be the equivalent of three semester units
2or four and one-half quarter units of study.

3(3) The board shall make the final determination as to whether
4a degree meets all requirements, including, but not limited to,
5course requirements, regardless of accreditation.

6begin insert

begin insertSEC. 56.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.45 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
7Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 62 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
82012, is amended to read:end insert

9

4999.45.  

An intern employed under this chapter shall:

10(a) Not perform any duties, except for those services provided
11as a clinical counselor trainee, until registered as an intern.

12(b) Not be employed or volunteer in a private practice until
13registered as an intern.

14(c) Inform each client prior to performing any professional
15services that he or she is unlicensed and under supervision.

16(d) Renew annually for a maximum of five years after initial
17registration with the board.

18(e) When no further renewals are possible, an applicant may
19 apply for and obtain a new intern registration if the applicant meets
20the educational requirements for registration in effect at the time
21of the application for a new intern registration. An applicant issued
22a subsequent intern registration pursuant to this subdivision may
23be employed or volunteer in any allowable work setting except
24private practice.

25(f) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
26begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
27that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
28 that date.

29begin insert

begin insertSEC. 57.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.45 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
30Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 63 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
312012, is amended to read:end insert

32

4999.45.  

(a) An intern employed under this chapter shall:

33(1) Not perform any duties, except for those services provided
34as a clinical counselor trainee, until registered as an intern.

35(2) Not be employed or volunteer in a private practice until
36registered as an intern.

37(3) Inform each client prior to performing any professional
38services that he or she is unlicensed and under supervision.

39(4) Renew annually for a maximum of five years after initial
40registration with the board.

P61   1(b) When no further renewals are possible, an applicant may
2apply for and obtain a new intern registration if the applicant meets
3the educational requirements for registration in effect at the time
4of the application for a new intern registration and has passed the
5California law and ethics examination described in Section
64999.53. An applicant issued a subsequent intern registration
7pursuant to this subdivision may be employed or volunteer in any
8allowable work setting except private practice.

9(c) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
10begin insert 2016.end insert

11begin insert

begin insertSEC. 58.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.46 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
12Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 64 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
132012, is amended to read:end insert

14

4999.46.  

(a) To qualify for the licensure examinations specified
15in subdivision (c) of Section 4999.52, applicants shall complete
16clinical mental health experience under the general supervision of
17an approved supervisor as defined in Section 4999.12.

18(b) The experience shall include a minimum of 3,000 postdegree
19hours of supervised clinical mental health experience related to
20the practice of professional clinical counseling, performed over a
21period of not less than two years (104 weeks), which shall include:

22(1) Not more than 40 hours in any seven consecutive days.

23(2) Not less than 1,750 hours of direct counseling with
24individuals or groups in a setting described in Section 4999.44
25using a variety of psychotherapeutic techniques and recognized
26counseling interventions within the scope of practice of licensed
27professional clinical counselors.

28(3) Not more than 500 hours of experience providing group
29therapy or group counseling.

30(4) Not more thanbegin delete 250end deletebegin insert 375end insert hours of experience providing
31begin delete counseling or crisis counseling on the telephone.end deletebegin insert personal
32psychotherapy, crisis counseling, or other counseling services via
33telehealth in accordance with Section 2290.5.end insert

34(5) Not less than 150 hours of clinical experience in a hospital
35or community mental health setting, as defined in Section 1820 of
36Title 16 of the California Code of Regulations.

37(6) Not more than a combined total of 1,250 hours of experience
38in the following related activities:

39(A) Direct supervisor contact.

40(B) Client centered advocacy.

P62   1(C) Not more than 250 hours of experience administering tests
2and evaluating psychological tests of clients, writing clinical
3reports, writing progress notes, or writing process notes.

4(D) Not more than 250 hours of verified attendance at
5workshops,begin insert seminars,end insert training sessions, or conferences directly
6related to professional clinical counseling that are approved by the
7applicant’s supervisor.

8(c) No hours of clinical mental health experience may be gained
9more than six years prior to the date the application for examination
10eligibility was filed.

11(d) An applicant shall register with the board as an intern in
12order to be credited for postdegree hours of experience toward
13licensure. Postdegree hours of experience shall be credited toward
14licensure, provided that the applicant applies for intern registration
15within 90 days of the granting of the qualifying degree and is
16registered as an intern by the board.

17(e) All applicants and interns shall be at all times under the
18supervision of a supervisor who shall be responsible for ensuring
19that the extent, kind, and quality of counseling performed is
20consistent with the training and experience of the person being
21supervised, and who shall be responsible to the board for
22compliance with all laws, rules, and regulations governing the
23practice of professional clinical counseling.

24(f) Experience obtained under the supervision of a spouse or
25relative by blood or marriage shall not be credited toward the
26required hours of supervised experience. Experience obtained
27under the supervision of a supervisor with whom the applicant has
28had or currently has a personal, professional, or business
29relationship that undermines the authority or effectiveness of the
30supervision shall not be credited toward the required hours of
31supervised experience.

32(g) begin deleteSupervision end deletebegin insertExcept for experience gained pursuant to
33subparagraph (D) of paragraph (6) of subdivision (b), supervision end insert

34shall include at least one hour of direct supervisor contact in each
35week for which experience is credited in each work setting.

36(1) No more than five hours of supervision, whether individual
37or group, shall be credited during any single week.

38(2) An intern shall receive at least one additional hour of direct
39supervisor contact for every week in which more than 10 hours of
P63   1face-to-face psychotherapy is performed in each setting in which
2experience is gained.

3(3) For purposes of this section, “one hour of direct supervisor
4contact” means one hour of face-to-face contact on an individual
5basis or two hours of face-to-face contact in a group of not more
6than eight persons in segments lasting no less than one continuous
7hour.

8(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (3), an intern working in a
9governmental entity, a school, a college, or a university, or an
10institution that is both nonprofit and charitable, may obtain the
11required weekly direct supervisor contact via two-way, real-time
12videoconferencing. The supervisor shall be responsible for ensuring
13that client confidentiality is upheld.

14(h) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
15begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
16that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
17that date.

18

begin deleteSEC. 31.end delete
19begin insertSEC. 59.end insert  

Section 4999.46 of the Business and Professions
20 Code
, as amended by Section 65 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
212012, is amended to read:

22

4999.46.  

(a) To qualify for the licensure examination specified
23by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 4999.53, applicants
24shall complete clinical mental health experience under the general
25supervision of an approved supervisor as defined in Section
264999.12.

27(b) The experience shall include a minimum of 3,000 postdegree
28hours of supervised clinical mental health experience related to
29the practice of professional clinical counseling, performed over a
30period of not less than two years (104 weeks), which shall include:

31(1) Not more than 40 hours in any seven consecutive days.

32(2) Not less than 1,750 hours of direct counseling with
33 individuals or groups in a setting described in Section 4999.44
34using a variety of psychotherapeutic techniques and recognized
35counseling interventions within the scope of practice of licensed
36professional clinical counselors.

37(3) Not more than 500 hours of experience providing group
38therapy or group counseling.

P64   1(4) Not more than 375 hours of experience providing personal
2psychotherapy, crisis counseling, or other counseling services via
3telehealth in accordance with Section 2290.5.

4(5) Not less than 150 hours of clinical experience in a hospital
5or community mental health setting, as defined in Section 1820 of
6Title 16 of the California Code of Regulations.

7(6) Not more than a combined total of 1,250 hours of experience
8in the following related activities:

9(A) Direct supervisor contact.

10(B) Client centered advocacy.

11(C) Not more than 250 hours of experience administering tests
12and evaluating psychological tests of clients, writing clinical
13reports, writing progress notes, or writing process notes.

14(D) Not more than 250 hours of verified attendance at
15workshops, seminars, training sessions, or conferences directly
16related to professional clinical counseling that are approved by the
17applicant’s supervisor.

18(c) No hours of clinical mental health experience may be gained
19more than six years prior to the date the application for examination
20eligibility was filed.

21(d) An applicant shall register with the board as an intern in
22order to be credited for postdegree hours of experience toward
23licensure. Postdegree hours of experience shall be credited toward
24licensure, provided that the applicant applies for intern registration
25within 90 days of the granting of the qualifying degree and is
26registered as an intern by the board.

27(e) All applicants and interns shall be at all times under the
28supervision of a supervisor who shall be responsible for ensuring
29that the extent, kind, and quality of counseling performed is
30consistent with the training and experience of the person being
31supervised, and who shall be responsible to the board for
32compliance with all laws, rules, and regulations governing the
33practice of professional clinical counseling.

34(f) Experience obtained under the supervision of a spouse or
35relative by blood or marriage shall not be credited toward the
36required hours of supervised experience. Experience obtained
37under the supervision of a supervisor with whom the applicant has
38had or currently has a personal, professional, or business
39relationship that undermines the authority or effectiveness of the
P65   1supervision shall not be credited toward the required hours of
2supervised experience.

3(g) Except for experience gained pursuant to subparagraph (D)
4of paragraph (6) of subdivision (b), supervision shall include at
5least one hour of direct supervisor contact in each week for which
6experience is credited in each work setting.

7(1) No more than five hours of supervision, whether individual
8or group, shall be credited during any single week.

9(2) An intern shall receive at least one additional hour of direct
10supervisor contact for every week in which more than 10 hours of
11face-to-face psychotherapy is performed in each setting in which
12experience is gained.

13(3) For purposes of this section, “one hour of direct supervisor
14contact” means one hour of face-to-face contact on an individual
15basis or two hours of face-to-face contact in a group of not more
16than eight persons in segments lasting no less than one continuous
17hour.

18(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (3), an intern working in a
19governmental entity, a school, a college, or a university, or an
20institution that is both nonprofit and charitable, may obtain the
21required weekly direct supervisor contact via two-way, real-time
22videoconferencing. The supervisor shall be responsible for ensuring
23that client confidentiality is upheld.

24(h) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014end delete
25begin insert 2016end insert.

26

begin deleteSEC. 32.end delete
27begin insertSEC. 60.end insert  

Section 4999.47 of the Business and Professions Code
28 is amended to read:

29

4999.47.  

(a) Clinical counselor trainees, interns, and applicants
30shall perform services only as an employee or as a volunteer.

31The requirements of this chapter regarding gaining hours of
32clinical mental health experience and supervision are applicable
33equally to employees and volunteers. Experience shall not be
34gained by interns or trainees for work performed as an independent
35contractor or reported on an IRS Form 1099.

36(1) If employed, a clinical counselor intern shall provide the
37board with copies of the corresponding W-2 tax forms for each
38year of experience claimed upon application for licensure as a
39professional clinical counselor.

P66   1(2) If volunteering, a clinical counselor intern shall provide the
2board with a letter from his or her employer verifying the intern’s
3employment as a volunteer upon application for licensure as a
4professional clinical counselor.

5(b) Clinical counselor trainees, interns, and applicants shall not
6receive any remuneration from patients or clients, and shall only
7be paid by their employers.

8(c) While an intern may be either a paid employee or a volunteer,
9employers are encouraged to provide fair remuneration.

10(d) Clinical counselor trainees, interns, and applicants who
11provide voluntary services or other services, and who receive no
12more than a total, from all work settings, of five hundred dollars
13($500) per month as reimbursement for expenses actually incurred
14by those clinical counselor trainees, interns, and applicants for
15services rendered in any lawful work setting other than a private
16practice shall be considered an employee and not an independent
17contractor.

18(e) The board may audit an intern or applicant who receives
19reimbursement for expenses and the intern or applicant shall have
20the burden of demonstrating that the payments received were for
21reimbursement of expenses actually incurred.

22(f) Clinical counselor trainees, interns, and applicants shall only
23perform services at the place where their employer regularly
24conducts business and services, which may include other locations,
25as long as the services are performed under the direction and
26control of the employer and supervisor in compliance with the
27laws and regulations pertaining to supervision. Clinical counselor
28trainees, interns, and applicants shall have no proprietary interest
29in the employer’s business.

30(g) Each educational institution preparing applicants for
31licensure pursuant to this chapter shall consider requiring, and
32shall encourage, its students to undergo individual, marital or
33conjoint, family, or group counseling or psychotherapy, as
34appropriate. Each supervisor shall consider, advise, and encourage
35his or her interns and clinical counselor trainees regarding the
36advisability of undertaking individual, marital or conjoint, family,
37or group counseling or psychotherapy, as appropriate. Insofar as
38it is deemed appropriate and is desired by the applicant, the
39educational institution and supervisors are encouraged to assist
P67   1the applicant in locating that counseling or psychotherapy at a
2reasonable cost.

3begin insert

begin insertSEC. 61.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.50 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
4Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 66 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
52012, is amended to read:end insert

6

4999.50.  

(a) The board may issue a professional clinical
7counselor license to any person who meets all of the following
8requirements:

9(1) He or she has received a master’s or doctoral degree
10described in Section 4999.32 or 4999.33, as applicable.

11(2) He or she has completed at least 3,000 hours of supervised
12experience in the practice of professional clinical counseling as
13provided in Section 4999.46.

14(3) He or she provides evidence of a passing score, as
15determined by the board, on examinations designated by the board
16pursuant to Section 4999.52.

17(b) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of this
18chapter shall be issued a license as a professional clinical counselor
19in the form that the board may deem appropriate.

20(c) The board shall begin accepting applications for examination
21eligibility on January 1, 2012.

22(d) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
23begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
24that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
25that date.

26begin insert

begin insertSEC. 62.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.50 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
27Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 67 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
282012, is amended to read:end insert

29

4999.50.  

(a) The board may issue a professional clinical
30counselor license to any person who meets all of the following
31requirements:

32(1) He or she has received a master’s or doctoral degree
33described in Section 4999.32 or 4999.33, as applicable.

34(2) He or she has completed at least 3,000 hours of supervised
35experience in the practice of professional clinical counseling as
36provided in Section 4999.46.

37(3) He or she provides evidence of a passing score, as
38determined by the board, on the examinations designated in Section
394999.53.

P68   1(b) An applicant who has satisfied the requirements of this
2chapter shall be issued a license as a professional clinical counselor
3in the form that the board may deem appropriate.

4(c) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
5begin insert 2016.end insert

6begin insert

begin insertSEC. 63.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.52 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
7Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 10 of Chapter 800 of the Statutes of
82012, is amended to read:end insert

9

4999.52.  

(a) Except as provided in Section 4999.54, every
10applicant for a license as a professional clinical counselor shall be
11examined by the board. The board shall examine the candidate
12with regard to his or her knowledge and professional skills and his
13or her judgment in the utilization of appropriate techniques and
14methods.

15(b) The examinations shall be given at least twice a year at a
16time and place and under supervision as the board may determine.

17(c) (1) It is the intent of the Legislature that national licensing
18examinations, such as the National Counselor Examination for
19Licensure and Certification (NCE) and the National Clinical Mental
20Health Counselor Examination (NCMHCE), be evaluated by the
21board as requirements for licensure as a professional clinical
22counselor.

23(2) The board shall evaluate various national examinations in
24order to determine whether they meet the prevailing standards for
25the validation and use of licensing and certification tests in
26California.

27(3) The Department of Consumer Affairs’ Office of Professional
28Examination Services shall review the occupational analysis that
29was used for developing the national examinations in order to
30determine if it adequately describes the licensing group and
31adequately determines the tasks, knowledge, skills, and abilities
32the licensed professional clinical counselor would need to perform
33the functions under this chapter.

34(4) Examinations shall measure knowledge and abilities
35demonstrably important to the safe, effective practice of the
36profession.

37(5) If national examinations do not meet the standards specified
38in paragraph (2), the board may require a passing score on either
39of the following:

P69   1(A) The national examinations plus one or more
2board-developed examinations.

3(B) One or more board-developed examinations.

4(6) If the board decides to require a national examination
5specified in paragraph (1), a passing score on this examination
6shall be accepted by the board for a period of seven years from
7the date the examination was taken.

8(7) If the board decides to require the examinations specified
9in paragraph (5), a passing score on these examinations shall be
10accepted by the board for a period of seven years from the date
11the examination was taken.

12(8) The licensing examinations shall also incorporate a
13California law and ethics examination element that is acceptable
14to the board, or, as an alternative, the board may develop a separate
15California law and ethics examination.

16(d) The board shall not deny any applicant who has submitted
17a complete application for examination admission to the licensure
18examinations required by this section if the applicant meets the
19educational and experience requirements of this chapter, and has
20not committed any acts or engaged in any conduct that would
21constitute grounds to deny licensure.

22(e) The board shall not deny any applicant whose application
23for licensure is complete admission to the examinations, nor shall
24the board postpone or delay any applicant’s examinations or delay
25 informing the candidate of the results of the examinations, solely
26upon the receipt by the board of a complaint alleging acts or
27conduct that would constitute grounds to deny licensure.

28(f) If an applicant for examination is the subject of a complaint
29or is under board investigation for acts or conduct that, if proven
30to be true, would constitute grounds for the board to deny licensure,
31the board shall permit the applicant to take the examinations, but
32may notify the applicant that licensure will not be granted pending
33completion of the investigation.

34(g) Notwithstanding Section 135, the board may deny any
35applicant who has previously failed an examination permission to
36retake that examination pending completion of the investigation
37of any complaints against the applicant.

38(h) Nothing in this section shall prohibit the board from denying
39an applicant admission to any examination, withholding the results,
40or refusing to issue a license to any applicant when an accusation
P70   1or statement of issues has been filed against the applicant pursuant
2to Section 11503 or 11504 of the Government Code, respectively,
3or the application has been denied in accordance with subdivision
4(b) of Section 485.

5(i) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the board may
6destroy all examination materials two years following the date of
7an examination.

8(j) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
9begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
10that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
11that date.

12begin insert

begin insertSEC. 64.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.52 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
13Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 11 of Chapter 800 of the Statutes of
142012, is amended to read:end insert

15

4999.52.  

(a) Except as provided in Section 4999.54, every
16applicant for a license as a professional clinical counselor shall be
17examined by the board. The board shall examine the candidate
18with regard to his or her knowledge and professional skills and his
19or her judgment in the utilization of appropriate techniques and
20methods.

21(b) The examinations shall be given at least twice a year at a
22time and place and under supervision as the board may determine.

23(c) The board shall not deny any applicant who has submitted
24a complete application for examination admission to the licensure
25examinations required by this section if the applicant meets the
26educational and experience requirements of this chapter, and has
27not committed any acts or engaged in any conduct that would
28constitute grounds to deny licensure.

29(d) The board shall not deny any applicant whose application
30for licensure is complete admission to the examinations specified
31by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 4999.53, nor shall
32the board postpone or delay this examination for any applicant or
33delay informing the candidate of the results of this examination,
34solely upon the receipt by the board of a complaint alleging acts
35or conduct that would constitute grounds to deny licensure.

36(e) If an applicant for the examination specified by paragraph
37(2) of subdivision (a) of Section 4999.53, who has passed the
38California law and ethics examination, is the subject of a complaint
39or is under board investigation for acts or conduct that, if proven
40to be true, would constitute grounds for the board to deny licensure,
P71   1the board shall permit the applicant to take this examination, but
2may notify the applicant that licensure will not be granted pending
3completion of the investigation.

4(f) Notwithstanding Section 135, the board may deny any
5applicant who has previously failed either the California law and
6ethics examination, or the examination specified by paragraph (2)
7of subdivision (a) of Section 4999.53, permission to retake either
8examination pending completion of the investigation of any
9complaints against the applicant.

10(g) Nothing in this section shall prohibit the board from denying
11an applicant admission to any examination, withholding the results,
12or refusing to issue a license to any applicant when an accusation
13or statement of issues has been filed against the applicant pursuant
14to Section 11503 or 11504 of the Government Code, respectively,
15or the application has been denied in accordance with subdivision
16(b) of Section 485.

17(h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the board may
18destroy all examination materials two years following the date of
19an examination.

20(i) On and after January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert the examination specified
21by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 4999.53 shall be
22passed within seven years of an applicant’s initial attempt.

23(j) A passing score on the clinical examination shall be accepted
24by the board for a period of seven years from the date the
25examination was taken.

26(k) No applicant shall be eligible to participate in the
27examination specified by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of
28Section 4999.53, if he or she fails to obtain a passing score on this
29examination within seven years from his or her initial attempt. If
30the applicant fails to obtain a passing score within seven years of
31initial attempt, he or she shall obtain a passing score on the current
32version of the California law and ethics examination in order to
33be eligible to retake this examination.

34(l) begin deleteThe provisions of this end deletebegin insertThis end insertsection shall become operative
35on January 1,begin delete 2014.end deletebegin insert 2016.end insert

36begin insert

begin insertSEC. 65.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.53 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
37begin insert is amended to read:end insert

38

4999.53.  

(a) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert a clinical
39counselor intern applying for licensure as a clinical counselor shall
40pass the following examinations as prescribed by the board:

P72   1(1) A California law and ethics examination.

2(2) A clinical examination administered by the board, or the
3National Clinical Mental Health Counselor Examination if the
4board finds that this examination meets the prevailing standards
5for validation and use of the licensing and certification tests in
6California.

7(b) Upon registration with the board, a clinical counselor intern
8shall, within the first year of registration, take an examination on
9California law and ethics.

10(c) A registrant may take the clinical examination or the National
11Clinical Mental Health Counselor Examination, as established by
12the board through regulation, only upon meeting all of the
13following requirements:

14(1) Completion of all required supervised work experience.

15(2) Completion of all education requirements.

16(3) Passage of the California law and ethics examination.

17(d) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
18begin insert 2016.end insert

19begin insert

begin insertSEC. 66.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.55 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
20begin insert is amended to read:end insert

21

4999.55.  

(a) Each applicant and registrant shall obtain a
22passing score on a board-administered California law and ethics
23examination in order to qualify for licensure.

24(b) A registrant shall participate in a board-administered
25California law and ethics examination prior to his or her registration
26renewal.

27(c) If an applicant fails the California law and ethics exam, he
28or she may retake the examination, upon payment of the required
29fees, without further application, except as provided in subdivision
30(d).

31(d) If a registrant fails to obtain a passing score on the California
32law and ethics examination described in subdivision (a) within his
33 or her first renewal period on or after the operative date of this
34section, he or she shall complete, at minimum, a 12-hour course
35in California law and ethics in order to be eligible to participate
36in the California law and ethics examination. Registrants shall only
37take the 12-hour California law and ethics course once during a
38renewal period. The 12-hour law and ethics course required by
39this section shall be taken through a board-approved continuing
P73   1education provider, a county, state, or governmental entity, or a
2college or university.

3(e) The board shall not issue a subsequent registration number
4unless the registrant has passed the California law and ethics
5examination.

6(f) This section shall become operative January 1,begin delete 2014.end deletebegin insert 2016.end insert

7

begin deleteSEC. 33.end delete
8begin insertSEC. 67.end insert  

Section 4999.60 of the Business and Professions Code
9 is amended to read:

10

4999.60.  

(a) This section applies to persons who are licensed
11outside of California and apply for examination eligibility on or
12after January 1, 2014.

13(b) The board may issue a license to a person who, at the time
14of submitting an application for a license pursuant to this chapter,
15holds a valid license as a professional clinical counselor, or other
16counseling license that allows the applicant to independently
17provide clinical mental health services, in another jurisdiction of
18the United States if all of the following conditions are satisfied:

19(1) The applicant’s education is substantially equivalent, as
20defined in Section 4999.62.

21(2) The applicant complies with subdivision (b) of Section
224999.40, if applicable.

23(3) The applicant’s supervised experience is substantially
24equivalent to that required for a license under this chapter. If the
25applicant has less than 3,000 hours of qualifying supervised
26experience, time actively licensed as a professional clinical
27counselor shall be accepted at a rate of 100 hours per month up to
28a maximum of 1,200 hours.

29(4) The applicant passes the examinations required to obtain a
30license under this chapter. An applicant who obtained his or her
31license or registration under another jurisdiction may apply for
32licensure with the board without taking the clinical examination
33if both of the following conditions are met:

34(A) The applicant obtained a passing score on the licensing
35examination set forth in regulation as accepted by the board.

36(B) The applicant’s license or registration in that jurisdiction is
37in good standing at the time of his or her application and has not
38been revoked, suspended, surrendered, denied, or otherwise
39restricted or encumbered as a result of any disciplinary proceeding
40brought by the licensing authority of that jurisdiction.

P74   1begin insert

begin insertSEC. 68.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.64 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
2begin insert is amended to read:end insert

3

4999.64.  

(a) Effective January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert an applicant
4who fails the examination specified in paragraph (2) of subdivision
5(a) of Section 4999.53 may, within one year from the notification
6date of that failure, retake the examination as regularly scheduled
7without further application upon payment of the fee for the
8examination. Thereafter, the applicant shall not be eligible for
9further examination until he or she files a new application, meets
10all requirements in effect on the date of application, and pays all
11required fees.

12(b) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
13begin insert 2016.end insert

14begin insert

begin insertSEC. 69.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.100 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
15Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 80 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
162012, is amended to read:end insert

17

4999.100.  

(a) An intern registration shall expire one year from
18the last day of the month in which it was issued.

19(b) To renew a registration, the registrant shall, on or before the
20expiration date of the registration, do the following:

21(1) Apply for a renewal on a form prescribed by the board.

22(2) Pay a renewal fee prescribed by the board.

23(3) Notify the board whether he or she has been convicted, as
24defined in Section 490, of a misdemeanor or felony, or whether
25any disciplinary action has been taken by any regulatory or
26licensing board in this or any other state, subsequent to the
27registrant’s last renewal.

28(c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2014,end delete
29begin insert 2016,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
30that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2014,end deletebegin insert 2016,end insert deletes or extends
31that date.

32begin insert

begin insertSEC. 70.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 4999.100 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
33Code
end insert
begin insert, as amended by Section 81 of Chapter 799 of the Statutes of
342012, is amended to read:end insert

35

4999.100.  

(a) An intern registration shall expire one year from
36the last day of the month in which it was issued.

37(b) To renew a registration, the registrant shall, on or before the
38expiration date of the registration, do the following:

39(1) Apply for a renewal on a form prescribed by the board.

40(2) Pay a renewal fee prescribed by the board.

P75   1(3) Notify the board whether he or she has been convicted, as
2defined in Section 490, of a misdemeanor or felony, or whether
3any disciplinary action has been taken by any regulatory or
4licensing board in this or any other state, subsequent to the
5registrant’s last renewal.

6(4) Participate in the California law and ethics examination
7pursuant to Section 4999.53 each year until successful completion
8of this examination.

9(c) The intern registration may be renewed a maximum of five
10times. No registration shall be renewed or reinstated beyond six
11years from the last day of the month during which it was issued,
12regardless of whether it has been revoked. When no further
13renewals are possible, an applicant may apply for and obtain a new
14intern registration if the applicant meets the educational
15requirements for registration in effect at the time of the application
16for a new intern registration and has passed the California law and
17ethics examination described in Section 4999.53. An applicant
18who is issued a subsequent intern registration pursuant to this
19subdivision may be employed or volunteer in any allowable work
20setting except private practice.

21(d) This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2014.end delete
22begin insert 2016.end insert

23

begin deleteSEC. 34.end delete
24begin insertSEC. 71.end insert  

Section 14132 of the Welfare and Institutions Code
25 is amended to read:

26

14132.  

The following is the schedule of benefits under this
27chapter:

28(a) Outpatient services are covered as follows:

29Physician, hospital or clinic outpatient, surgical center,
30respiratory care, optometric, chiropractic, psychology, podiatric,
31occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech therapy, audiology,
32acupuncture to the extent federal matching funds are provided for
33acupuncture, and services of persons rendering treatment by prayer
34or healing by spiritual means in the practice of any church or
35religious denomination insofar as these can be encompassed by
36federal participation under an approved plan, subject to utilization
37controls.

38(b) (1) Inpatient hospital services, including, but not limited
39to, physician and podiatric services, physical therapy and
40occupational therapy, are covered subject to utilization controls.

P76   1(2) For Medi-Cal fee-for-service beneficiaries, emergency
2services and care that are necessary for the treatment of an
3emergency medical condition and medical care directly related to
4the emergency medical condition. This paragraph shall not be
5construed to change the obligation of Medi-Cal managed care
6plans to provide emergency services and care. For the purposes of
7this paragraph, “emergency services and care” and “emergency
8medical condition” shall have the same meanings as those terms
9are defined in Section 1317.1 of the Health and Safety Code.

10(c) Nursing facility services, subacute care services, and services
11provided by any category of intermediate care facility for the
12developmentally disabled, including podiatry, physician, nurse
13practitioner services, and prescribed drugs, as described in
14subdivision (d), are covered subject to utilization controls.
15Respiratory care, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech
16therapy, and audiology services for patients in nursing facilities
17and any category of intermediate care facility for the
18developmentally disabled are covered subject to utilization controls.

19(d) (1) Purchase of prescribed drugs is covered subject to the
20Medi-Cal List of Contract Drugs and utilization controls.

21(2) Purchase of drugs used to treat erectile dysfunction or any
22off-label uses of those drugs are covered only to the extent that
23federal financial participation is available.

24(3) (A) To the extent required by federal law, the purchase of
25outpatient prescribed drugs, for which the prescription is executed
26by a prescriber in written, nonelectronic form on or after April 1,
272008, is covered only when executed on a tamper resistant
28prescription form. The implementation of this paragraph shall
29conform to the guidance issued by the federal Centers for Medicare
30and Medicaid Services but shall not conflict with state statutes on
31the characteristics of tamper resistant prescriptions for controlled
32substances, including Section 11162.1 of the Health and Safety
33Code. The department shall provide providers and beneficiaries
34with as much flexibility in implementing these rules as allowed
35by the federal government. The department shall notify and consult
36with appropriate stakeholders in implementing, interpreting, or
37making specific this paragraph.

38(B) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
3911340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code,
40the department may take the actions specified in subparagraph (A)
P77   1by means of a provider bulletin or notice, policy letter, or other
2similar instructions without taking regulatory action.

3(4) (A) (i) For the purposes of this paragraph, nonlegend has
4the same meaning as defined in subdivision (a) of Section
514105.45.

6(ii) Nonlegend acetaminophen-containing products, with the
7exception of children’s acetaminophen-containing products,
8selected by the department are not covered benefits.

9(iii) Nonlegend cough and cold products selected by the
10department are not covered benefits. This clause shall be
11implemented on the first day of the first calendar month following
1290 days after the effective date of the act that added this clause,
13or on the first day of the first calendar month following 60 days
14after the date the department secures all necessary federal approvals
15to implement this section, whichever is later.

16(iv) Beneficiaries under the Early and Periodic Screening,
17Diagnosis, and Treatment Program shall be exempt from clauses
18(ii) and (iii).

19(B) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
2011340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code,
21the department may take the actions specified in subparagraph (A)
22by means of a provider bulletin or notice, policy letter, or other
23similar instruction without taking regulatory action.

24(e) Outpatient dialysis services and home hemodialysis services,
25including physician services, medical supplies, drugs and
26equipment required for dialysis, are covered, subject to utilization
27controls.

28(f) Anesthesiologist services when provided as part of an
29outpatient medical procedure, nurse anesthetist services when
30rendered in an inpatient or outpatient setting under conditions set
31forth by the director, outpatient laboratory services, and X-ray
32services are covered, subject to utilization controls. Nothing in
33this subdivision shall be construed to require prior authorization
34for anesthesiologist services provided as part of an outpatient
35medical procedure or for portable X-ray services in a nursing
36facility or any category of intermediate care facility for the
37developmentally disabled.

38(g) Blood and blood derivatives are covered.

39(h) (1) Emergency and essential diagnostic and restorative
40dental services, except for orthodontic, fixed bridgework, and
P78   1partial dentures that are not necessary for balance of a complete
2artificial denture, are covered, subject to utilization controls. The
3utilization controls shall allow emergency and essential diagnostic
4and restorative dental services and prostheses that are necessary
5 to prevent a significant disability or to replace previously furnished
6prostheses which are lost or destroyed due to circumstances beyond
7the beneficiary’s control. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
8director may by regulation provide for certain fixed artificial
9dentures necessary for obtaining employment or for medical
10conditions that preclude the use of removable dental prostheses,
11and for orthodontic services in cleft palate deformities administered
12by the department’s California Children Services Program.

13(2) For persons 21 years of age or older, the services specified
14in paragraph (1) shall be provided subject to the following
15conditions:

16(A) Periodontal treatment is not a benefit.

17(B) Endodontic therapy is not a benefit except for vital
18pulpotomy.

19(C) Laboratory processed crowns are not a benefit.

20(D) Removable prosthetics shall be a benefit only for patients
21as a requirement for employment.

22(E) The director may, by regulation, provide for the provision
23of fixed artificial dentures that are necessary for medical conditions
24that preclude the use of removable dental prostheses.

25(F) Notwithstanding the conditions specified in subparagraphs
26(A) to (E), inclusive, the department may approve services for
27persons with special medical disorders subject to utilization review.

28(3) Paragraph (2) shall become inoperative July 1, 1995.

29(i) Medical transportation is covered, subject to utilization
30controls.

31(j) Home health care services are covered, subject to utilization
32controls.

33(k) Prosthetic and orthotic devices and eyeglasses are covered,
34subject to utilization controls. Utilization controls shall allow
35replacement of prosthetic and orthotic devices and eyeglasses
36necessary because of loss or destruction due to circumstances
37beyond the beneficiary’s control. Frame styles for eyeglasses
38replaced pursuant to this subdivision shall not change more than
39once every two years, unless the department so directs.

P79   1Orthopedic and conventional shoes are covered when provided
2by a prosthetic and orthotic supplier on the prescription of a
3physician and when at least one of the shoes will be attached to a
4prosthesis or brace, subject to utilization controls. Modification
5of stock conventional or orthopedic shoes when medically
6indicated, is covered subject to utilization controls. When there is
7a clearly established medical need that cannot be satisfied by the
8modification of stock conventional or orthopedic shoes,
9custom-made orthopedic shoes are covered, subject to utilization
10controls.

11Therapeutic shoes and inserts are covered when provided to
12beneficiaries with a diagnosis of diabetes, subject to utilization
13controls, to the extent that federal financial participation is
14available.

15(l) Hearing aids are covered, subject to utilization controls.
16Utilization controls shall allow replacement of hearing aids
17necessary because of loss or destruction due to circumstances
18beyond the beneficiary’s control.

19(m) Durable medical equipment and medical supplies are
20covered, subject to utilization controls. The utilization controls
21shall allow the replacement of durable medical equipment and
22medical supplies when necessary because of loss or destruction
23due to circumstances beyond the beneficiary’s control. The
24utilization controls shall allow authorization of durable medical
25equipment needed to assist a disabled beneficiary in caring for a
26child for whom the disabled beneficiary is a parent, stepparent,
27foster parent, or legal guardian, subject to the availability of federal
28financial participation. The department shall adopt emergency
29regulations to define and establish criteria for assistive durable
30medical equipment in accordance with the rulemaking provisions
31of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter 3.5 (commencing
32 with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the
33Government Code).

34(n) Family planning services are covered, subject to utilization
35controls.

36(o) Inpatient intensive rehabilitation hospital services, including
37respiratory rehabilitation services, in a general acute care hospital
38are covered, subject to utilization controls, when either of the
39following criteria are met:

P80   1(1) A patient with a permanent disability or severe impairment
2requires an inpatient intensive rehabilitation hospital program as
3described in Section 14064 to develop function beyond the limited
4amount that would occur in the normal course of recovery.

5(2) A patient with a chronic or progressive disease requires an
6inpatient intensive rehabilitation hospital program as described in
7Section 14064 to maintain the patient’s present functional level as
8long as possible.

9(p) (1) Adult day health care is covered in accordance with
10Chapter 8.7 (commencing with Section 14520).

11(2) Commencing 30 days after the effective date of the act that
12added this paragraph, and notwithstanding the number of days
13previously approved through a treatment authorization request,
14adult day health care is covered for a maximum of three days per
15week.

16(3) As provided in accordance with paragraph (4), adult day
17health care is covered for a maximum of five days per week.

18(4) As of the date that the director makes the declaration
19described in subdivision (g) of Section 14525.1, paragraph (2)
20shall become inoperative and paragraph (3) shall become operative.

21(q) (1) Application of fluoride, or other appropriate fluoride
22treatment as defined by the department, and other prophylaxis
23treatment for children 17 years of age and under are covered.

24(2) All dental hygiene services provided by a registered dental
25hygienist, registered dental hygienist in extended functions, and
26registered dental hygienist in alternative practice licensed pursuant
27to Sections 1753, 1917, 1918, and 1922 of the Business and
28Professions Code may be covered as long as they are within the
29scope of Denti-Cal benefits and they are necessary services
30provided by a registered dental hygienist, registered dental
31 hygienist in extended functions, or registered dental hygienist in
32alternative practice.

33(r) (1) Paramedic services performed by a city, county, or
34special district, or pursuant to a contract with a city, county, or
35special district, and pursuant to a program established under Article
363 (commencing with Section 1480) of Chapter 2.5 of Division 2
37of the Health and Safety Code by a paramedic certified pursuant
38to that article, and consisting of defibrillation and those services
39specified in subdivision (3) of Section 1482 of the article.

P81   1(2) All providers enrolled under this subdivision shall satisfy
2all applicable statutory and regulatory requirements for becoming
3a Medi-Cal provider.

4(3) This subdivision shall be implemented only to the extent
5funding is available under Section 14106.6.

6(s) In-home medical care services are covered when medically
7appropriate and subject to utilization controls, for beneficiaries
8who would otherwise require care for an extended period of time
9in an acute care hospital at a cost higher than in-home medical
10care services. The director shall have the authority under this
11section to contract with organizations qualified to provide in-home
12medical care services to those persons. These services may be
13provided to patients placed in shared or congregate living
14arrangements, if a home setting is not medically appropriate or
15available to the beneficiary. As used in this section, “in-home
16medical care service” includes utility bills directly attributable to
17continuous, 24-hour operation of life-sustaining medical equipment,
18to the extent that federal financial participation is available.

19As used in this subdivision, in-home medical care services
20 include, but are not limited to:

21(1) Level of care and cost of care evaluations.

22(2) Expenses, directly attributable to home care activities, for
23materials.

24(3) Physician fees for home visits.

25(4) Expenses directly attributable to home care activities for
26shelter and modification to shelter.

27(5) Expenses directly attributable to additional costs of special
28diets, including tube feeding.

29(6) Medically related personal services.

30(7) Home nursing education.

31(8) Emergency maintenance repair.

32(9) Home health agency personnel benefits which permit
33coverage of care during periods when regular personnel are on
34vacation or using sick leave.

35(10) All services needed to maintain antiseptic conditions at
36stoma or shunt sites on the body.

37(11) Emergency and nonemergency medical transportation.

38(12) Medical supplies.

39(13) Medical equipment, including, but not limited to, scales,
40gurneys, and equipment racks suitable for paralyzed patients.

P82   1(14) Utility use directly attributable to the requirements of home
2care activities which are in addition to normal utility use.

3(15) Special drugs and medications.

4(16) Home health agency supervision of visiting staff which is
5medically necessary, but not included in the home health agency
6rate.

7(17) Therapy services.

8(18) Household appliances and household utensil costs directly
9attributable to home care activities.

10(19) Modification of medical equipment for home use.

11(20) Training and orientation for use of life-support systems,
12including, but not limited to, support of respiratory functions.

13(21) Respiratory care practitioner services as defined in Sections
143702 and 3703 of the Business and Professions Code, subject to
15prescription by a physician and surgeon.

16Beneficiaries receiving in-home medical care services are entitled
17to the full range of services within the Medi-Cal scope of benefits
18as defined by this section, subject to medical necessity and
19applicable utilization control. Services provided pursuant to this
20subdivision, which are not otherwise included in the Medi-Cal
21schedule of benefits, shall be available only to the extent that
22federal financial participation for these services is available in
23accordance with a home- and community-based services waiver.

24(t) Home- and community-based services approved by the
25United States Department of Health and Human Services may be
26covered to the extent that federal financial participation is available
27for those services under waivers granted in accordance with Section
281396n of Title 42 of the United States Code. The director may
29seek waivers for any or all home- and community-based services
30approvable under Section 1396n of Title 42 of the United States
31Code. Coverage for those services shall be limited by the terms,
32conditions, and duration of the federal waivers.

33(u) Comprehensive perinatal services, as provided through an
34agreement with a health care provider designated in Section
3514134.5 and meeting the standards developed by the department
36pursuant to Section 14134.5, subject to utilization controls.

37The department shall seek any federal waivers necessary to
38implement the provisions of this subdivision. The provisions for
39which appropriate federal waivers cannot be obtained shall not be
40implemented. Provisions for which waivers are obtained or for
P83   1which waivers are not required shall be implemented
2notwithstanding any inability to obtain federal waivers for the
3other provisions. No provision of this subdivision shall be
4implemented unless matching funds from Subchapter XIX
5 (commencing with Section 1396) of Chapter 7 of Title 42 of the
6United States Code are available.

7(v) Early and periodic screening, diagnosis, and treatment for
8any individual under 21 years of age is covered, consistent with
9the requirements of Subchapter XIX (commencing with Section
101396) of Chapter 7 of Title 42 of the United States Code.

11(w) Hospice service which is Medicare-certified hospice service
12is covered, subject to utilization controls. Coverage shall be
13available only to the extent that no additional net program costs
14are incurred.

15(x) When a claim for treatment provided to a beneficiary
16includes both services which are authorized and reimbursable
17under this chapter, and services which are not reimbursable under
18this chapter, that portion of the claim for the treatment and services
19authorized and reimbursable under this chapter shall be payable.

20(y) Home- and community-based services approved by the
21United States Department of Health and Human Services for
22beneficiaries with a diagnosis of AIDS or ARC, who require
23intermediate care or a higher level of care.

24Services provided pursuant to a waiver obtained from the
25Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human
26Services pursuant to this subdivision, and which are not otherwise
27included in the Medi-Cal schedule of benefits, shall be available
28only to the extent that federal financial participation for these
29services is available in accordance with the waiver, and subject to
30the terms, conditions, and duration of the waiver. These services
31shall be provided to individual beneficiaries in accordance with
32the client’s needs as identified in the plan of care, and subject to
33medical necessity and applicable utilization control.

34The director may under this section contract with organizations
35qualified to provide, directly or by subcontract, services provided
36for in this subdivision to eligible beneficiaries. Contracts or
37agreements entered into pursuant to this division shall not be
38subject to the Public Contract Code.

39(z) Respiratory care when provided in organized health care
40systems as defined in Section 3701 of the Business and Professions
P84   1Code, and as an in-home medical service as outlined in subdivision
2(s).

3(aa) (1) There is hereby established in the department, a
4program to provide comprehensive clinical family planning
5services to any person who has a family income at or below 200
6percent of the federal poverty level, as revised annually, and who
7is eligible to receive these services pursuant to the waiver identified
8in paragraph (2). This program shall be known as the Family
9Planning, Access, Care, and Treatment (Family PACT) Program.

10(2) The department shall seek a waiver in accordance with
11Section 1315 of Title 42 of the United States Code, or a state plan
12amendment adopted in accordance with Section
131396a(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXI)(ii)(2) of Title 42 of the United States
14Code, which was added to Section 1396a of Title 42 of the United
15States Code by Section 2303(a)(2) of the federal Patient Protection
16and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) (Public Law 111-148), for a
17program to provide comprehensive clinical family planning
18services as described in paragraph (8). Under the waiver, the
19program shall be operated only in accordance with the waiver and
20the statutes and regulations in paragraph (4) and subject to the
21terms, conditions, and duration of the waiver. Under the state plan
22amendment, which shall replace the waiver and shall be known as
23the Family PACT successor state plan amendment, the program
24shall be operated only in accordance with this subdivision and the
25statutes and regulations in paragraph (4). The state shall use the
26standards and processes imposed by the state on January 1, 2007,
27including the application of an eligibility discount factor to the
28extent required by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
29Services, for purposes of determining eligibility as permitted under
30Section 1396a(a)(10)(A)(ii)(XXI)(ii)(2) of Title 42 of the United
31States Code. To the extent that federal financial participation is
32available, the program shall continue to conduct education,
33outreach, enrollment, service delivery, and evaluation services as
34specified under the waiver. The services shall be provided under
35the program only if the waiver and, when applicable, the successor
36state plan amendment are approved by the federal Centers for
37Medicare and Medicaid Services and only to the extent that federal
38financial participation is available for the services. Nothing in this
39section shall prohibit the department from seeking the Family
P85   1PACT successor state plan amendment during the operation of the
2waiver.

3(3) Solely for the purposes of the waiver or Family PACT
4successor state plan amendment and notwithstanding any other
5provision of law, the collection and use of an individual’s social
6security number shall be necessary only to the extent required by
7federal law.

8(4) Sections 14105.3 to 14105.39, inclusive, 14107.11, 24005,
9and 24013, and any regulations adopted under these statutes shall
10apply to the program provided for under this subdivision. No other
11provision of law under the Medi-Cal program or the State-Only
12Family Planning Program shall apply to the program provided for
13under this subdivision.

14(5) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
1511340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code,
16the department may implement, without taking regulatory action,
17the provisions of the waiver after its approval by the federal Health
18Care Financing Administration and the provisions of this section
19by means of an all-county letter or similar instruction to providers.
20Thereafter, the department shall adopt regulations to implement
21this section and the approved waiver in accordance with the
22requirements of Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of
23Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code. Beginning
24six months after the effective date of the act adding this
25subdivision, the department shall provide a status report to the
26Legislature on a semiannual basis until regulations have been
27adopted.

28(6) In the event that the Department of Finance determines that
29the program operated under the authority of the waiver described
30in paragraph (2) or the Family PACT successor state plan
31amendment is no longer cost effective, this subdivision shall
32become inoperative on the first day of the first month following
33the issuance of a 30-day notification of that determination in
34writing by the Department of Finance to the chairperson in each
35house that considers appropriations, the chairpersons of the
36committees, and the appropriate subcommittees in each house that
37considers the State Budget, and the Chairperson of the Joint
38Legislative Budget Committee.

39(7) If this subdivision ceases to be operative, all persons who
40have received or are eligible to receive comprehensive clinical
P86   1family planning services pursuant to the waiver described in
2paragraph (2) shall receive family planning services under the
3Medi-Cal program pursuant to subdivision (n) if they are otherwise
4eligible for Medi-Cal with no share of cost, or shall receive
5comprehensive clinical family planning services under the program
6established in Division 24 (commencing with Section 24000) either
7if they are eligible for Medi-Cal with a share of cost or if they are
8otherwise eligible under Section 24003.

9(8) For purposes of this subdivision, “comprehensive clinical
10family planning services” means the process of establishing
11objectives for the number and spacing of children, and selecting
12the means by which those objectives may be achieved. These
13means include a broad range of acceptable and effective methods
14and services to limit or enhance fertility, including contraceptive
15methods, federal Food and Drug Administration approved
16contraceptive drugs, devices, and supplies, natural family planning,
17abstinence methods, and basic, limited fertility management.
18Comprehensive clinical family planning services include, but are
19not limited to, preconception counseling, maternal and fetal health
20counseling, general reproductive health care, including diagnosis
21and treatment of infections and conditions, including cancer, that
22threaten reproductive capability, medical family planning treatment
23and procedures, including supplies and followup, and
24informational, counseling, and educational services.
25Comprehensive clinical family planning services shall not include
26abortion, pregnancy testing solely for the purposes of referral for
27abortion or services ancillary to abortions, or pregnancy care that
28is not incident to the diagnosis of pregnancy. Comprehensive
29clinical family planning services shall be subject to utilization
30control and include all of the following:

31(A) Family planning related services and male and female
32sterilization. Family planning services for men and women shall
33include emergency services and services for complications directly
34related to the contraceptive method, federal Food and Drug
35Administration approved contraceptive drugs, devices, and
36supplies, and followup, consultation, and referral services, as
37indicated, which may require treatment authorization requests.

38(B) All United States Department of Agriculture, federal Food
39and Drug Administration approved contraceptive drugs, devices,
P87   1and supplies that are in keeping with current standards of practice
2and from which the individual may choose.

3(C) Culturally and linguistically appropriate health education
4and counseling services, including informed consent, that include
5all of the following:

6(i) Psychosocial and medical aspects of contraception.

7(ii) Sexuality.

8(iii) Fertility.

9(iv) Pregnancy.

10(v) Parenthood.

11(vi) Infertility.

12(vii) Reproductive health care.

13(viii) Preconception and nutrition counseling.

14(ix) Prevention and treatment of sexually transmitted infection.

15(x) Use of contraceptive methods, federal Food and Drug
16Administration approved contraceptive drugs, devices, and
17supplies.

18(xi) Possible contraceptive consequences and followup.

19(xii) Interpersonal communication and negotiation of
20relationships to assist individuals and couples in effective
21contraceptive method use and planning families.

22(D) A comprehensive health history, updated at the next periodic
23visit (between 11 and 24 months after initial examination) that
24includes a complete obstetrical history, gynecological history,
25contraceptive history, personal medical history, health risk factors,
26and family health history, including genetic or hereditary
27conditions.

28(E) A complete physical examination on initial and subsequent
29periodic visits.

30(F) Services, drugs, devices, and supplies deemed by the federal
31Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to be appropriate for
32inclusion in the program.

33(9) In order to maximize the availability of federal financial
34participation under this subdivision, the director shall have the
35discretion to implement the Family PACT successor state plan
36amendment retroactively to July 1, 2010.

37(ab) (1) Purchase of prescribed enteral nutrition products is
38covered, subject to the Medi-Cal list of enteral nutrition products
39and utilization controls.

P88   1(2) Purchase of enteral nutrition products is limited to those
2products to be administered through a feeding tube, including, but
3not limited to, a gastric, nasogastric, or jejunostomy tube.
4Beneficiaries under the Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis,
5and Treatment Program shall be exempt from this paragraph.

6(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), the department may deem
7an enteral nutrition product, not administered through a feeding
8tube, including, but not limited to, a gastric, nasogastric, or
9jejunostomy tube, a benefit for patients with diagnoses, including,
10but not limited to, malabsorption and inborn errors of metabolism,
11if the product has been shown to be neither investigational nor
12experimental when used as part of a therapeutic regimen to prevent
13serious disability or death.

14(4) Notwithstanding Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
1511340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code,
16the department may implement the amendments to this subdivision
17made by the act that added this paragraph by means of all-county
18letters, provider bulletins, or similar instructions, without taking
19regulatory action.

20(5) The amendments made to this subdivision by the act that
21added this paragraph shall be implemented June 1, 2011, or on the
22first day of the first calendar month following 60 days after the
23date the department secures all necessary federal approvals to
24implement this section, whichever is later.

25(ac) Diabetic testing supplies are covered when provided by a
26pharmacy, subject to utilization controls.



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