BILL NUMBER: AB 213	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 18, 2013
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 15, 2013
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 1, 2013

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Logue
   (Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Pan)
   (Coauthors: Assembly Members Conway, Beth Gaines, Harkey, Jones,
Morrell, Nestande, and Wilk)

                        JANUARY 31, 2013

   An act to add Section 712 to the Business and Professions Code,
and to add Section 131136 to the Health and Safety Code, relating to
healing arts.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 213, as amended, Logue. Healing arts: licensure and
certification requirements: military experience.
   Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of various
healing arts professions and vocations by boards within the
Department of Consumer Affairs. Existing law requires the rules and
regulations of these healing arts boards to provide for methods of
evaluating education, training, and experience obtained in military
service if such training is applicable to the requirements of the
particular profession or vocation regulated by the board. Under
existing law, specified other healing arts professions and vocations
are licensed or certified and regulated by the State Department of
Public Health. In some instances, a board with the Department of
Consumer Affairs or the State Department of Public Health approves
schools offering educational course credit for meeting licensing or
certification qualifications and requirements.
   This bill would require the State Department of Public Health,
upon the presentation of evidence by an applicant for licensure or
certification, to accept education, training, and practical
experience completed by an applicant in military service toward the
qualifications and requirements to receive a license or certificate
for specified professions and vocations if that education, training,
or experience is equivalent to the standards of the department. If a
board within the Department of Consumer Affairs or the State
Department of Public Health accredits or otherwise approves schools
offering educational course credit for meeting licensing and
certification qualifications and requirements, the bill would, not
later than January 1, 2015, require those schools seeking
accreditation or approval to have procedures in place to evaluate an
applicant's military education, training, and practical experience
toward the completion of an educational program that would qualify a
person to apply for licensure or certification, as specified.
   Under existing law, the Department of Veterans Affairs has
specified powers and duties relating to various programs serving
veterans. Under existing law, the Chancellor of the California State
University and the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges
have specified powers and duties relating to statewide health
education programs.
   With respect to complying with the bill's requirements and
obtaining specified funds to support compliance with these
provisions, this bill would require the Department of Veterans
Affairs, the Chancellor of the California State University, and the
Chancellor of the California Community Colleges to provide technical
assistance to the healing arts boards within the Department of
Consumer Affairs, the State Department of Public Health, and to the
schools offering, or seeking to offer, educational course credit for
meeting licensing qualifications and requirements.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  This act shall be known, and may be cited, as the
Veterans Health Care Workforce Act of 2013.
  SEC. 2.  (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the
following:
   (1) Lack of health care providers continues to be a significant
barrier to access to health care services in medically underserved
urban and rural areas of California.
   (2) Veterans of the United States Armed Forces and the California
National Guard gain invaluable education, training, and practical
experience through their military service.
   (3) According to the federal Department of Defense, as of June
2011, one million veterans were unemployed nationally and the jobless
rate for post-9/11 veterans was 13.3 percent, with young male
veterans 18 to 24 years of age experiencing an unemployment rate of
21.9 percent.
   (4) According to the federal Department of Defense, during the
2011 federal fiscal year, 8,854 enlisted service members with medical
classifications separated from active duty.
   (5) According to the federal Department of Defense, during the
2011 federal fiscal year, 16,777 service members who separated from
active duty listed California as their state of residence.
   (6) It is critical, both to veterans seeking to transition to
civilian health care professions and to patients living in
underserved urban and rural areas of California, that the Legislature
ensures that veteran applicants for licensure by healing arts boards
within the Department of Consumer Affairs or the State Department of
Public Health are expedited through the qualifications and
requirements process.
   (b) It is the intent of the Legislature to ensure that boards
within the Department of Consumer Affairs and the State Department of
Public Health and schools offering educational course credit for
meeting licensing qualifications and requirements fully and
expeditiously recognize and provide credit for an applicant's
military education, training, and practical experience.
  SEC. 3.  Section 712 is added to the Business and Professions Code,
to read:
   712.  (a) Not later than January 1, 2015, if a board under this
division accredits or otherwise approves schools offering educational
course credit for meeting licensing qualifications and requirements,
the board shall require a school seeking accreditation or approval
to submit to the board proof that the school has procedures in place
to evaluate, upon presentation of satisfactory evidence by the
applicant, the applicant's military education, training, and
practical experience toward the completion of an educational program
that would qualify a person to apply for licensure if the school
determines that the education, training, or practical experience is
equivalent to the standards of the board. A board that requires a
school to be accredited by a national organization shall not impose
requirements on the school that conflict with the standards of the
national organization.
   (b) With respect to  complying   compliance
 with the requirements of this section  ,  including
the determination of equivalency between the education, training, or
practical experience of an applicant and the board's standards, and
obtaining state, federal, or private funds to support compliance with
this section, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Chancellor of
the California State University, and the Chancellor of the California
Community Colleges shall provide technical assistance to the boards
under this division and to the schools under this section. 
   (c) Nothing in this section shall interfere with an educational,
certification, or licensing requirement or standard set by a
licensing entity or certification board or other appropriate healing
arts regulatory agency or entity, to practice health care in the
state. 
  SEC. 4.  Section 131136 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to
read:
   131136.  (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
department shall, upon the presentation of satisfactory evidence by
an applicant for licensure or certification in one of the professions
described in subdivision (b), accept the education, training, and
practical experience completed by the applicant as a member of the
United States Armed Forces or Military Reserves of the United States,
the national guard of any state, the military reserves of any state,
or the naval militia of any state, toward the qualifications and
requirements for licensure or certification by the department if the
department determines that the education, training, or practical
experience is equivalent to the standards of the department.
   (b) The following professions are subject to this section:
   (1) Medical laboratory technician as described in Section 1260.3
of the Business and Professions Code.
   (2) Clinical laboratory scientist as described in Section 1261 of
the Business and Professions Code.
   (3) Radiologic technologist as described in Chapter 6 (commencing
with Section 114840) of Part 9 of Division 104.
   (4) Nuclear medicine technologist as described in Chapter 4
(commencing with Section 107150) of Part 1 of Division 104.
   (5) Certified nurse assistant as described in Article 9
(commencing with Section 1337) of Chapter 2 of Division 2.
   (6) Certified home health aide as described in Section 1736.1.
   (7) Certified hemodialysis technician as described in Section
1247.61 of the Business and Professions Code.
   (8) Nursing home administrator as described in Section 1416.2.
   (c) Not later than January 1, 2015, if the department accredits or
otherwise approves schools offering educational course credit for
meeting licensing and certification qualifications and requirements,
the department shall require a school seeking accreditation or
approval to submit to the board proof that the school has procedures
in place to fully accept an applicant's military education, training,
and practical experience toward the completion of an educational
program that would qualify a person to apply for licensure or
certification if the school determines that the education, training,
or practical experience is equivalent to the standards of the
department. If the department requires a school to be accredited by a
national organization, the requirement of the department shall not,
in any way, conflict with standards set by the national organization.

   (d) With respect to complying with the requirements of this
section including the determination of equivalency between the
education, training, or practical experience of an applicant and the
department's standards, and obtaining state, federal, or private
funds to support compliance with this section, the Department of
Veterans Affairs, the Chancellor of the California State University,
and the Chancellor of the California Community Colleges shall provide
technical assistance to the department, to the State Public Health
Officer, and to the schools described in this section. 
   (e) Nothing in this section shall interfere with an educational,
certification, or licensing requirement or standard set by a
licensing entity or certification board or other appropriate healing
arts regulatory agency or entity, to practice health care in
California.