Bill Text: GA HB60 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Licensing requirements and exceptions; professional counseling, social work, or marriage and family therapy; provisions
Spectrum: Moderate Partisan Bill (Republican 6-1)
Status: (Passed) 2009-07-01 - Effective Date [HB60 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2009-HB60-Introduced.html
09 LC
21 0061/AP
House
Bill 60 (AS PASSED HOUSE AND SENATE)
By:
Representatives Jacobs of the
80th,
Willard of the
49th,
Wilkinson of the
52nd,
Lindsey of the
54th,
Lunsford of the
110th,
and others
A
BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
AN ACT
To
amend Code Section 43-10A-7 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating
to licensing requirements and exceptions, so as to provide that no person exempt
from the licensing requirements of such Code section shall hold himself or
herself out as being licensed to practice professional counseling, social work,
or marriage and family therapy or use any term or other indicia implying that he
or she is licensed to practice professional counseling, social work, or marriage
and family therapy or any combination thereof; to repeal conflicting laws; and
for other purposes.
BE
IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
1.
Code
Section 43-10A-7 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated, relating to
licensing requirements and exceptions, is amended by revising subsection (b) as
follows:
"(b)
The prohibition of subsection (a) of this Code section shall not apply to the
following
persons;
provided, however, that no such person shall hold himself or herself out as
being licensed to practice professional counseling, social work, or marriage and
family therapy or any combination thereof or use the words 'licensed' or
'licensure' or any other words, letters, titles, images, or figures stating or
implying that he or she is licensed to practice any such specialty, and no
organization shall present itself as authorized to license individuals to
practice any such specialty:
(1)
Persons licensed to practice medicine or psychology under Chapter 34 or 39,
respectively, of this title;
(2)
Persons engaged in the practice of a specialty as an employee of any agency or
department of the federal government or any licensed hospital or long-term care
facility, but only when engaged in that practice as an employee of such agency,
department, hospital, or facility;
(3)(A)
Persons who, prior to July 1, 2000, engaged in the practice of a specialty as an
employee of any community service board or similar entity created by general law
to provide services to persons with disabilities, as defined in Chapter 2 of
Title 37, or any agency or department of the state or any of its political
subdivisions, but only when engaged in that practice as an employee of such an
agency or department.
(B)
Persons who engage in the practice of social work as employees of any community
service board or similar entity created by general law to provide services to
persons with disabilities, as defined in Chapter 2 of Title 37, or any agency or
department of the state or any of its political subdivisions, but only when
engaged in that practice as employees of such community service board or similar
entity, agency, or department, and persons or entities which contract to provide
social work services with any community service board or similar entity or any
agency or department of the state or any of its political subdivisions, but such
contracting persons and entities shall only be exempt under this subparagraph
when engaged in providing social work services pursuant to those contracts and
shall only be exempt until January 1, 1996.
(C)
Persons who engage in the practice of professional counseling as employees of
privately owned correctional facilities, the Department of Corrections,
Department of Human Resources, any county board of health, or any community
service board or similar entity created by general law to provide services to
persons with disabilities, as defined in Chapter 2 of Title 37, but only when
engaged in that practice as employees of such privately owned correctional
facility, department, board, or entity and persons or entities which contract to
provide professional counseling services with such department or board of
health, but such contracting persons and entities shall only be exempt under
this subparagraph when engaged in providing professional counseling services
pursuant to those contracts and shall only be exempt until January 1,
1996;
(4)
Students of a recognized educational institution who are preparing to become
practitioners of a specialty, but only if the services they render as such
practitioners are under supervision and direction and their student status is
clearly designated by the title 'trainee' or 'intern';
(5)
Persons who have obtained a master's degree from a program accredited by the
Council on Social Work Education and who are practicing social work under
direction and supervision while preparing to take the master's social work
licensing examination, but only for a period of up to one year following the
granting of such degree;
(6)
Persons who have obtained one of the graduate degrees required for licensure as
a professional counselor or marriage and family therapist and who are practicing
such specialty under supervision and direction in order to obtain the experience
required for licensure;
(7)
Elementary, middle, or secondary school counselors and school social workers
certificated as such by the Department of Education, Professional Standards
Commission, or its successor agency but only when practicing within the scope of
such certification and only when designated by the title 'school counselor,'
'school social worker,' or a title designated by the school system in which they
are employed for persons practicing within such certification;
(8)
Persons registered as rehabilitation suppliers by the Georgia Board of Workers'
Compensation, including those registered as of July 1, 1992, but only when
practicing rehabilitation counseling as a rehabilitation supplier for workers'
compensation claimants and only so long as they do not use any titles other than
titles describing the certifications or licenses they are required to hold under
Code Section 34-9-200.1;
(9)
Active members of the clergy but only when the practice of their specialty is in
the course of their service as clergy;
(10)
Members of religious ministries responsible to their established ecclesiastical
authority who possess a master's degree or its equivalent in theological
studies;
(11)
Persons engaged in the practice of a specialty in accordance with Biblical
doctrine in public or nonprofit agencies or entities or in private
practice;
(12)
Persons engaged in the practice of a specialty as an employee of the Division of
Family and Children Services of the Department of Human Resources but only when
engaged in such practice as an employee of that division;
(13)
Persons who have obtained a master's degree from a program accredited by the
Council on Social Work Education and who are engaged in the practice of
community organization, policy, planning, research, or administration may use
the title 'social worker' and may only engage in such practice;
(14)
Persons who have obtained a bachelor's degree in social work from a program
accredited by the Council on Social Work Education may use the title 'social
worker' and may practice social work, but they may not practice autonomously and
may only practice under direction and supervision, and, notwithstanding the
definitions in paragraphs (5) and (15) of Code Section 43-10A-3, such
supervision shall be provided by a social worker who, as a minimum, has been
awarded a bachelor's or a master's degree in social work from a program
accredited by the Council on Social Work Education and who has completed at
least two years of post-degree practice in the field of social
work;
(15)
Addiction counselors who have met the certification requirements of the Georgia
Addiction Counselors' Association or any other similar private association of
addiction counselors which association includes among its certification
requirements the following:
(A)
Attainment of a high school diploma or a general educational development (GED)
equivalency diploma;
(B)
Completion of at least 4,000 hours of full-time paid experience under direction
provided by a person acceptable to the association in the practice of chemical
dependency and abuse counseling;
(C)
Completion of at least 180 hours of education in the field of addiction and
addiction counseling or treatment; and
(D)
Completion of at least 220 hours of supervision provided by a supervisor who
meets the qualifications established by the association and which teaches
chemical dependency and abuse counseling.
Services
which may be provided under this paragraph shall be limited to those practices
sanctioned by the certifying association and shall in any event be limited to
the provision of chemical dependency treatment in the following settings:
screening; intake; orientation; assessment for addiction diseases; treatment
planning; individual, family, and group addiction counseling; case management;
crisis intervention; client education; referral, reporting, and record keeping;
and consultation with other professionals in regard to client treatment and
services. Persons exempt under this paragraph shall not use any title
indicating or implying that they are licensed under this chapter;
(15.1)
Persons who are training to be addiction counselors but only when such persons
are:
(A)
Employed by an agency or facility that is licensed to provide addiction
counseling;
(B)
Supervised and directed by a supervisor who meets the qualifications established
by the Georgia Addiction Counselor's Association or any other similar private
association of addiction counselors which includes among its certification
requirements the criteria specified in paragraph (15) of this
subsection;
(C)
Graduated from high school or have a general educational development (GED)
equivalency diploma; and
(D)
Actively seeking certification in accordance with the requirements of paragraph
(15) of this subsection.
No
person shall qualify for the exception provided under this paragraph for a
period in excess of three years. Services which may be provided under this
paragraph shall be limited to those practices sanctioned by the certifying
association and shall in any event be limited to the provision of chemical
dependency treatment in the following settings: screening; intake; orientation;
assessment for addiction diseases; treatment planning; individual, family, and
group addiction counseling; case management; crises intervention; client
education; referral, reporting, and record keeping; and consultation with other
professionals in regard to client treatment and services. Persons exempt under
this paragraph shall not use any title indicating or implying that they are
licensed under this
chapter.;
(16)
Any person engaged in the practice of professional counseling as an employee or
student peer counselor of the University System of Georgia or its educational
units, the Technical College System of Georgia or its educational units, or of a
public or private college or university within this state, but only when engaged
in that practice as such an employee or student peer counselor and excepting the
use of psychotherapeutic techniques to evaluate and treat emotional and mental
illness, disorder, or dysfunction;
(17)
Persons who engage in the practice of professional counseling, excluding the use
of psychotherapy, as employees of organizations which maintain, now or in the
future, accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation
Facilities or the national Accreditation Council for Agencies Serving the Blind
and Visually Handicapped, but only when those persons are providing those
services as employees of those organizations pursuant to contracts between such
organizations and the state or a department, agency, county, municipality, or
political subdivision of the state;
(18)
Persons engaged in the practice of a specialty as an employee of the Department
of Labor, but only when engaged in such practice as an employee of such
department; and
(19)
Persons currently licensed to practice a specialty in another jurisdiction and
who are practicing such specialty within a defined disaster area in order to
alleviate the impact on persons affected by a disaster as defined in paragraph
(1) of Code Section 38-3-91 or a state of emergency as defined in paragraph (7)
of Code Section 38-3-3, but only when such specialty services are provided
without cost to the recipients, and only for a maximum of 30 consecutive days
following a disaster or a state of emergency."
SECTION
2.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.