The Virginia Register OF
REGULATIONS is an official state publication issued every other week
throughout the year. Indexes are published quarterly, and are cumulative for
the year. The Virginia Register has several functions. The new and
amended sections of regulations, both as proposed and as finally adopted, are
required by law to be published in the Virginia Register. In addition,
the Virginia Register is a source of other information about state
government, including petitions for rulemaking, emergency regulations,
executive orders issued by the Governor, and notices of public hearings on
regulations.
ADOPTION,
AMENDMENT, AND REPEAL OF REGULATIONS
An
agency wishing to adopt, amend, or repeal regulations must first publish in the
Virginia Register a notice of intended regulatory action; a basis,
purpose, substance and issues statement; an economic impact analysis prepared
by the Department of Planning and Budget; the agency’s response to the economic
impact analysis; a summary; a notice giving the public an opportunity to
comment on the proposal; and the text of the proposed regulation.
Following
publication of the proposal in the Virginia Register, the promulgating agency
receives public comments for a minimum of 60 days. The Governor reviews the
proposed regulation to determine if it is necessary to protect the public
health, safety and welfare, and if it is clearly written and easily
understandable. If the Governor chooses to comment on the proposed regulation,
his comments must be transmitted to the agency and the Registrar no later than
15 days following the completion of the 60-day public comment period. The
Governor’s comments, if any, will be published in the Virginia Register.
Not less than 15 days following the completion of the 60-day public comment
period, the agency may adopt the proposed regulation.
The
Joint Commission on Administrative Rules (JCAR) or the appropriate standing
committee of each house of the General Assembly may meet during the
promulgation or final adoption process and file an objection with the Registrar
and the promulgating agency. The objection will be published in the Virginia
Register. Within 21 days after receipt by the agency of a legislative
objection, the agency shall file a response with the Registrar, the objecting
legislative body, and the Governor.
When
final action is taken, the agency again publishes the text of the regulation as
adopted, highlighting all changes made to the proposed regulation and
explaining any substantial changes made since publication of the proposal. A
30-day final adoption period begins upon final publication in the Virginia
Register.
The
Governor may review the final regulation during this time and, if he objects,
forward his objection to the Registrar and the agency. In addition to or in
lieu of filing a formal objection, the Governor may suspend the effective date
of a portion or all of a regulation until the end of the next regular General
Assembly session by issuing a directive signed by a majority of the members of
the appropriate legislative body and the Governor. The Governor’s objection or
suspension of the regulation, or both, will be published in the Virginia
Register. If the Governor finds that changes made to the proposed
regulation have substantial impact, he may require the agency to provide an
additional 30-day public comment period on the changes. Notice of the
additional public comment period required by the Governor will be published in
the Virginia Register.
The
agency shall suspend the regulatory process for 30 days when it receives
requests from 25 or more individuals to solicit additional public comment,
unless the agency determines that the changes have minor or inconsequential
impact.
A
regulation becomes effective at the conclusion of the 30-day final adoption
period, or at any other later date specified by the promulgating agency, unless
(i) a legislative objection has been filed, in which event the regulation,
unless withdrawn, becomes effective on the date specified, which shall be after
the expiration of the 21-day objection period; (ii) the Governor exercises his
authority to require the agency to provide for additional public comment, in
which event the regulation, unless withdrawn, becomes effective on the date
specified, which shall be after the expiration of the period for which the
Governor has provided for additional public comment; (iii) the Governor and the
General Assembly exercise their authority to suspend the effective date of a
regulation until the end of the next regular legislative session; or (iv) the
agency suspends the regulatory process, in which event the regulation, unless
withdrawn, becomes effective on the date specified, which shall be after the
expiration of the 30-day public comment period and no earlier than 15 days from
publication of the readopted action.
A
regulatory action may be withdrawn by the promulgating agency at any time
before the regulation becomes final.
FAST-TRACK
RULEMAKING PROCESS
Section
2.2-4012.1 of the Code of Virginia provides an exemption from certain
provisions of the Administrative Process Act for agency regulations deemed by
the Governor to be noncontroversial. To use this process, Governor's
concurrence is required and advance notice must be provided to certain
legislative committees. Fast-track regulations will become effective on the
date noted in the regulatory action if no objections to using the process are
filed in accordance with § 2.2-4012.1.
EMERGENCY
REGULATIONS
Pursuant
to § 2.2-4011 of the Code of Virginia, an agency, upon consultation
with the Attorney General, and at the discretion of the Governor, may adopt
emergency regulations that are necessitated by an emergency situation. An
agency may also adopt an emergency regulation when Virginia statutory law or
the appropriation act or federal law or federal regulation requires that a
regulation be effective in 280 days or less from its enactment. The emergency regulation becomes operative upon its
adoption and filing with the Registrar of Regulations, unless a later date is
specified. Emergency regulations are limited to no more than 18 months in
duration; however, may be extended for six months under certain circumstances
as provided for in § 2.2-4011 D. Emergency regulations are published as
soon as possible in the Register.
During
the time the emergency status is in effect, the agency may proceed with the
adoption of permanent regulations through the usual procedures. To begin
promulgating the replacement regulation, the agency must (i) file the Notice of
Intended Regulatory Action with the Registrar within 60 days of the effective
date of the emergency regulation and (ii) file the proposed regulation with the
Registrar within 180 days of the effective date of the emergency regulation. If
the agency chooses not to adopt the regulations, the emergency status ends when
the prescribed time limit expires.
STATEMENT
The
foregoing constitutes a generalized statement of the procedures to be followed.
For specific statutory language, it is suggested that Article 2 (§ 2.2-4006
et seq.) of Chapter 40 of Title 2.2 of the Code of Virginia be examined
carefully.
CITATION
TO THE VIRGINIA REGISTER
The Virginia
Register is cited by volume, issue, page number, and date. 34:8 VA.R.
763-832 December 11, 2017, refers to Volume 34, Issue 8, pages 763 through
832 of the Virginia Register issued on
December 11, 2017.
The
Virginia Register of Regulations is
published pursuant to Article 6 (§ 2.2-4031 et seq.) of Chapter 40 of
Title 2.2 of the Code of Virginia.
Members
of the Virginia Code Commission: John
S. Edwards, Chair; James A. "Jay" Leftwich, Vice Chair;
Ryan T. McDougle; Nicole Cheuk; Rita Davis; Leslie L. Lilley; Thomas
M. Moncure, Jr.; Christopher R. Nolen; Charles S. Sharp; Samuel T. Towell; Malfourd
W. Trumbo; Mark J. Vucci.
Staff
of the Virginia Register: Karen
Perrine, Registrar of Regulations; Anne Bloomsburg, Assistant
Registrar; Nikki Clemons, Regulations Analyst; Rhonda Dyer,
Publications Assistant; Terri Edwards, Senior Operations Staff
Assistant.
PUBLICATION SCHEDULE AND DEADLINES
Vol. 36 Iss. 4 - October 14, 2019
November 2019 through December 2020
Volume: Issue
|
Material Submitted By Noon*
|
Will Be Published On
|
36:6
|
October 23, 2019
|
November 11, 2019
|
36:7
|
November 6, 2019
|
November 25, 2019
|
36:8
|
November 18, 2019 (Monday)
|
December 9, 2019
|
36:9
|
December 4, 2019
|
December 23, 2019
|
36:10
|
December 18, 2019
|
January 6, 2020
|
36:11
|
January 1, 2020
|
January 20, 2020
|
36:12
|
January 15, 2020
|
February 3, 2020
|
36:13
|
January 29, 2020
|
February 17, 2020
|
36:14
|
February 12. 2020
|
March 2, 2020
|
36:15
|
February 26, 2020
|
March 16, 2020
|
36:16
|
March 11, 2020
|
March 30, 2020
|
36:17
|
March 25, 2020
|
April 13, 2020
|
36:18
|
April 8, 2020
|
April 27, 2020
|
36:19
|
April 22. 2020
|
May 11, 2020
|
36:20
|
May 6, 2020
|
May 25, 2020
|
36:21
|
May 20, 2020
|
June 8, 2020
|
36:22
|
June 3, 2020
|
June 22, 2020
|
36:23
|
June 17, 2020
|
July 6, 2020
|
36:24
|
July 1, 2020
|
July 20, 2020
|
36:25
|
July 15, 2020
|
August 3, 2020
|
36:26
|
July 29, 2020
|
August 17, 2020
|
37:1
|
August 12, 2020
|
August 31, 2020
|
37:2
|
August 26, 2020
|
September 14, 2020
|
37:3
|
September 9, 2020
|
September 28, 2020
|
37:4
|
September 23, 2020
|
October 12, 2020
|
37:5
|
October 7, 2020
|
October 26, 2020
|
37:6
|
October 21, 2020
|
November 9, 2020
|
37:7
|
November 4, 2020
|
November 23, 2020
|
37:8
|
November 16, 2020 (Monday)
|
December 7, 2020
|
37:9
|
December 2, 2020
|
December 21, 2020
|
*Filing deadlines are Wednesdays
unless otherwise specified.
PETITIONS FOR RULEMAKING
Vol. 36 Iss. 4 - October 14, 2019
TITLE
18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF COUNSELING
Initial Agency Notice
Title of Regulation: 18VAC115-50.
Regulations Governing the Practice of Marriage and Family Therapy.
Statutory Authority: § 54.1-2400 of the Code of
Virginia.
Name of Petitioner: David and Suzanne Mikkelson.
Nature of Petitioner's Request: To amend 18VAC115-50-55
to reduce the required internship number of hours of experience with couples
and families from 200 to 120 of the required 240 hours.
Agency Plan for Disposition of Request: In accordance
with Virginia law, the petition will be filed with the Registrar of Regulations
and published on October 14, 2019, with comment requested until November 13,
2019. It will also be placed on the Virginia Regulatory Town Hall and available
for comments to be posted electronically. At its first meeting following the
close of comment, which is scheduled for February 7, 2020, the board will
consider the request to amend regulations and all comment received in support
or opposition. The petitioner will be informed of the board's response and any
action it approves.
Public Comment Deadline: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Jaime Hoyle, Executive Director, Board
of Counseling, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone
(804) 367-4406, or email jaime.hoyle@dhp.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-11 Filed September 16, 2019, 12:24 p.m.
PERIODIC REVIEWS AND SMALL BUSINESS IMPACT REVIEWS
Vol. 36 Iss. 4 - October 14, 2019
TITLE 12. HEALTH
STATE BOARD OF HEALTH
Agency Notice
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the State Board of Health is conducting a periodic review and small business impact review of 12VAC5-381, Regulations for the Licensure of Home Care Organizations. The review of this regulation will be guided by the principles in Executive Order 14 (as amended, July 16, 2018).
The Notice of Intended Regulatory Action for 12VAC5-381, which is published in this issue of the Virginia Register, serves as the announcement of the periodic review.
Contact Information: Robert Payne, Director, Office of Licensure and Certification, Virginia Department of Health, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 401, Richmond, VA 23230-4920, telephone (804) 367-2109, FAX (804) 527-4502, or email robert.payne@vdh.virginia.gov.
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TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD FOR BARBERS AND COSMETOLOGY
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC41-11, Public Participation Guidelines, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology is publishing its report of findings dated September 24, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 2.2-4007.02 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology solicit the input of interested parties in the formation and development of its regulations. Therefore the continued need for the regulation is established in statute. The regulation is necessary to protect public health, safety, and welfare by establishing public participation guidelines that promote public involvement in the development, amendment, or repeal of an agency's regulation. By soliciting the input of interested parties, the board is better equipped to effectively regulate the occupation or profession. Since no complaints or comments were received during the public comment period, there does not appear to be a reason to amend or repeal the regulation. The regulation is clearly written and easily understandable. The regulation does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation.
The last periodic review of this regulation occurred in 2015. On September 9, 2019, the board reviewed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Stephen Kirschner, Regulatory Operations Administrator, Board for Barbers and Cosmetology, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (866) 245-9693, or email barbercosmo@dpor.virginia.gov.
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC41-20, Barbering and Cosmetology Regulations, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology is publishing its report of findings dated September 24, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 54.1-201.5 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology to promulgate regulations. The continued need for the regulation is established in statute. Repeal of the regulation would remove the current public protections provided by the regulation. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology provides protection to the safety and welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth by ensuring that only those individuals who meet specific criteria set forth in the statutes and regulations are eligible to receive a barber, cosmetology, nail or wax technician, instructor, salon, or school license or temporary permit. The board is also tasked with ensuring that its regulants meet standards of practice that are set forth in the regulation.
There were no comments or complaints received during the public comment period. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation. The most recent comprehensive regulatory review of the regulation took effect in February of 2017.
On September 9, 2019, the board reviewed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Stephen Kirschner, Regulatory Operations Administrator, Board for Barbers and Cosmetology, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (866) 245-9693, or email barbercosmo@dpor.virginia.gov.
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC41-50, Tattooing Regulations, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology is publishing its report of findings dated September 24, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 54.1-201.5 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology to promulgate regulations. The continued need for the regulation is established in statute. Repeal of the regulation would remove the current public protections provided by the regulation. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology provides protection to the safety and welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth by ensuring that only those individuals who meet specific criteria set forth in the statutes and regulations are eligible to receive a tattooing or permanent cosmetic tattooing, instructor, salon, parlor, or school license or temporary license. The board is also tasked with ensuring that its regulants meet standards of practice that are set forth in the regulation.
The sole comment received during the public comment period requested the elimination of regulation of the profession, an act that can only be undertaken by the General Assembly. There is an ongoing general review of this regulation, started in 2017, currently in the proposed stage. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation.
On September 9, 2019, the board reviewed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Stephen Kirschner, Regulatory Operations Administrator, Board for Barbers and Cosmetology, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (866) 245-9693, or email barbercosmo@dpor.virginia.gov.
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC41-60, Body Piercing Regulations, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology is publishing its report of findings dated September 24, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 54.1-201.5 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology to promulgate regulations. The continued need for the regulation is established in statute. Repeal of the regulation would remove the current public protections provided by the regulation. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology provides protection to the safety and welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth by ensuring that only those individuals who meet specific criteria set forth in the statutes and regulations are eligible to receive a body piercing or salon license. The board is also tasked with ensuring that its regulants meet standards of practice that are set forth in the regulation.
The sole comment received during the public comment period supported the continued regulation of the industry. There is an ongoing general review of this regulation, started in 2017, currently in the proposed stage. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation.
On September 9, 2019, the board reviewed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Stephen Kirschner, Regulatory Operations Administrator, Board for Barbers and Cosmetology, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (866) 245-9693, or email barbercosmo@dpor.virginia.gov.
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC41-70, Esthetics Regulations, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology is publishing its report of findings dated September 24, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 54.1-201.5 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Board for Barbers and Cosmetology to promulgate regulations. The continued need for the regulation is established in statute. Repeal of the regulation would remove the current public protections provided by the regulation. The Board for Barbers and Cosmetology provides protection to the safety and welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth by ensuring that only those individuals who meet specific criteria set forth in the statutes and regulations are eligible to receive an esthetician, master esthetician, instructor, spa, or school license or temporary permit. The board is also tasked with ensuring that its regulants meet standards of practice that are set forth in the regulation.
The board received one public comment requesting a new type of license, which requires a statutory change. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation. The most recent comprehensive regulatory review of the regulation took effect in February of 2017.
On September 9, 2019, the board reviewed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Stephen Kirschner, Regulatory Operations Administrator, Board for Barbers and Cosmetology, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (866) 245-9693, or email barbercosmo@dpor.virginia.gov.
CEMETERY BOARD
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Cemetery Board conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC47-11, Public Participation Guidelines, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Cemetery Board is publishing its report of findings dated September 18, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 2.2-4007.02 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Cemetery Board to solicit the input of interested parties in the formation and development of its regulations. Therefore, the continued need for the regulation is established in statute. The regulation is necessary to protect public health, safety, and welfare by establishing public participation guidelines that promote public involvement in the development, amendment, or repeal of an agency's regulation. By soliciting the input of interested parties, the board is better equipped to effectively regulate the occupation or profession.
No comments or complaints were received during the public comment period. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation.
The most recent periodic review of the regulation occurred in 2015. On September 18, 2019, the board discussed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Christine Martine, Executive Director, Cemetery Board, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8552, FAX (866) 826-8863, or email cemetery@dpor.virginia.gov.
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Cemetery Board conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC47-20, Cemetery Board Rules and Regulations, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Cemetery Board is publishing its report of findings dated September 18, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 54.1-201.5 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Cemetery Board to promulgate regulations. The continued need for the regulation is established in statute. Repeal of the regulation would remove the current public protections provided by the regulation. The Cemetery Board provides protection to the safety and welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth by ensuring that only those individuals who meet specific criteria set forth in the statutes and regulations are eligible to receive a cemetery company license and sales personnel registration. The board is also tasked with ensuring that its regulants meet standards of practice that are set forth in the regulations.
No comments or complaints were received during the public comment period. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation.
The most recent periodic review of the regulation occurred in 2015. On September 18, 2019, the board discussed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Christine Martine, Executive Director, Cemetery Board, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8552, FAX (866) 826-8863, or email cemetery@dpor.virginia.gov.
COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITY BOARD
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Common Interest Community Board conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC48-30, Condominium Regulations, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Common Interest Community Board is publishing its report of findings dated September 17, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Sections 54.1-2349 and 55-79.98 of the Code of Virginia mandate the Common Interest Community Board promulgate regulations. The continued need for the regulation is established in statute. Repeal of the regulation would remove the current public protections provided by the regulation.
The Common Interest Community Board provides protection to the public welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth by assuring full and fair disclosure in the offering and disposition of condominium interests and by establishing standards of conduct for condominium declarants.
No comments or complaints were received during the public comment period. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation. This regulation became effective on August 1, 2015, and this is the first periodic review of the regulation. On September 5, 2019, the board discussed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined through proper unanimous vote that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Trisha Henshaw, Executive Director, Common Interest Community Board, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8510, FAX (866) 490-2723, or email cic@dpor.virginia.gov.
BOARD FOR HEARING AID SPECIALISTS AND OPTICIANS
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC80-11, Public Participation Guidelines, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians is publishing its report of findings dated September 24, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 2.2-4007.02 of the Code of Virginia mandates the board solicit the input of interested parties in the formation and development of its regulations. Therefore the continued need for the regulation is established in statute. The regulation is necessary to protect public health, safety, and welfare by establishing public participation guidelines that promote public involvement in the development, amendment, or repeal of an agency's regulation. By soliciting the input of interested parties, the board is better equipped to effectively regulate the occupation or profession. Since no complaints or comments were received during the public comment period, there does not appear to be a reason to amend or repeal the regulation. The regulation is clearly written and easily understandable. The regulation does not overlap, duplicate, or contravene federal or state law or regulation. The last periodic review of this regulation occurred in 2015.
On August 7, 2019, the board reviewed the regulation and, for the reasons stated in this section, determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed, but should be retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Stephen Kirschner, Regulatory Operations Administrator, Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (866) 245-9693, or email hearingaidspec@dpor.virginia.
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC80-20, Hearing Aid Specialists Regulations, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians is publishing its report of findings dated September 24, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 54.1-201.5 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians to promulgate regulations. The continued need for the regulation is established in statute. Repeal of the regulation would remove the current public protections provided by the regulation. The Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians provides protection to the safety and welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth by ensuring that only those individuals who meet specific criteria set forth in the statutes and regulations are eligible to receive a hearing aid specialist license. The board is also tasked with ensuring that its regulants meet standards of practice that are set forth in the regulations.
Since no complaints or comments were received during the public comment period, there does not appear to be a reason to amend or repeal the regulation. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation. The most recent comprehensive regulatory review of the regulation took effect in February of 2017.
On August 8, 2019, the board reviewed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Stephen Kirschner, Regulatory Operations Administrator, Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (866) 245-9693, or email hearingaidspec@dpor.virginia.
Report of Findings
Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians conducted a small business impact review of 18VAC80-30, Opticians Regulations, and determined that this regulation should be retained in its current form. The Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians is publishing its report of findings dated September 24, 2019, to support this decision in accordance with § 2.2-4007.1 F of the Code of Virginia.
Section 54.1-201.5 of the Code of Virginia mandates the Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians to promulgate regulations. The continued need for the regulation is established in statute. Repeal of the regulation would remove the current public protections provided by the regulation. The Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians provides protection to the safety and welfare of the citizens of the Commonwealth by ensuring that only those individuals who meet specific criteria set forth in the statutes and regulations are eligible to receive an optician license. The
board is also tasked with ensuring that its regulants meet standards of practice that are set forth in the regulation.
Since no complaints or comments were received during the public comment period, there does not appear to be a reason to amend or repeal the regulation. The regulation is clearly written, easily understandable, and does not overlap, duplicate, or conflict with federal or state law or regulation. The most recent comprehensive regulatory review of the regulation occurred in 2012.
On August 8, 2019, the board reviewed the regulation and for the reasons stated in this section determined that the regulation should not be amended or repealed but retained in its current form.
Contact Information: Stephen Kirschner, Regulatory Operations Administrator, Board for Hearing Aid Specialists and Opticians, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8590, FAX (866) 245-9693, or email hearingaidspec@dpor.virginia.
REAL ESTATE BOARD
Agency Notice
Pursuant to Executive Order 14 (as amended July 16, 2018) and §§ 2.2-4007.1 and 2.2-4017 of the Code of Virginia, the Real Estate Board is conducting a periodic review and small business impact review of each listed regulation. The review of each regulation will be guided by the principles in Executive Order 14 (as amended July 16, 2018).
18VAC135-11, Public Participation Guidelines
18VAC135-20, Virginia Real Estate Board Licensing Regulations
18VAC135-50, Fair Housing Regulations
The purpose of this review is to determine whether each regulation should be repealed, amended, or retained in its current form. Public comment is sought on the review of any issue relating to each regulation, including whether the regulation (i) is necessary for the protection of public health, safety, and welfare or for the economical performance of important governmental functions; (ii) minimizes the economic impact on small businesses in a manner consistent with the stated objectives of applicable law; and (iii) is clearly written and easily understandable.
Public comment period begins October 14, 2019, and ends November 4, 2019.
Comments may be submitted online to the Virginia Regulatory Town Hall at http://www.townhall.virginia.gov/L/Forums.cfm. Comments may also be sent to Christine Martine, Executive Director, Real Estate Board, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 400, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone (804) 367-8552, FAX (866) 826-8863, or email reboard@dpor.virginia.gov.
Comments must include the commenter's name and address (physical or email) information in order to receive a response to the comment from the agency. Following the close of the public comment period, a report of the review will be posted on the Town Hall and a report of the small business impact review will be published in the Virginia Register of Regulations.
NOTICES OF INTENDED REGULATORY ACTION
Vol. 36 Iss. 4 - October 14, 2019
TITLE 12. HEALTH
Regulation for the Licensure of Home Care Organizations
Notice of Intended Regulatory Action
Notice is hereby given in accordance with § 2.2-4007.01 of the
Code of Virginia that the State Board of Health intends to consider amending 12VAC5-381,
Regulation for the Licensure of Home Care Organizations. The purpose of the
proposed action is to assess all current regulation content, including the
informed consent contract, the qualifications and supervision of licensed and
nonlicensed personnel, the complaint procedure for consumers, the provision and
coordination of treatment and services provided by the organization, the
clinical records kept by the organization, the utilization and quality control
review procedures, and the arrangements for the continuing evaluation of the
quality of care provided. This action may address comments received during the
public comment period for this notice and subsequent stages of this action.
In addition, pursuant to Executive Order 14 (as amended, July
16, 2018) and § 2.2-4007.1 of the Code of Virginia, the agency is
conducting a periodic review and small business impact review of this
regulation to determine whether this regulation should be repealed, amended, or
retained in its current form. Public comment is sought on the review of any
issue relating to this regulation, including whether the regulation (i) is
necessary for the protection of public health, safety, and welfare; (ii)
minimizes the economic impact on small businesses consistent with the stated
objectives of applicable law; and (iii) is clearly written and easily
understandable.
The agency does not intend to hold a public hearing on the
proposed action after publication in the Virginia Register.
Statutory Authority: §§ 32.1-12 and 32.1-162.12 of the
Code of Virginia.
Public Comment Deadline: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Robert Payne, Director, Office of
Licensure and Certification, Virginia Department of Health, 9960 Mayland Drive,
Suite 401, Richmond, VA 23230-4920, telephone (804) 367-2109, FAX (804)
527-4502, or email robert.payne@vdh.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6178; Filed September 23, 2019, 3:45 p.m.
TITLE 12. HEALTH
Administration of Medical Assistance Services
Notice of Intended Regulatory Action
Notice is hereby given in accordance with § 2.2-4007.01 of the
Code of Virginia that the Board of Medical Assistance Services intends to
consider amending 12VAC30-20, Administration of Medical Assistance Services.
The purpose of the proposed action is to establish a more formalized process by
which to address administrative settlement agreements in a timely fashion. The
proposed action will include (i) in 12VAC30-20-550, establishing the process
for settlement agreement resolution between a Medicaid provider and the
Department of Medical Assistance Services and (ii) amendments to the existing
timelines, consistent with the new settlement agreement procedures, for issuing
the informal decision in an informal administrative appeal or the recommended
decision of the hearing officer in a formal administrative appeal.
The agency does not intend to hold a public hearing on the
proposed action after publication in the Virginia Register.
Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of
Virginia; 42 USC § 1396 et seq.
Public Comment Deadline: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Emily McClellan, Regulatory Supervisor,
Policy Division, Department of Medical Assistance Services, 600 East Broad
Street, Suite 1300, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 371-4300, FAX (804)
786-1680, or email emily.mcclellan@dmas.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-5615; Filed September 18, 2019, 12:31 p.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
Regulations Governing the Practice of Dental Hygiene
Notice of Intended Regulatory Action
Notice is hereby given in accordance with § 2.2-4007.01 of the
Code of Virginia that the Board of Dentistry intends to consider amending 18VAC60-25,
Regulations Governing the Practice of Dental Hygiene. The purpose of the
proposed action is to adopt the protocol for dental hygienists employed by the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services practicing under
remote supervision of a dentist in accordance with Chapter 86 of the 2019 Acts
of Assembly. The proposed action would also correct citations and update the
protocol for the remote supervision of dental hygienists employed by the
Virginia Department of Health.
The agency intends to hold a public hearing on the proposed
action after publication in the Virginia Register.
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-2722 of the
Code of Virginia.
Public Comment Deadline: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Sandra Reen, Executive Director, Board
of Dentistry, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone
(804) 367-4437, FAX (804) 527-4428, or email sandra.reen@dhp.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6044; Filed September 30, 2019, 10:32 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
Regulations Governing the Practice of Physician Assistants
Notice of Intended Regulatory Action
Notice is hereby given in accordance with § 2.2-4007.01 of the
Code of Virginia that the Board of Medicine intends to consider amending 18VAC85-50,
Regulations Governing the Practice of Physician Assistants. The purpose of
the proposed action is to comply with amendments to the Code of Virginia,
pursuant to Chapters 92 and 137 of the 2019 Acts of Assembly, that replace
practice by a physician assistant under the supervision of a physician or a
podiatrist with practice in collaboration and consultation with a patient care
team physician or patient care team podiatrist.
The agency intends to hold a public hearing on the proposed
action after publication in the Virginia Register.
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-2951.1
of the Code of Virginia.
Public Comment Deadline: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: William L. Harp, M.D., Executive
Director, Board of Medicine, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233,
telephone (804) 367-4558, FAX (804) 527-4429, or email
william.harp@dhp.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6083; Filed September 30, 2019, 10:33 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
Regulations Governing the Practice of Physical Therapy
Notice of Intended Regulatory Action
Notice is hereby given in accordance with § 2.2-4007.01 of the
Code of Virginia that the Board of Physical Therapy intends to consider
amending 18VAC112-20, Regulations Governing the Practice of Physical Therapy.
The purpose of the proposed action is to adopt amendments necessary for
participation by Virginia in the Physical Therapy Compact, which allows a
physical therapist or physical therapist assistant who has obtained a compact
privilege to practice in the Commonwealth without a Virginia license. To comply
with compact rules, the proposed amendments require all applicants for
licensure to have criminal background checks and all holders of a compact
privilege to adhere to the laws and regulations governing practice in Virginia.
As permitted by compact rules, the proposed amendments set the fee to obtain
and renew a compact privilege in Virginia at $50, which is similar to the fee
charged by other states.
The agency intends to hold a public hearing on the proposed
action after publication in the Virginia Register.
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-3474 of the
Code of Virginia.
Public Comment Deadline: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Corie Tillman Wolf, Executive Director,
Board of Physical Therapy, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233,
telephone (804) 367-4674, FAX (804) 527-4413, or email
ptboard@dhp.virginia.gov.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6119; Filed September 18, 2019, 1:42 p.m.
REGULATIONS
Vol. 36 Iss. 4 - October 14, 2019
TITLE 1. ADMINISTRATION
STATE BOARD OF ELECTIONS
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
State Board of Elections is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act pursuant to § 2.2-4002 B 8 of the Code of Virginia, which
exempts agency action relating to the conduct of elections or eligibility to
vote.
Title of Regulation: 1VAC20-50. Candidate
Qualification (adding 1VAC20-50-40).
Statutory Authority: §§ 24.2-103 and 24.2-506 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: January 1, 2020.
Agency Contact: David Nichols, Director of Election
Services, Department of Elections, 1100 Bank Street, Richmond, VA 23219,
telephone (804) 864-8952, or email david.nichols@elections.virginia.gov.
Summary:
As required by Chapter 682 of the 2019 Acts of Assembly,
the amendment establishes (i) the requirement that entities that review
petition signatures capture the names of canceled voters from the petition on a
list and retain this list with the candidate's petition page and (ii) that the
reviewing entity may provide this information to appropriate authorities.
1VAC20-50-40. Review of canceled voter petition.
A. Pursuant to the requirements of § 24.2-506 B of the
Code of Virginia, in the event a petition signer's voter registration status is
canceled at the time of processing petition signatures:
1. The petition signer's name and reason for cancelation
must be recorded on a list.
2. A list of canceled voter petition signatures must be
retained by the reviewing entity with the candidate's petition page.
B. The candidate's petition page and the list of canceled
voter petition signatures may be provided to the appropriate authorities
pursuant to § 24.2-1016 of the Code of Virginia.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6182; Filed September 24, 2019, 4:41 p.m.
TITLE 3. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL AUTHORITY
Final Regulation
Title of Regulation: 3VAC5-50. Retail Operations (amending 3VAC5-50-160).
Statutory Authority: §§ 4.1-103 and 4.1-111 of the Code
of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 15, 2019.
Agency Contact: LaTonya D. Hucks-Watkins, Legal Liaison,
Virginia Alcoholic Beverage Control Authority, 2901 Hermitage Road, Richmond,
VA 23220, telephone (804) 213-4698, FAX (804) 213-4574, or email latonya.hucks-watkins@abc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments (i) permit advertising of happy hour
provided the advertisement does not tend to induce minors or other individuals
who cannot legally drink to drink or to encourage persons to drink in excess,
(ii) remove superfluous provisions that appear in other authority regulations,
and (iii) add a reminder that the regulation is subject to and shall be adhered
to in a manner consistent with all other authority regulations.
Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: No
public comments were received by the promulgating agency.
3VAC5-50-160. Happy hour and related promotions; definitions;
exceptions.
A. Definitions. The following words and terms when
used in this section shall have the following meanings unless the context
clearly indicates otherwise:
1. "Happy hour" means a specified period of time
during which alcoholic beverages are sold at prices reduced from the customary
price established by a retail licensee.
2. "Drink" means any beverage containing the amount
of alcoholic beverages customarily served to a patron as a single serving by a
retail licensee.
B. A licensee may advertise its happy hour so long as the
advertising does not tend to induce minors or other interdicted individuals to
drink or encourage persons to consume to excess.
C. No retail licensee shall engage in any of the
following practices:
1. Conducting a happy hour between 9 p.m. of each day and 2
a.m. of the following day;
2. Allowing a person to possess more than two drinks at any
one time during a happy hour, with the exception of flights of wine and beer
consisting of samples of not more than five different wines or beers or samples
of five different distilled spirits products provided each distilled spirits
sample contains no more than one-half ounce of distilled spirits;
3. 2. Increasing the volume of alcoholic
beverages contained in a drink without increasing proportionately the customary
or established retail price charged for such drink;
4. 3. Selling two or more drinks for one price,
such as "two for one" or "three for one";
5. Selling pitchers of mixed beverages except in accordance
with 3VAC5-50-60;
6. Giving away drinks;
7. 4. Selling an unlimited number of drinks for
one price, such as "all you can drink for $5.00"; 8. Advertising
happy hour anywhere other than within the interior of the licensed premises,
except that a licensee may use the term "Happy Hour" or "Drink
Specials," a list of the alcoholic beverage products featured during a
happy hour as well as the time period within which alcoholic beverages are
being sold at reduced prices in any otherwise lawful advertisement; or
9. 5. Establishing a customary retail price for
any drink at a markup over cost significantly less than that applied to other
beverages of similar type, quality, or volume.
C. D. This regulation section
shall not apply to prearranged private parties, functions, or events, not open
to the public, where the guests thereof are served in a room [ or rooms ]
designated and used exclusively for private parties, functions, or
events.
E. This section is subject to and shall be adhered to in a
manner consistent with all other regulations of the authority.
VA.R. Doc. No. R19-5585; Filed September 18, 2019, 11:53 a.m.
TITLE 4. CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES
MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Marine Resources Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 11 of the Code of Virginia;
however, the commission is required to publish the full text of final
regulations.
Title of Regulation: 4VAC20-252. Pertaining to the
Taking of Striped Bass (amending 4VAC20-252-80 through 4VAC20-252-110,
4VAC20-252-135).
Statutory Authority: § 28.2-201 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: September 25, 2019.
Agency Contact: Jennifer Farmer, Regulatory Coordinator,
Marine Resources Commission, 380 Fenwick Road, Fort Monroe, VA 23651, telephone
(757) 247-2248, or email jennifer.farmer@mrc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments (i) lower the recreational striped bass
possession limits and change the recreational striped bass size limits in the
Chesapeake Bay area and (ii) establish maximum gill net mesh size requirements
for commercial striped bass in the Chesapeake Bay and coastal areas.
4VAC20-252-80. Bay spring/summer striped bass recreational
fishery.
A. The open season for the Bay spring/summer striped bass
recreational fishery shall be May 16 through June 15 inclusive.
B. The area open for this fishery shall be the Chesapeake Bay
and its tributaries.
C. The minimum size limit for this fishery shall be 20 inches
total length, and the maximum size limit for this fishery shall be 28 inches
total length.
D. The possession limit for this fishery shall be two one
fish per person.
4VAC20-252-90. Bay fall striped bass recreational fishery.
A. The open season for the bay fall striped bass recreational
fishery shall be October 4 through December 31, inclusive.
B. The area open for this fishery shall be the Chesapeake Bay
and its tributaries.
C. The minimum size limit for this fishery shall be 20 inches
total length.
D. The maximum size limit for this fishery shall be 28
36 inches total length; however, the maximum size limit shall only
apply to one fish of the possession limit.
E. The possession limit for this fishery shall be two one
fish per person.
4VAC20-252-100. Potomac River tributaries summer/fall striped
bass recreational fishery.
A. The open season for the Potomac River tributaries
summer/fall striped bass fishery shall correspond to the open summer/fall
season as established by the Potomac River Fisheries Commission for the
mainstem Potomac River, except as provided in subsection D of this section.
B. The area open for this fishery shall be the Potomac River
tributaries.
C. The minimum size limit for this fishery shall be 20 inches
total length.
D. The maximum size limit for this fishery shall be 28
inches total length from From May 16 through June 15 the maximum
size limit for this fishery shall be 28 inches total length.
E. From June 16 through December 31 the maximum size limit
for this fishery shall be 36 inches total length.
F. The possession limit for this fishery shall be two
one fish per person.
4VAC20-252-110. Coastal striped bass recreational fishery.
A. The open seasons for the coastal striped bass recreational
fishery shall be January 1 through March 31 and May 16 through December 31,
inclusive.
B. The area open for this fishery shall be the coastal area
as defined in this chapter.
C. The minimum size limit for this fishery shall be 28 inches
total length.
D. The maximum size limit for this fishery shall be 36
inches total length.
E. The possession limit for this fishery shall be one
fish per person per day.
4VAC20-252-135. Gill net mesh size and tending restrictions:
exemptions.
A. Any registered commercial fisherman who is permitted to
harvest striped bass from the coastal area in accordance with 4VAC20-252-130 A
and C and sets or fishes any gill net in the coastal area shall be prohibited
from using a gill net mesh size greater than nine inches in stretched mesh.
B. Any registered commercial fisherman who is
permitted to harvest striped bass from the coastal area in accordance with
4VAC20-252-130 A and C and sets or fishes any gill net in the coastal
area shall be exempt from the maximum gill net mesh size requirements during
November and December as described in 4VAC20-430-65 A and B.
B. C. Any registered commercial fisherman who
is permitted to harvest striped bass from the coastal area in accordance with
4VAC20-252-130 A and C and sets or fishes any gill net seven inches or
greater in stretched mesh in the coastal area shall be exempt from the tending
requirements described in 4VAC20-430-65 E and F during the months of November
and December.
C. D. Any registered commercial fisherman who
is permitted to harvest striped bass from the coastal area in accordance with
4VAC20-252-130 A and C shall display an optic yellow flag issued by the
commission while fishing for striped bass in the coastal area and while
transiting the coastal area before and after a striped bass fishing trip. This
flag shall be prominently displayed on the starboard side of the vessel.
E. Any registered commercial fisherman who is permitted to
harvest striped bass from the Chesapeake Bay area in accordance with
4VAC20-252-130 A and C and sets or fishes any gill net in the Chesapeake Bay
area shall be prohibited from using a gill net greater than seven inches in
stretched mesh with the exception of restricted areas as defined in
4VAC20-751-20.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6144; Filed September 25, 2019, 10:23 a.m.
TITLE 4. CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES
MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION
Emergency Regulation
Title of Regulation: 4VAC20-510. Pertaining to
Amberjack and Cobia (amending 4VAC20-510-25).
Statutory Authority: §§ 28.2-201 and 28.2-210 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Dates: September 25, 2019, through October 24,
2019.
Agency Contact: Jennifer Farmer, Regulatory Coordinator,
Marine Resources Commission, 380 Fenwick Road, Fort Monroe, VA 23651, telephone
(757) 247-2248 or email jennifer.farmer@mrc.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
The amendment establishes a closure date for the commercial
cobia fishery on October 1, 2019.
4VAC20-510-25. Commercial fishery possession limits and season.
A. It shall be unlawful for any person fishing commercially
to possess more than two amberjack or more than two cobia at any time, except
as described in 4VAC20-510-33. Any amberjack or cobia caught after the
possession limit has been reached shall be returned to the water immediately.
When fishing from any boat or vessel where the entire catch is held in a common
hold or container, the possession limit shall be for the boat or vessel and
shall be equal to the number of valid commercial fisherman registration
licensees on board multiplied by two, except there is a maximum vessel limit of
six cobia per vessel per day. The captain or operator of the boat or vessel
shall be responsible for any boat or vessel possession limit.
B. In 2018 2019 it shall be unlawful for any
person fishing commercially to harvest or possess any cobia after September 30.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6183; Filed September 25, 2019, 8:11 a.m.
TITLE 4. CONSERVATION AND NATURAL RESOURCES
MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Marine Resources Commission is claiming an exemption from the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 11 of the Code of Virginia;
however, the commission is required to publish the full text of final
regulations.
Title of Regulation: 4VAC20-620. Pertaining to Summer
Flounder (amending 4VAC20-620-40).
Statutory Authority: § 28.2-201 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: September 25, 2019.
Agency Contact: Jennifer Farmer, Regulatory Coordinator,
Marine Resources Commission, 380 Fenwick Road, Fort Monroe, VA 23651, telephone
(757) 247-2248, or email jennifer.farmer@mrc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
For summer flounder commercially harvested offshore
(federal waters) and landed in Virginia, the amendments set for fall 2019 (i)
the landing dates as October 1 through November 15 and November 16 through
December 31 and (ii) the possession and landing limits as 10,000 pounds.
4VAC20-620-40. Commercial vessel possession and landing
limitations.
A. It shall be unlawful for any person harvesting summer
flounder outside of Virginia's waters to do any of the following, except as
described in subsections B, C, D, and E, and F of this section:
1. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount of
summer flounder in excess of 10% by weight of Atlantic croaker or the combined
landings, on board a vessel, of black sea bass, scup, squid, scallops and
Atlantic mackerel.
2. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount of
summer flounder in excess of 1,500 pounds landed in combination with Atlantic
croaker.
3. Fail to sell the vessel's entire harvest of all species at
the point of landing.
B. Nothing in this chapter shall preclude a vessel from
possessing any North Carolina or New Jersey vessel possession limit of summer
flounder in Virginia; however, no vessel that possesses the North Carolina or
New Jersey vessel possession limit of summer flounder shall offload any amount
of that possession limit, except as described in subsection J K
of this section.
C. From March 1 through April 19, it shall be unlawful for
any person harvesting summer flounder outside of Virginia waters to do any of
the following:
1. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount of
summer flounder in excess of the combined total of the Virginia landing limit
described in subdivision 2 of this subsection and the amount of the legal North
Carolina or New Jersey landing limit or trip limit.
2. Land in Virginia more than a total of 10,000 pounds of
summer flounder.
3. Land in Virginia any amount of summer flounder more than
once in any consecutive five-day period.
D. From October 16 1 through December 31
November 15, it shall be unlawful for any person harvesting summer
flounder outside of Virginia waters to do any of the following:
1. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount of
summer flounder in excess of the combined total of the Virginia landing limit
described in subdivision 2 of this subsection and the amount of the legal North
Carolina or New Jersey landing limit or trip limit.
2. Land in Virginia more than a total of 7,000 10,000
pounds of summer flounder.
3. Land in Virginia any amount of summer flounder more than
once in any consecutive five-day period.
E. From November 16 through December 31, it shall be
unlawful for any person harvesting summer flounder outside of Virginia waters
to do any of the following:
1. Possess aboard any vessel in Virginia waters any amount
of summer flounder in excess of the total of the Virginia landing limit
described in subdivision 2 of this subsection and the amount of the legal North
Carolina or New Jersey landing limit or trip limit.
2. Land in Virginia more than a total of 10,000 pounds of
summer flounder.
3. Land in Virginia any amount of summer flounder more than
once in any consecutive five-day period.
E. F. From January 1 through December 31, any
boat or vessel issued a valid federal summer flounder moratorium permit and
owned and operated by a legal Virginia Commercial Hook-and-Line Licensee that
possesses a Restricted Summer Flounder Endorsement shall be restricted to a
possession and landing limit of 200 pounds of summer flounder, except as
described in 4VAC20-620-30 F.
F. G. Upon request by a marine police officer,
the seafood buyer or processor shall offload and accurately determine the total
weight of all summer flounder aboard any vessel landing summer flounder in
Virginia.
G. H. Any possession limit described in this
section shall be determined by the weight in pounds of summer flounder as
customarily packed, boxed, and weighed by the seafood buyer or
processor. The weight of any summer flounder in pounds found in excess of any
possession limit described in this section shall be prima facie evidence of
violation of this chapter. Persons in possession of summer flounder aboard any
vessel in excess of the possession limit shall be in violation of this chapter
unless that vessel has requested and been granted safe harbor. Any buyer or
processor offloading or accepting any quantity of summer flounder from any
vessel in excess of the possession limit shall be in violation of this chapter,
except as described by subsection J K of this section. A buyer or
processor may accept or buy summer flounder from a vessel that has secured safe
harbor, provided that vessel has satisfied the requirements described in
subsection J K of this section.
H. I. If a person violates the possession
limits described in this section, the entire amount of summer flounder in that
person's possession shall be confiscated. Any confiscated summer flounder shall
be considered as a removal from the appropriate commercial harvest or landings
quota. Upon confiscation, the marine police officer shall inventory the
confiscated summer flounder and, at a minimum, secure two bids for purchase of
the confiscated summer flounder from approved and licensed seafood buyers. The
confiscated fish will be sold to the highest bidder, and all funds derived from
such sale shall be deposited for the Commonwealth pending court resolution of
the charge of violating the possession limits established by this chapter. All
of the collected funds will be returned to the accused upon a finding of
innocence or forfeited to the Commonwealth upon a finding of guilty.
I. J. It shall be unlawful for a licensed
seafood buyer or federally permitted seafood buyer to fail to contact the
Marine Resources Commission Operation Station prior to a vessel offloading
summer flounder harvested outside of Virginia. The buyer shall provide to the
Marine Resources Commission the name of the vessel, its captain, an estimate of
the amount in pounds of summer flounder on board that vessel, and the
anticipated or approximate offloading time. Once offloading of any vessel is
complete and the weight of the landed summer flounder has been determined, the
buyer shall contact the Marine Resources Commission Operations Station and
report the vessel name and corresponding weight of summer flounder landed. It
shall be unlawful for any person to offload from a boat or vessel for
commercial purposes any summer flounder during the period of 9 p.m. to 7 a.m.
J. K. Any boat or vessel that has entered
Virginia waters for safe harbor shall only offload summer flounder when the
state that licenses that vessel requests to transfer quota to Virginia, in the
amount that corresponds to that vessel's possession limit, and the commissioner
agrees to accept that transfer of quota.
K. L. After any commercial harvest or landing
quota as described in 4VAC20-620-30 has been attained and announced as such,
any boat or vessel possessing summer flounder on board may enter Virginia
waters for safe harbor but shall contact the Marine Resources Commission
Operation Center in advance of such entry into Virginia waters.
L. M. It shall be unlawful for any person
harvesting summer flounder outside of Virginia waters to possess aboard any
vessel, in Virginia, any amount of summer flounder, once it has been projected
and announced that 100% of the quota described in 4VAC20-620-30 A has been
taken.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6184; Filed September 25, 2019, 8:40 a.m.
TITLE 8. EDUCATION
STATE COUNCIL OF HIGHER EDUCATION FOR VIRGINIA
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
State Council of Higher Education for Virginia is claiming an exemption from
the Administrative Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4002 B 4 of
the Code of Virginia, which exempts regulations relating to grants of state or
federal funds or property.
Title of Regulation: 8VAC40-180. Virginia Foster Care
Tuition Grant Regulations (adding 8VAC40-180-10 through 8VAC40-180-50).
Statutory Authority: § 23.1-601 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: October 1, 2019.
Agency Contact: Beverly Rebar, Senior Associate for
Academic and Legislative Affairs, State Council of Higher Education for
Virginia, 101 North 14th Street, 9th Floor, Monroe Building, Richmond, VA
23219, telephone (804) 371-0571, or email beverlyrebar@schev.edu.
Summary:
Pursuant to § 23.1-601 of the Code of Virginia,
the regulatory action establishes provisions for implementation and
administration of a financial aid program to assist foster care students to
attend college, including definitions, application procedures, eligibility
criteria for initial and renewal awards, and information about award amounts
and restrictions.
CHAPTER 180
VIRGINIA FOSTER CARE TUITION GRANT REGULATIONS
8VAC40-180-10. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Award" means a grant from state or
institutional funds authorized for the Virginia Foster Care Tuition Grant.
"Baccalaureate public institution of higher education"
means Christopher Newport University, George Mason University, James Madison
University, Longwood University, the University of Mary Washington, Norfolk
State University, Old Dominion University, Radford University, the University
of Virginia, the University of Virginia's College at Wise as a division of the
University of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University, Virginia Military
Institute, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Virginia State
University, and The College of William and Mary in Virginia.
"Comprehensive community college" or
"community college" means an associate-degree-granting public
institution of higher education in Virginia governed by the State Board of
Community Colleges.
"Cost of attendance" means the sum of tuition,
required fees, room, board, books and supplies, and other education-related
expenses as determined by a participating institution for purposes of awarding
federal Title IV student financial assistance.
"Eligible program" means a degree or certificate
program of at least one academic year in length or a noncredit workforce
credential program in a comprehensive community college. As used in this
section, "academic year" means the enrollment period which normally
extends from late August to May or early June that is normally comprised of two
semesters (fall and spring) or three quarters (fall, winter, and spring).
"Expected family contribution" or
"EFC" means a measure of a student's family's financial strength and
is calculated according to federal aid methodology and used to determine
eligibility for need-based federal Title IV aid. The institution may exercise
professional judgment to adjust the student's EFC, as permitted under federal
law, based on factors that affect the family's ability to pay. For students
eligible for a state award but the federal processor has not calculated the
student's EFC, the institution shall calculate the student's EFC using the
appropriate federal EFC worksheet.
"Financial need" means any positive difference
between a student's cost of attendance and the student's expected family
contribution.
"Free Application for Federal Student Aid" or
"FAFSA" means the needs analysis form submitted to the United States
Department of Education, which is completed annually by students applying for
federal Title IV student financial assistance and need-based financial aid
programs sponsored by the Commonwealth of Virginia and that result in the
calculation of the expected family contribution.
"Full-time student for more than five years" means
that the recipient must not have completed in excess of 120 semester hours or
its equivalent.
"Gift aid" means grants, scholarships, tuition
waivers, or other forms of aid that do not need to be repaid and excludes loans
or work-study.
"Half-time enrollment" means enrolling into a
minimum of six credit hours for semester-based terms or its equivalent.
"Participating institution" means any
comprehensive community college, any other associate-degree-granting public
institution of higher education, or baccalaureate public institution of higher
education.
"Program" means the Virginia Foster Care Tuition
Grant program.
"Satisfactory academic progress" means
acceptable progress towards completion of an approved course of study, as
defined by the institution for the purposes of eligibility under § 668 of the
Federal Compilation of Student Financial Aid Regulations. For purposes of this
definition, "approved course of study" means a curriculum of courses
at the undergraduate level leading to a first bachelor's degree. "Approved
course of study" does not include religious training or theological
education in programs in the 39.xxxx series, as classified in the National
Center for Education Statistics' Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP).
"Semester" means a division of an academic year
approximately 15 to 16 weeks in length from the first day of classes through
the last day of exams for the fall and spring enrollment periods.
"Term" means the fall semester or quarter,
winter quarter, spring semester or quarter, or summer session.
"Tuition and mandatory fees" means the tuition
and mandatory education and general (E&G) fees and mandatory non-E&G
fees charged by the institution.
8VAC40-180-20. Application procedures and eligibility
criteria for an initial award.
A. In order to apply for the program, the student must:
1. Submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid by
the participating institution's priority filing date or deadline and complete
the verification process, if applicable;
2. Be accepted into an associate-degree-granting public
institution of higher education or baccalaureate public institution of higher
education; and
3. Ensure that a document on official Department of Social
Services letterhead providing dates in foster care, and if applicable, an
adoption assistance agreement verifying special needs adoption, is sent to the
institution's financial aid office.
B. To be eligible for an award, the student must:
1. Be a foster child as supported by documentation from the
Department of Social Services that includes either (i) dates in foster care or
(ii) assistance received for a special needs adoption. For the purposes of this
chapter, "foster child" means one who was in foster care at the time
they received their high school diploma or general education diploma (GED); in
the custody of a social service agency or a special needs adoption at the time
they received their high school diploma or GED; or was formerly in foster care
when turning age 18 years and subsequently received a high school diploma or
GED;
2. Have at least half-time enrollment in an eligible
program;
3. Be a domiciliary resident of Virginia. For the purposes
of this chapter, "domiciliary resident of Virginia" means a student
who is determined by a participating institution to meet the eligibility
requirements specified by § 23.1-502 et seq. of the Code of Virginia;
4. Maintain satisfactory academic progress;
5. Have not been previously enrolled as a full-time student
for more than five years;
6. Not hold a bachelor's degree; and
7. Demonstrate financial need.
8VAC40-180-30. Amount of awards and award restrictions.
A. Community colleges must provide awards, when combined
with other gift aid, sufficient to cover, at a minimum, tuition and mandatory
fees.
B. Richard Bland College and baccalaureate public
institutions of higher education may provide awards, when combined with other
gift aid, sufficient to cover at a minimum tuition and mandatory fees.
C. Awards are subject to the following restrictions:
1. The award when combined with other gift aid may not
exceed the student's cost of attendance.
2. The award when combined with other tuition-only awards
may not exceed the student's tuition and mandatory fees. For the purposes of
this chapter, "tuition-only awards" means any grants, scholarships,
tuition waivers, or any other form of aid that does not need to be repaid that
are designated by the source of the aid to be applied only to tuition and
mandatory fees.
3. If an award recipient's enrollment is below half time as
of the institution's census date, eligibility for the grant is lost and must be
refunded to the institution.
D. A student who receives an award and who during a term
withdraws from the institution that made the award must surrender the balance
of the award. In determining the earned portion of the award that the student
may retain, the institution shall apply the percentage of earned aid resulting
from the federal return to Title IV formula to the student's award amount.
E. A student who has a change in enrollment, such as
adding or dropping one or more courses, must have his award reevaluated by the
institution to ensure that the award conforms with the restrictions under
subsection C of this section.
8VAC40-180-40. Use of funds.
Funding for this program may be designated from either
institutional appropriations of the Virginia Student Financial Assistance
Program or institutional funds.
8VAC40-180-50. Renewability of awards.
Community colleges must provide for renewal awards.
Richard Bland College and baccalaureate public institutions of higher education
may provide for renewal awards. To be eligible for a renewal award, the student
must:
1. Meet satisfactory academic progress standards;
2. Complete the FAFSA or FAFSA renewal form as appropriate;
3. Have at least half-time enrollment in an eligible
program;
4. Have not been previously enrolled as a full-time student
for more than five years;
5. Not have a prior bachelor's degree;
6. Demonstrate financial need; and
7. Meet additional criteria as determined by the
participating institution. Such requirements may include a minimum grade point
average, continuous enrollment, or full-time enrollment.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6124; Filed September 19, 2019, 3:36 p.m.
TITLE 12. HEALTH
DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAL ASSISTANCE SERVICES
Emergency Regulation
Title of Regulation: 12VAC30-20. Administration of
Medical Assistance Services (amending 12VAC30-20-540, 12VAC30-20-550,
12VAC30-20-560).
Statutory Authority: § 32.1-325 of the Code of Virginia;
42 USC § 1396 et seq.
Effective Dates: November 14, 2019, through May 13,
2021.
Agency Contact: Emily McClellan, Regulatory Supervisor,
Policy Division, Department of Medical Assistance Services, 600 East Broad
Street, Suite 1300, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 371-4300, FAX (804)
786-1680, or email emily.mcclellan@dmas.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
Section 2.2-4011 B of the Code of Virginia states that
agencies may adopt emergency regulations in situations in which Virginia
statutory law or the appropriation act requires that a regulation be effective
in 280 days or less from its enactment, and the regulation is not exempt under
the provisions of § 2.2-4006 A 4 of the Code of Virginia.
Chapter 2, Item 303 V 2 and clause (vii) of Item 303 JJ 1
of the 2018 Acts of Assembly, Special Session I, and Chapter 854 of the 2019
Acts of Assembly (appropriation acts) direct the Department of Medical
Assistance Services (DMAS) to amend the State Plan for Medical Assistance to
implement amendments related to appeals administered by and for DMAS in order
to establish a more formalized process by which to address administrative
settlement agreements in a timely fashion. Item 303 JJ 2 authorizes DMAS to
promulgate emergency regulations to implement these changes.
In 12VAC30-20-550, the amendments (i) establish the process
for a settlement agreement resolution between a Medicaid provider and DMAS and
(ii) adjust the time periods set forth in the existing informal and formal
appeal provisions for consistentcy with the procedures. The amendments affect
the timelines for issuing the informal decision in an informal administrative
appeal or a recommended decision of the hearing officer in a formal
administrative appeal.
12VAC30-20-540. Informal appeals.
A. Notice of informal appeal.
1. Providers appealing the termination or denial of their
Medicaid agreement pursuant to § 32.1-325 E of the Code of Virginia shall
file a written notice of informal appeal with the DMAS Appeals Division within
15 days of the provider's receipt of the notice of termination or denial.
2. Providers appealing adjustments to a cost report shall file
a written notice of informal appeal with the DMAS Appeals Division within 90
days of the provider's receipt of the notice of program reimbursement. The
written notice of informal appeal shall identify the issues, adjustments, or
items that the provider is appealing.
3. Providers appealing all other DMAS decisions shall file a
written notice of informal appeal with the DMAS Appeals Division within 30 days
of the provider's receipt of the decision. The written notice of informal
appeal shall identify each adjustment, patient, service date, or other disputed
matter that the provider is appealing.
B. Administrative dismissals.
1. Failure to timely file a written notice of informal appeal
with the information required by subdivision A 2 or A 3 of this section shall
result in an administrative dismissal.
2. A representative, billing company, or other third-party
entity filing a written notice of appeal on behalf of a provider shall submit
to DMAS, at the time of filing or upon request, a written authorization to act
on the provider's behalf, signed by the provider. The authorization shall
reference the specific adverse action or actions being appealed including,
if applicable, each patient's name and date of service. Failure to submit a
written authorization as specified in this subdivision shall result in an
administrative dismissal. This requirement shall not apply to an appeal filed
by a Virginia licensed attorney.
3. If a provider has not exhausted any applicable DMAS or
contractor reconsideration or review process or contractor's internal appeals
process that the provider is required to exhaust before filing a DMAS informal
appeal, the provider's written notice of informal appeal shall be
administratively dismissed.
4. If DMAS has not issued a decision with appeal rights, the
provider's attempt to file a written notice of informal appeal, prior to the
issuance of a decision by DMAS that has appeal rights, shall be
administratively dismissed.
C. Written case summary.
1. DMAS shall file a written case summary with the DMAS
Appeals Division within 30 days of the filing of the provider's notice of
informal appeal and shall transmit a complete copy of the case summary to the
provider on the same day.
2. For each adjustment, patient, and service date or other
disputed matter identified by the provider in its notice of informal appeal,
the case summary shall explain the factual basis upon which DMAS relied in
taking its action or making its decision and identify any authority or
documentation upon which DMAS relied in taking its action or making its
decision.
3. Failure to file a written case summary with the DMAS
Appeals Division within 30 days of the filing of the written notice of informal
appeal shall result in dismissal in favor of the provider.
4. The provider shall have 12 days following the due date of
the case summary to file with the DMAS Appeals Division and transmit to the
author of the case summary a written notice of all alleged deficiencies in the
case summary that the provider knows, or reasonably should know, exist. Failure
of the provider to timely file a written notice of deficiency with the DMAS
Appeals Division shall be deemed a waiver of all deficiencies, alleged or
otherwise, with the case summary.
5. Upon timely receipt of the provider's notice of deficiency,
DMAS shall have 12 days to address the alleged deficiency or deficiencies.
If DMAS does not address the alleged deficiency or does not address the alleged
deficiency to the provider's satisfaction, the alleged deficiency or
deficiencies shall become an issue to be addressed by the informal appeals
agent as part of the informal appeal decision.
6. The informal appeals agent shall make a determination as to
each deficiency that is alleged by the provider as set forth in this
subsection. In making that determination, the informal appeals agent shall
determine whether the alleged deficiency is such that it could not reasonably
be determined from the case summary the factual basis and authority for the
DMAS action, relating to the alleged deficiency, so as to require a dismissal
in favor of the provider on the issue or issues to which the alleged
deficiency pertains.
D. Conference.
1. The informal appeals agent shall conduct the conference
within 90 days from the filing of the notice of informal appeal. If DMAS, the
provider, and the informal appeals agent agree, the conference may be conducted
by way of written submissions. If the conference is conducted by way of written
submissions, the informal appeals agent shall specify the time within which the
provider may file written submissions, not to exceed 90 days from the filing of
the notice of informal appeal. Only written submissions filed within the time
specified by the informal appeals agent shall be considered.
2. The conference may be recorded at the discretion of the
informal appeals agent and solely for the convenience of the informal appeals
agent. Because the conference is not an adversarial or evidentiary proceeding,
no other recordings or transcriptions shall be permitted. Any recordings made
for the convenience of the informal appeals agent shall not be released to DMAS
or to the provider.
3. Upon completion of the conference, the informal appeals
agent shall specify the time within which the provider may file additional
documentation or information, if any, not to exceed 30 days. Only documentation
or information filed within the time specified by the informal appeals agent
shall be considered.
E. Informal appeals decision. The informal appeal decision
shall be issued within 180 days of receipt of the notice of informal appeal unless
the provider and DMAS have mutually agreed in writing to stay the timeframe for
issuing the informal decision pursuant to 12VAC30-20-550.
F. Remand. Whenever an informal appeal is required pursuant
to a remand by court order, final agency decision, agreement of the parties, or
otherwise, all time periods set forth in this section shall begin to run
effective with the date that the document containing the remand is date-stamped
by the DMAS Appeals Division in Richmond, Virginia.
12VAC30-20-550. (Reserved.) Settlement agreements.
A. Providers who have filed an administrative appeal under
12VAC30-20-540 or 12VAC30-20-560 may submit a proposal to DMAS to settle the
appeal.
B. A proposal for a settlement shall be submitted in
writing by the provider or the provider's counsel to the DMAS Appeals Division
Director. The proposal shall include the justification for the settlement and
the terms proposed to settle the case. The Appeals Division Director shall
refer the proposal to a DMAS appeal representative authorized by the Office of
the Attorney General under § 2.2-509 of the Code of Virginia to represent
DMAS in administrative proceedings.
C. Stay of decision deadlines.
1. Receipt of a settlement proposal from a provider in
accordance with subsection B of this section shall not require the DMAS appeal
representative to engage in settlement negotiations or agree to stay the
deadline for the informal appeal decision or for the formal appeal recommended
decision of the hearing officer (collectively, the decision deadline). The DMAS
appeal representative and the provider may jointly agree in writing to stay the
decision deadline for a period of up to 60 days to facilitate settlement
discussions. The date of the written agreement of the parties to stay the
decision deadline shall be the start date for calculating the length of the
stay. Written notice of the agreement to stay the decision deadline and the
length of stay shall be provided to the Appeals Division Director on the start
date. During the stay, the time period to issue the informal appeal decision or
the formal appeal recommended decision shall not run; however, all other
interim deadlines remain applicable.
2. If the parties mutually agree in writing to a proposed
resolution within the agreed upon stay period described in subdivision C 1 of
this section, then the stay shall be extended for such additional time as may
be necessary for review and approval of the settlement in accordance with § 2.2-514
of the Code of Virginia.
3. A stay may be removed by a party to the appeal for any
reason, including the following:
a. The parties do not agree to a full settlement within the
agreed upon stay period described in subdivision C 1 of this section;
b. One party advises the other and the Appeals Division
Director in writing that it no longer agrees for the stay to continue; or
c. The parties reach a proposed settlement, but the
proposed settlement is not approved in accordance with § 2.2-514 of the
Code of Virginia.
If the stay is removed, the stay shall be communicated in
writing between the parties and written notice provided to the Appeals Division
Director. The time period to issue the informal appeal decision or the formal
appeal recommended decision shall resume on the day the notice is provided to
the Appeals Division Director.
12VAC30-20-560. Formal appeals.
A. A provider appealing a DMAS informal appeal decision shall
file a written notice of formal appeal with the DMAS Appeals Division within 30
days of the provider's receipt of the informal appeal decision. The notice of
formal appeal shall identify each adjustment, patient, service date, or other
disputed matter that the provider is appealing. Failure to file a written
notice of formal appeal in the detail specified within 30 days of receipt of
the informal appeal decision shall result in dismissal of the appeal. Pursuant
to § 2.2-4019 A of the Code of Virginia, DMAS shall ascertain the fact
basis for decisions through informal proceedings unless the parties consent in
writing to waive such a conference or proceeding to go directly to a formal
hearing, and therefore only issues that were addressed pursuant to
§ 2.2-4019 of the Code of Virginia shall be addressed in the formal
appeal, unless DMAS and the provider consent to waive the informal fact-finding
process under § 2.2-4019 A of the Code of Virginia.
B. Documentary evidence, objections to documentary evidence,
opening briefs, and reply briefs.
1. Documentary evidence, objections to documentary evidence,
opening briefs, and reply briefs shall be filed with the DMAS Appeals Division
on the date specified in this subsection. The hearing officer shall only
consider those documents or pleadings that are filed within the required
timeline. Simultaneous with filing, the filing party shall transmit a copy to the
other party and to the hearing officer.
a. All documentary evidence upon which DMAS or the provider
relies shall be filed within 21 days of the filing of the notice of formal
appeal.
b. Any objections to the admissibility of documentary evidence
shall be filed within seven days of the filing of the documentary evidence. The
hearing officer shall rule on any such objections within seven days of the
filing of the objections.
c. The opening brief shall be filed by DMAS and the provider
within 30 days of the completion of the hearing.
d. Any reply brief from DMAS or the provider shall be filed
within 10 days of the filing of the opening brief to which the reply brief
responds.
2. If there has been an extension to the time for conducting
the hearing pursuant to subsection C of this section, the hearing officer is
authorized to alter the due dates for filing opening and reply briefs to permit
the hearing officer to be in compliance with the due date for the submission of
the recommended decision as required by § 32.1-325.1 B of the Code of
Virginia and subsection E of this section.
C. The hearing officer shall conduct the hearing within 45
days from the filing of the notice of formal appeal, unless the hearing
officer, DMAS, and the provider all mutually agree to extend the time for
conducting the hearing. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the due date for the
hearing officer to submit the recommended decision to the DMAS director, as
required by § 32.1-325.1 B of the Code of Virginia and subsection E of
this section, shall not be extended or otherwise changed.
D. Hearings shall be transcribed by a court reporter retained
by DMAS.
E. The hearing officer shall submit a recommended decision to
the DMAS director with a copy to the provider within 120 days of the filing of
the formal appeal notice, unless the provider and DMAS have mutually agreed
in writing to stay the timeframe for issuing the recommended decision pursuant
to 12VAC30-20-550. If the hearing officer does not submit a recommended
decision within 120 days of the filing of the notice of formal appeal or the
period specified under 12VAC30-20-550, then DMAS shall give written notice
to the hearing officer and the Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court that a
recommended decision is due.
F. Upon receipt of the hearing officer's recommended
decision, the DMAS director shall notify DMAS and the provider in writing that
any written exceptions to the hearing officer's recommended decision shall be
filed with the DMAS Appeals Division within 14 days of receipt of the DMAS
director's letter. Only exceptions filed within 14 days of receipt of the DMAS
director's letter shall be considered.
G. The DMAS director shall issue the final agency decision
within 60 days of receipt of the hearing officer's recommended decision in
accordance with § 32.1-325.1 B of the Code of Virginia.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-5615; Filed September 18, 2019, 12:31 p.m.
TITLE 13. HOUSING
BOARD OF HOUSING AND COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
Board of Housing and Community Development is claiming an exemption from
Article 2 of the Administrative Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006
A 4 a of the Code of Virginia, which excludes regulations that are necessary to
conform to changes in Virginia statutory law or the appropriation act where no
agency discretion is involved. The Board of Housing and Community Development
will receive, consider, and respond to petitions by any interested person at
any time with respect to reconsideration or revision.
Title of Regulation: 13VAC5-112. Enterprise Zone
Grant Program Regulation (amending 13VAC5-112-460).
Statutory Authority: § 59.1-541 of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Kyle Flanders, Senior Policy Analyst,
Department of Housing and Community Development, Main Street Centre, 600 East
Main Street, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23219, telephone (804) 786-6761, FAX (804)
371-7090, TTY (804) 371-7089, or email kyle.flanders@dhcd.virginia.gov.
Summary:
Pursuant to Chapters 119 and 496 of the 2019 Acts of
Assembly, the amendment increases to three the number of times the Governor may
renew an enterprise zone designation.
Part VIII
Procedures and Requirements for Zone Designations
13VAC5-112-460. Procedures for zone application and
designation.
A. Upon recommendation of the Director of the Department of
Housing and Community Development, the Governor may designate up to 30 enterprise
zones in accordance with the provisions of this section. Such designations are
to be done in coordination with the expiration of existing zones designated
under earlier Enterprise Zone Program provisions or the termination of
designations pursuant to 13VAC5-112-510, 13VAC5-112-520, and 13VAC5-112-530 D.
B. Applications for zone designation will be solicited by the
department on a competitive basis in accordance with the following procedures
and requirements:
1. An application for zone designation must be submitted on
Form EZ-1 to the Director, Virginia Department of Housing and Community
Development, 600 East Main Street, Suite 300, Richmond, Virginia 23219, on or
before the submission deadline established by the department.
2. Each applicant jurisdiction must hold at least one public
hearing on the application for zone designation prior to submission of the
application to the department. Notification of the public hearing is to be in
accordance with § 15.2-2204 of the Code of Virginia, relating to
advertising of public hearings. An actual copy of the advertisement must be
included in the application.
3. In order to be considered in the competitive zone
designation process, an application from a jurisdiction must include all
the requested information, be accompanied by a resolution of the local
governing body, and be signed by the chief administrator or the clerk to
county board of supervisors where there is no chief administrator. The chief
administrator or clerk, in signing the application, must certify that the
applicant jurisdiction held the public hearing required in subdivision 2 of
this subsection.
C. Within 60 days following the application submission
deadline, the department shall review and the director shall recommend to the
Governor those applications that meet a minimum threshold standard as set by
the department and are competitively determined to have the greatest potential
for accomplishing the purposes of the program.
D. Enterprise zones designated pursuant to § 59.1-542 of the
Code of Virginia will be designated for an initial 10-year period except as
provided for in 13VAC5-112-510 and 13VAC5-112-520. Upon recommendation of the
director of the department, the Governor may renew zones for up to two three
five-year renewal periods.
E. A local governing body whose application for zone
designation is denied shall be notified and provided with the reasons for
denial.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6166; Filed September 25, 2019, 8:40 a.m.
TITLE 14. INSURANCE
STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
following amendments are exempt from the Virginia Administrative Process Act
pursuant to § 2.2-4002 C of the Code of Virginia, which provides that
minor changes to regulations published in the Virginia Administrative Code
under the Virginia Register Act, Chapter 41 (§ 2.2-4100 et seq.) of Title
2.2 of the Code of Virginia, made by the Virginia Code Commission pursuant to
§ 30-150 of the Code of Virginia, shall be exempt from the provisions of
the Virginia Administrative Process Act.
Title of Regulation: 14VAC5-395. Rules Governing
Settlement Agents (amending 14VAC5-395-10, 14VAC5-395-20,
14VAC5-395-30, 14VAC5-395-70, 14VAC5-395-75, 14VAC5-395-80).
Statutory Authority: §§ 12.1-13 and 55.1-1012 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: October 14, 2019.
Agency Contact: Raquel Pino, Insurance Policy Advisor,
Bureau of Insurance, State Corporation Commission, P.O. Box 1157, Richmond, VA
23218, telephone (804) 371-9499, FAX (804) 371-9944, or email
raquel.pino@scc.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments update citations to the Code of Virginia due
to the recodification of Title 55 to the Title 55.1 in the 2019 Session of the
General Assembly.
14VAC5-395-10. Applicability.
This chapter implements Chapter 27.3 (§ 55-525.16 10
(§ 55.1-1000 et seq.) of Title 55 55.1 of the Code of
Virginia and applies to all title insurance agents, title insurance agencies,
and title insurance companies providing escrow, closing, or settlement services
involving the purchase of or lending on the security of any real property in
the Commonwealth of Virginia.
14VAC5-395-20. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall
have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Agent" or "insurance agent" means an
individual or business entity that sells, solicits, or negotiates contracts of
title insurance in the Commonwealth.
"Bureau" means the State Corporation Commission
Bureau of Insurance.
"Business entity" means a partnership, limited
partnership, limited liability company, corporation, or other legal entity
other than a sole proprietorship, professional corporation, or professional
limited liability company.
"Chapter 27.3 10" means Chapter 27.3
(§ 55-525.16 10 (§ 55.1-1000 et seq.) of Title 55 55.1
of the Code of Virginia.
"Designated licensed producer" means an individual who
(i) possesses a valid license to sell, solicit, or negotiate contracts of title
insurance in the Commonwealth; (ii) is appointed; (iii) is an officer,
director, or employee of the business entity; and (iv) is responsible for the
business entity's compliance with the insurance laws, rules, and regulations of
this Commonwealth.
"Employee" means an individual (i) whose manner and
means of performance of work are subject to the right of control of, or are
controlled by, a person and (ii) whose compensation for federal income tax
purposes is reported, or required to be reported, on a W-2 form issued by the
controlling person.
"Escrow, closing, or settlement services" means the
administrative and clerical services required to carry out the terms of
contracts affecting real estate. These services include (i) placing orders
for title insurance; (ii) receiving and issuing receipts for money received
from the parties; (iii) ordering loan checks and payoffs; (iv) ordering surveys
and inspections; (v) preparing settlement statements or Closing Disclosure
forms; (vi) determining that all closing documents conform to the parties'
contract requirements; (vii) setting the closing appointment; (viii) following
up with the parties to ensure that the transaction progresses to closing; (ix)
ascertaining that the lenders' instructions have been satisfied; (x) conducting
a closing conference at which the documents are executed; (xi) receiving and
disbursing funds; (xii) completing form documents and instruments selected by
and in accordance with instructions of the parties to the transaction; (xiii)
handling or arranging for the recording of documents; (xiv) sending recorded
documents to the lender; (xv) sending the recorded deed and the title policy to
the buyer; and (xvi) reporting federal income tax information for the real
estate sale to the Internal Revenue Service.
"Lay real estate settlement agent" means a person
who (i) is not licensed as an attorney under Chapter 39 (§ 54.1-3900 et
seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia, (ii) is not a party to the real
estate transaction, (iii) provides escrow, closing or settlement services in
connection with a transaction related to any real estate in this Commonwealth,
and (iv) is listed as the settlement agent on the settlement statement or
Closing Disclosure for the transaction.
"Settlement agent" means a person, other than a
party to the real estate transaction, who provides escrow, closing, or
settlement services in connection with a transaction related to real estate in
the Commonwealth and who is listed as the settlement agent on the settlement
statement or Closing Disclosure for the transaction. Any person, other than a
party to the transaction, who conducts the settlement conference and receives
or handles money shall be deemed a "settlement agent" subject to the
applicable requirements of Chapter 27.3 10 and this chapter.
"Title insurance agency" or "title insurance
agent" means any individual or business entity licensed in the
Commonwealth, pursuant to Chapter 18 (§ 38.2-1800 et seq.) of Title 38.2 of the
Code of Virginia, as a title insurance agent and appointed by a title insurance
company licensed in the Commonwealth who shall perform all of the following
services (for which liability arises) relevant to the issuance of title
insurance policies, subject to the underwriting directives and guidelines of
the agent's title insurance company. These services shall include (i) the
evaluation of the title search to determine the insurability of the title;,
(ii) a determination of whether or not underwriting objections have been
cleared;, (iii) the actual issuance of a title commitment or
binder and endorsements;, and (iv) the actual issuance of the
policy or policies and endorsements on behalf of the title insurance
company. A title insurance agent holding funds in escrow shall promptly deposit
the funds in a trust account in a financial institution authorized to do
business in this Commonwealth. This trust account shall be separate from all
other accounts held by the agent.
"Title insurance company" means any company
licensed to transact, or transacting, title insurance in this Commonwealth.
14VAC5-395-30. Registration.
A. Every settlement agent shall register with the bureau in
accordance with the provisions of § 55-525.30 § 55.1-1014 of
the Code of Virginia.
B. At the time of application for registration, a settlement
agent other than a title insurance company shall provide to the bureau (i) its
certificate of authorization or charter of a domestic limited liability company
or corporation, or certificate of registration or certificate of authority of a
foreign limited liability company or corporation, as applicable; (ii) an
original surety bond; and (iii) the name of the designated licensed producer.
C. Within 30 days of registration a settlement agent shall
furnish to the bureau:
1. Legal name;
2. Any fictitious or assumed names;
3. Principal place of business address;
4. Addresses of all other business locations;
5. Telephone numbers;
6. Escrow account numbers and financial institution addresses;
7. Employee and independent contractor list;
8. Website or websites;
9. Affiliated entities; and
10. Such other information as the bureau may require.
14VAC5-395-70. Reporting requirements.
A. Every settlement agent shall make all escrow, closing, or
settlement records available promptly upon request for examination by the
bureau without notice during normal business hours.
B. A settlement agent shall maintain documentation that
supports all entries on the settlement statement or Closing Disclosure.
C. A settlement agent shall promptly respond to a bureau
request for books, records, documentation, or other information in connection
with the bureau's investigation, enforcement, or examination of the settlement
agent's compliance with applicable laws and regulations. If no time period is
specified by the bureau, a written response as well as any requested books,
records, documentation, or information shall be delivered by the settlement
agent to the bureau not later than 30 days from the date of such request.
D. Within 30 days following the occurrence of any of the
following events, a settlement agent other than a title insurance company shall
report to the bureau if:
1. Any bankruptcy, reorganization, or receivership proceedings
are filed by or against the settlement agent.
2. Any governmental authority enters a final disposition in a
regulatory, administrative, or enforcement action against the settlement agent.
3. Any governmental authority revokes or suspends the
settlement agent's registration, license, or other license for a similar
business.
4. Based on allegations by any governmental authority that the
settlement agent violated any law or regulation applicable to the conduct of
its licensed business, the settlement agent enters into, or otherwise agrees to
the entry of, a settlement or consent order, decree, or agreement with or by
such governmental authority.
5. The settlement agent surrenders its license in another
state.
6. The settlement agent is denied a license in another state.
7. The settlement agent or any of its members, partners,
directors, officers, principals, employees, or independent contractors is
convicted of a felony.
8. Any funds held by the settlement agent are (i) seized by or
on behalf of any court or governmental instrumentality or (ii) forfeited to or
on behalf of any court or governmental instrumentality. The term
"forfeited" shall not include the escheatment of funds in accordance
with The Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act (§ 55-210.1 (§
55.1-2500 et seq. of Title 55 55.1 of the Code of Virginia)
or the interpleading of funds to a court of competent jurisdiction.
E. A settlement agent shall immediately notify the bureau
following the loss of (i) a designated licensed producer, (ii) required
insurance coverage, or (iii) required bond coverage.
F. A settlement agent or former settlement agent other than a
title insurance company shall provide the following information to the bureau
within 10 days after such person's title insurance license is surrendered,
terminated, suspended, or revoked or has lapsed by operation of law, or the
licensed and registered business is otherwise closed: (i) the names, addresses,
telephone numbers, fax numbers, and email addresses of a designated contact
person; (ii) the location of the settlement agent's or former settlement
agent's records; and (iii) any additional information that the bureau may
reasonably require. A settlement agent or former settlement agent other than a
title insurance company shall maintain current information with the bureau
until all escrow funds are disbursed and all title policies are issued.
G. Sixty days prior to ceasing business, a settlement agent
shall provide notice to the bureau of its intent to cease conducting
settlements and the anticipated date of business termination.
H. The reports required by this section shall be in the
format and contain such additional information as the bureau may reasonably
require. The bureau may also require additional reports that it deems
necessary.
14VAC5-395-75. Operating requirements.
A settlement agent shall comply with the following
requirements:
1. A settlement agent shall continuously maintain the
requirements and standards for licensure and registration.
2. A settlement agent shall reconcile its escrow accounts
monthly.
3. A settlement agent shall not provide any information to the
bureau or a consumer that is false, misleading, or deceptive.
4. A settlement agent shall not charge duplicative or padded
fees for escrow, closing, or settlement services.
5. A settlement agent shall not engage in any activity that
directly or indirectly results in an evasion of the provisions of Chapter 27.3
10 or this chapter.
6. Any person, other than a party to the transaction, who
conducts the settlement conference and receives or handles money, including
possessing wire transfer authority, shall be deemed a "settlement
agent" subject to the applicable requirements of Chapter 27.3 10
and this chapter.
7. A designated licensed producer shall be appointed by the
same title insurance company as its employer settlement agent.
8. A settlement agent shall not use or accept the services of
a title insurance agent who is an independent contractor unless the title
insurance agent is licensed and appointed. A settlement agent that permits an
independent contractor to conduct one or more settlement conferences on behalf
of the settlement agent shall ensure that the independent contractor is
properly insured and bonded as required by Chapter 27.3 10 and
this chapter.
9. A settlement agent that uses the services of a title
insurance agent who is an independent contractor shall be considered the legal
principal of the independent contractor and shall be liable for any violations
of Chapter 27.3 10 or this chapter committed by the independent
contractor, including unintentional conduct, within the scope of engagement.
10. A former settlement agent shall remain subject to the
provisions of Chapter 27.3 10 and this chapter in connection with
all settlements that the settlement agent performed while licensed and
registered, notwithstanding the occurrence of any of the following events:
a. The settlement agent's license is surrendered, terminated,
suspended, or revoked or has lapsed by operation of law; or
b. The settlement agent ceases conducting settlements.
11. If a settlement agent or former settlement agent disposes
of records containing a consumer's personal financial information or copies of
a consumer's identification documents, such records and copies shall be
disposed of in a secure manner.
14VAC5-395-80. Enforcement.
Failure to comply with any provision of Chapter 27.3 10
or this chapter may result in penalties, license revocation or suspension, the
entry of a cease and desist order, restitution, or other enforcement action.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6168; Filed September 20, 2019, 11:39 a.m.
TITLE 16. LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT
SAFETY AND HEALTH CODES BOARD
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
following regulatory action is exempt from Article 2 of the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 c of the Code of Virginia,
which excludes regulations that are necessary to meet the requirements of
federal law or regulations, provided such regulations do not differ materially
from those required by federal law or regulation. The Safety and Health Codes
Board will receive, consider, and respond to petitions by any interested person
at any time with respect to reconsideration or revision.
Titles of Regulations: 16VAC25-60. Administrative
Regulation for the Virginia Occupational Safety and Health Program (amending 16VAC25-60-130).
16VAC25-85. Recording and Reporting Occupational Injuries
and Illnesses (amending 16VAC25-85-1904.10).
16VAC25-90. Federal Identical General Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-90-1910.6,
16VAC25-90-1910.120, 16VAC25-90-1910.1001, Appendices D, E, H to
16VAC25-90-1910.1001, 16VAC25-90-1910.1017, 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, Appendices A,
C to 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, 16VAC25-90-1910.1025, 16VAC25-90-1910.1026,
16VAC25-90-1910.1027, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1027, 16VAC25-90-1910.1028,
16VAC25-90-1910.1029, Appendices A, B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1029, 16VAC25-90-1910.1030,
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, Appendices B-1, B-11, B-111, C, D to
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, 16VAC25-90-1910.1044, 16VAC25-90-1910.1045,
16VAC25-90-1910.1047, 16VAC25-90-1910.1048, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1048,
16VAC25-90-1910.1050, 16VAC25-90-1910.1051, Appendix F to 16VAC25-90-1910.1051,
16VAC25-90-1910.1052, Appendix B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1052,
16VAC25-90-1910.1053).
16VAC25-100. Federal Identical Shipyard Employment Standards (amending 16VAC25-100-1915.5,
16VAC25-100-1915.80, 16VAC25-100-1915.1001, Appendices D, E, I to
16VAC25-100-1915.1001, 16VAC25-100-1915.1026).
16VAC25-175. Federal Identical Construction Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-175-1926.6,
16VAC25-175-1926.50, 16VAC25-175-1926.55, 16VAC25-175-1926.60,
16VAC25-175-1926.62, 16VAC25-175-1926.64, 16VAC25-175-1926.104,
16VAC25-175-1926.200, 16VAC25-175-1926.201, 16VAC25-175-1926.250,
16VAC25-175-1926.800, 16VAC25-175-1926.1000, 16VAC25-175-1926.1001,
16VAC25-175-1926.1002, 16VAC25-175-1926.1003, 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, Appendices
D, E, I to 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, 16VAC25-175-1926.1126, 16VAC25-175-1926.1127,
16VAC25-175-1926.1129, 16VAC25-175-1926.1153; repeal 16VAC25-175-1926.202,
16VAC25-175-1926.203, Appendix A to Subpart W).
Statutory Authority: § 40.1-22 of the Code of
Virginia; Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-596).
Effective Date: November 15, 2019.
Agency Contact: Holly Trice, Senior Staff Attorney,
Department of Labor and Industry, 600 East Main Street, Suite 207, Richmond, VA
23219, telephone (804) 786-2641, FAX (804) 371-6524, or email
holly.trice@doli.virginia.gov.
Summary:
In a final rule, Standards Improvement Project - IV
(SIP-IV), federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) makes 14
revisions to existing standards in the recordkeeping, general industry,
maritime, and construction standards. SIP-IV removes or revises outdated,
duplicative, unnecessary, and inconsistent requirements in OSHA's safety and
health standards in 29 CFR.
More specifically, SIP-IV:
1. Revises § 1904.10(b)(6) of 29 CFR Part 104
(Occupational Injuries and Illness Recordkeeping and Reporting Standards) to
assist employers in complying with requirements for recording hearing loss by
adding a cross reference to § 1904.5.
2. Makes three revisions to Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous
Substances) of Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 as follows:
a. Remove the requirement that employers provide periodic
chest X-rays (CXR) to screen for lung cancer from Inorganic Arsenic
(§ 1910.1018), Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), and Acrylonitrile
(§ 1910.1045). OSHA is not removing (i) the requirement for a baseline CXR
in these or any other standards or (ii) the CXR requirements in standards where
CXR is used for purposes other than screening for lung cancer.
b. Allow but not require use of digital "CXRs" in
the medical surveillance provisions of Inorganic Arsenic (§ 1910.1018),
Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), Acrylonitrile (§ 1910.1045),
Asbestos (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, 1926.1101), and Cadmium (§§ 1910.1027
and 1926.1127) and allows other reasonably-sized standard X-ray films, such as
the 16-inch by 17-inch size, to be used in addition to the 14-inch by 17-inch
film specified in some standards.
c. Update terminology and references to (i) replace
''roentgenogram'' with ''X-ray"; (ii) eliminate references to semiannual
exams for certain employees in the Coke Oven Emissions appendices
(§ 1910.1029, Appendix A(VI) and Appendix B(II)(A)) as these exams were
eliminated in the second SIP rulemaking (70 FR 1112); (iii) in Appendix E of
each of its three asbestos standards (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, and
1926.1101), update terminology and clarify that classification must be in
accordance with the International Labour Organization (ILO) classification
system according to the Guidelines for the use of the ILO International
Classification of Radiographs of Pneumoconioses (revised edition 2011); and
(iv) specify that only ILO standard digital chest radiographic images are to be
used to classify digital CXRs and that digital CXRs are not to be printed out as
hard copies and then classified.
3. Makes four revisions to update lung function testing
requirements found in Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous Substances) of Part 1910,
Cotton Dust Standard (§ 1910.1043) including the following:
a. In § 1910(h)(2)(iii), require an evaluation of
forced expiratory volume (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC), and FEV1/FVC
against the lower limit of normal and percent predicted values to fully
characterize possible pulmonary impairment in exposed workers, which is
consistent with generally accepted current practices and supported by the
National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
b. Remove the old Knudson values from Appendix C, reserve
Appendix C for future use, and modify § 1910.1043(n)(1) to specify that only
Appendices B and D are mandatory.
c. Change two subheaders in The Respiratory Questionnaire
for Non-Textile Workers for the Cotton Industry (Appendix B-II to
§ 1910.1043), section "B. Occupational History Table," column
titled ''Tenure of Employment'' to read as follows: ''FROM (year)'' and ''TO
(year)''; the "Tenure of Employment" column contains boxes in which
dates of employment are entered.
d. Make changes to reflect the most recent spirometry
recommendations from American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society
(ATS/ERS) (Miller et al., 2005) in Appendix D to § 1910.1043, which sets
standards for spirometric measurements of pulmonary function.
4. Removes the term "feral cat" from the
definitions in § 1915.80.
5. Revises § 1926.50 to update the 911 service posting
requirements consistent with the current status of land-line and wireless
telephone technologies.
6. Makes several minor clarifications to § 1926.55,
including changing the phrase "threshold limit values" (TLV) to
"permissible exposure limits" (PELs), removing confusing phrases, and
fixing grammatical errors.
7. Replaces the entire regulatory text for the Process
Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals (PSM) Standard for Construction
at § 1926.64 with a cross reference to the identical general industry standard
at § 1910.119.
8. Revises the minimum breaking strength in the safety
belts, lifelines, and lanyards standard at § 1926.104(c) from 5,400 to
5,000 pounds to conform with the breaking strength requirements in the Fall
Protection Standard at § 1926.502(d)(9).
9. Revises Subpart G of Part 1926:
a. Update the version of Part 6 of the Manual on Uniform
Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) that is incorporated by reference to the
November 4, 2009, MUTCD (2009 Edition), including Revision 1 and Revision 2,
both dated May 2012 (74 FR 66730, 77 FR 28455, and 77 FR 28460).
b. Revise §§ 1926.200 through 1926.203 to (i) delete
references in §§ 1926.200(g)(2) and 1926.201(a) to the 1988 Edition and
Millennium Edition of the MUTCD and insert references to the 2009 Edition, (ii)
revise the regulatory text of § 1926.200 (g)(1) and (2) to eliminate
confusion regarding OSHA's interpretation of the existing text; (iii) delete
§ 1926.202 because it duplicates the requirements in the revisions to § 1926.200(g);
and (iv) delete § 1926.203 because the revisions to § 1926.202 make §
1926.203 unnecessary.
10. Revises § 1926.250(a)(2) to exclude all
single-family residential structures and woodframed multifamily residential
structures from the requirement of posting maximum safe load limits of floors
in storage areas.
11. Revises Subpart S (Underground Construction, Caissons,
Cofferdams, and Compressed Air) of Part 1926 to update
§ 1926.800(k)(10)(ii) for mobile diesel powered equipment used in ''other
than gassy operations'' underground by requiring compliance only with
§ 57.5067, pertaining to underground metal and nonmetal mines, instead of
§§ 75.1909, 75.1910, and 75.1911(a) through (i), pertaining to underground
coal mines.
12. Revises Subpart W (Rollover Protective
Structures; Overhead Protection) of Part 1926 by removing the provisions that
specify the test procedures and performance requirements found in
§§ 1926.1000, 1926.1001, 1926.1002, and 1926.1003 and replacing those
provisions with references to the underlying consensus standards from which
they were derived. (ISO 3471:2008, ISO 5700:2013, ISO 27850:2013.)
13. Revises Subpart Z of Part 1926 by removing and
reserving § 1926.1129, which regulated exposure to Coke Oven Emissions in
Construction; coke oven work is only found in general industry.
14. Makes multiple revisions to paragraphs and appendices
in Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 to remove Social Security number collection
requirements.
In this regulatory action, the board is adopting this final
rule and revising 16VAC25-60-130 D to update the reference to Part 6 of the
MUTCD to the November 4, 2009 MUTCD, including Revision 1 and Revision 2, both
dated May 2012.
Note on Incorporation by Reference: Pursuant to
§ 2.2-4103 of the Code of Virginia, 29 CFR Part 1904 (Recording and
Reporting Occupational Injuries and Illnesses), 29 CFR Part 1910
(Occupational Safety and Health Standards), 29 CFR 1915 (Shipyard
Employment Standards), and 29 CFR Part 1926 (Construction Industry
Standards) are declared documents generally available to the public and
appropriate for incorporation by reference. For this reason, these documents
will not be printed in the Virginia Register of Regulations. A copy of each
document is available for inspection at the Department of Labor and Industry,
Main Street Centre, 600 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, and in the
office of the Registrar of Regulations, 900 East Main Street, 11th Floor,
Richmond, Virginia 23219.
Statement of Final Agency Action: On September 17, 2019,
the Safety and Health Codes Board adopted Phase IV of federal OSHA's final rule
for the Standards Improvement Project, as published in 84 FR 21416 through 84
FR 21598 on May 14, 2019, with an effective date of November 15, 2019.
Federal Terms and State Equivalents: When the
regulations as set forth in the Standards Improvement Project-Phase IV are
applied to the Commissioner of the Department of Labor and Industry or to
Virginia employers, the following federal terms shall be considered to read as
follows:
Federal Terms
|
VOSH Equivalent
|
29 CFR
|
VOSH Standard
|
Assistant Secretary
|
Commissioner of Labor and Industry
|
Agency
|
Department
|
May 14, 2019
|
November 15, 2019
|
16VAC25-60-130. Construction industry standards.
A. The occupational safety or health standards adopted as
rules or regulations by the Virginia Safety and Health Codes Board either
directly, or by reference, from 29 CFR Part 1926 shall apply by their own terms
to all employers and employees engaged in either construction work or
construction related activities covered by the Virginia State Plan for
Occupational Safety and Health.
B. The employer shall comply with the manufacturer's
specifications and limitations applicable to the operation, training, use,
installation, inspection, testing, repair and maintenance of all machinery,
vehicles, tools, materials and equipment, unless specifically superseded by a
more stringent corresponding requirement in 29 CFR Part 1926. The use of any
machinery, vehicle, tool, material or equipment that is not in compliance with
any applicable requirement of the manufacturer is prohibited, and shall either
be identified by the employer as unsafe by tagging or locking the controls to
render them inoperable or be physically removed from its place of use or
operation.
C. For the purposes of the applicability of such Part 1926
standards, the key criteria utilized to make such a decision shall be the
activities taking place at the worksite, not the primary business of the
employer. Construction work shall generally include any building, altering,
repairing, improving, demolishing, painting or decorating any structure,
building, highway, or roadway and any draining, dredging, excavation, grading
or similar work upon real property. Construction also generally includes work
performed in traditional construction trades such as carpentry, roofing,
masonry work, plumbing, trenching and excavating, tunneling, and electrical
work. Construction does not include maintenance, alteration or repair of
mechanical devices, machinery, or equipment, even when the mechanical device,
machinery or equipment is part of a pre-existing structure.
D. The employer shall comply with the Virginia Department of
Transportation (VDOT) Work Area Protection Manual in lieu of the federal Manual
on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (Part VI of the MUTCD, 1988 2009
Edition, Revision 3 1 dated May 2012 and Revision 2 dated May 2012,
or Part VI of the MUTCD, Millennium Edition - referenced in
16VAC25-175-1926.200 through 16VAC25-175-1926.202) and
16VAC25-175-1926.201) when working under a contract for construction,
repair, or maintenance between the employer and the Commonwealth; agencies,
authorities, or instrumentalities of the Commonwealth; or any political
subdivision or public body of the Commonwealth when such contract stipulates
employer compliance with the VDOT Work Area Protection Manual in effect at the
time of contractual agreement.
E. Certain standards of 29 CFR Part 1910 have been
determined by federal OSHA to be applicable to construction and have been
adopted for this application by the board.
F. The standards adopted from 29 CFR Part 1910.19 and 29 CFR
Part 1910.20 containing respectively, special provisions regarding air
contaminants and requirements concerning access to employee exposure and
medical records shall apply to construction work as well as general industry.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6163; Filed September 23, 2019, 10:21 a.m.
TITLE 16. LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT
SAFETY AND HEALTH CODES BOARD
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
following regulatory action is exempt from Article 2 of the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 c of the Code of Virginia,
which excludes regulations that are necessary to meet the requirements of
federal law or regulations, provided such regulations do not differ materially
from those required by federal law or regulation. The Safety and Health Codes
Board will receive, consider, and respond to petitions by any interested person
at any time with respect to reconsideration or revision.
Titles of Regulations: 16VAC25-60. Administrative
Regulation for the Virginia Occupational Safety and Health Program (amending 16VAC25-60-130).
16VAC25-85. Recording and Reporting Occupational Injuries
and Illnesses (amending 16VAC25-85-1904.10).
16VAC25-90. Federal Identical General Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-90-1910.6,
16VAC25-90-1910.120, 16VAC25-90-1910.1001, Appendices D, E, H to
16VAC25-90-1910.1001, 16VAC25-90-1910.1017, 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, Appendices A,
C to 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, 16VAC25-90-1910.1025, 16VAC25-90-1910.1026,
16VAC25-90-1910.1027, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1027, 16VAC25-90-1910.1028,
16VAC25-90-1910.1029, Appendices A, B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1029, 16VAC25-90-1910.1030,
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, Appendices B-1, B-11, B-111, C, D to
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, 16VAC25-90-1910.1044, 16VAC25-90-1910.1045,
16VAC25-90-1910.1047, 16VAC25-90-1910.1048, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1048,
16VAC25-90-1910.1050, 16VAC25-90-1910.1051, Appendix F to 16VAC25-90-1910.1051,
16VAC25-90-1910.1052, Appendix B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1052,
16VAC25-90-1910.1053).
16VAC25-100. Federal Identical Shipyard Employment Standards (amending 16VAC25-100-1915.5,
16VAC25-100-1915.80, 16VAC25-100-1915.1001, Appendices D, E, I to
16VAC25-100-1915.1001, 16VAC25-100-1915.1026).
16VAC25-175. Federal Identical Construction Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-175-1926.6,
16VAC25-175-1926.50, 16VAC25-175-1926.55, 16VAC25-175-1926.60,
16VAC25-175-1926.62, 16VAC25-175-1926.64, 16VAC25-175-1926.104,
16VAC25-175-1926.200, 16VAC25-175-1926.201, 16VAC25-175-1926.250,
16VAC25-175-1926.800, 16VAC25-175-1926.1000, 16VAC25-175-1926.1001,
16VAC25-175-1926.1002, 16VAC25-175-1926.1003, 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, Appendices
D, E, I to 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, 16VAC25-175-1926.1126, 16VAC25-175-1926.1127,
16VAC25-175-1926.1129, 16VAC25-175-1926.1153; repeal 16VAC25-175-1926.202,
16VAC25-175-1926.203, Appendix A to Subpart W).
Statutory Authority: § 40.1-22 of the Code of
Virginia; Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-596).
Effective Date: November 15, 2019.
Agency Contact: Holly Trice, Senior Staff Attorney,
Department of Labor and Industry, 600 East Main Street, Suite 207, Richmond, VA
23219, telephone (804) 786-2641, FAX (804) 371-6524, or email
holly.trice@doli.virginia.gov.
Summary:
In a final rule, Standards Improvement Project - IV
(SIP-IV), federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) makes 14
revisions to existing standards in the recordkeeping, general industry,
maritime, and construction standards. SIP-IV removes or revises outdated,
duplicative, unnecessary, and inconsistent requirements in OSHA's safety and
health standards in 29 CFR.
More specifically, SIP-IV:
1. Revises § 1904.10(b)(6) of 29 CFR Part 104
(Occupational Injuries and Illness Recordkeeping and Reporting Standards) to
assist employers in complying with requirements for recording hearing loss by
adding a cross reference to § 1904.5.
2. Makes three revisions to Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous
Substances) of Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 as follows:
a. Remove the requirement that employers provide periodic
chest X-rays (CXR) to screen for lung cancer from Inorganic Arsenic
(§ 1910.1018), Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), and Acrylonitrile
(§ 1910.1045). OSHA is not removing (i) the requirement for a baseline CXR
in these or any other standards or (ii) the CXR requirements in standards where
CXR is used for purposes other than screening for lung cancer.
b. Allow but not require use of digital "CXRs" in
the medical surveillance provisions of Inorganic Arsenic (§ 1910.1018),
Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), Acrylonitrile (§ 1910.1045),
Asbestos (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, 1926.1101), and Cadmium (§§ 1910.1027
and 1926.1127) and allows other reasonably-sized standard X-ray films, such as
the 16-inch by 17-inch size, to be used in addition to the 14-inch by 17-inch
film specified in some standards.
c. Update terminology and references to (i) replace
''roentgenogram'' with ''X-ray"; (ii) eliminate references to semiannual
exams for certain employees in the Coke Oven Emissions appendices
(§ 1910.1029, Appendix A(VI) and Appendix B(II)(A)) as these exams were
eliminated in the second SIP rulemaking (70 FR 1112); (iii) in Appendix E of
each of its three asbestos standards (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, and
1926.1101), update terminology and clarify that classification must be in
accordance with the International Labour Organization (ILO) classification
system according to the Guidelines for the use of the ILO International
Classification of Radiographs of Pneumoconioses (revised edition 2011); and
(iv) specify that only ILO standard digital chest radiographic images are to be
used to classify digital CXRs and that digital CXRs are not to be printed out as
hard copies and then classified.
3. Makes four revisions to update lung function testing
requirements found in Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous Substances) of Part 1910,
Cotton Dust Standard (§ 1910.1043) including the following:
a. In § 1910(h)(2)(iii), require an evaluation of
forced expiratory volume (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC), and FEV1/FVC
against the lower limit of normal and percent predicted values to fully
characterize possible pulmonary impairment in exposed workers, which is
consistent with generally accepted current practices and supported by the
National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
b. Remove the old Knudson values from Appendix C, reserve
Appendix C for future use, and modify § 1910.1043(n)(1) to specify that only
Appendices B and D are mandatory.
c. Change two subheaders in The Respiratory Questionnaire
for Non-Textile Workers for the Cotton Industry (Appendix B-II to
§ 1910.1043), section "B. Occupational History Table," column
titled ''Tenure of Employment'' to read as follows: ''FROM (year)'' and ''TO
(year)''; the "Tenure of Employment" column contains boxes in which
dates of employment are entered.
d. Make changes to reflect the most recent spirometry
recommendations from American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society
(ATS/ERS) (Miller et al., 2005) in Appendix D to § 1910.1043, which sets
standards for spirometric measurements of pulmonary function.
4. Removes the term "feral cat" from the
definitions in § 1915.80.
5. Revises § 1926.50 to update the 911 service posting
requirements consistent with the current status of land-line and wireless
telephone technologies.
6. Makes several minor clarifications to § 1926.55,
including changing the phrase "threshold limit values" (TLV) to
"permissible exposure limits" (PELs), removing confusing phrases, and
fixing grammatical errors.
7. Replaces the entire regulatory text for the Process
Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals (PSM) Standard for Construction
at § 1926.64 with a cross reference to the identical general industry standard
at § 1910.119.
8. Revises the minimum breaking strength in the safety
belts, lifelines, and lanyards standard at § 1926.104(c) from 5,400 to
5,000 pounds to conform with the breaking strength requirements in the Fall
Protection Standard at § 1926.502(d)(9).
9. Revises Subpart G of Part 1926:
a. Update the version of Part 6 of the Manual on Uniform
Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) that is incorporated by reference to the
November 4, 2009, MUTCD (2009 Edition), including Revision 1 and Revision 2,
both dated May 2012 (74 FR 66730, 77 FR 28455, and 77 FR 28460).
b. Revise §§ 1926.200 through 1926.203 to (i) delete
references in §§ 1926.200(g)(2) and 1926.201(a) to the 1988 Edition and
Millennium Edition of the MUTCD and insert references to the 2009 Edition, (ii)
revise the regulatory text of § 1926.200 (g)(1) and (2) to eliminate
confusion regarding OSHA's interpretation of the existing text; (iii) delete
§ 1926.202 because it duplicates the requirements in the revisions to § 1926.200(g);
and (iv) delete § 1926.203 because the revisions to § 1926.202 make §
1926.203 unnecessary.
10. Revises § 1926.250(a)(2) to exclude all
single-family residential structures and woodframed multifamily residential
structures from the requirement of posting maximum safe load limits of floors
in storage areas.
11. Revises Subpart S (Underground Construction, Caissons,
Cofferdams, and Compressed Air) of Part 1926 to update
§ 1926.800(k)(10)(ii) for mobile diesel powered equipment used in ''other
than gassy operations'' underground by requiring compliance only with
§ 57.5067, pertaining to underground metal and nonmetal mines, instead of
§§ 75.1909, 75.1910, and 75.1911(a) through (i), pertaining to underground
coal mines.
12. Revises Subpart W (Rollover Protective
Structures; Overhead Protection) of Part 1926 by removing the provisions that
specify the test procedures and performance requirements found in
§§ 1926.1000, 1926.1001, 1926.1002, and 1926.1003 and replacing those
provisions with references to the underlying consensus standards from which
they were derived. (ISO 3471:2008, ISO 5700:2013, ISO 27850:2013.)
13. Revises Subpart Z of Part 1926 by removing and
reserving § 1926.1129, which regulated exposure to Coke Oven Emissions in
Construction; coke oven work is only found in general industry.
14. Makes multiple revisions to paragraphs and appendices
in Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 to remove Social Security number collection
requirements.
In this regulatory action, the board is adopting this final
rule and revising 16VAC25-60-130 D to update the reference to Part 6 of the
MUTCD to the November 4, 2009 MUTCD, including Revision 1 and Revision 2, both
dated May 2012.
Note on Incorporation by Reference: Pursuant to
§ 2.2-4103 of the Code of Virginia, 29 CFR Part 1904 (Recording and
Reporting Occupational Injuries and Illnesses), 29 CFR Part 1910
(Occupational Safety and Health Standards), 29 CFR 1915 (Shipyard
Employment Standards), and 29 CFR Part 1926 (Construction Industry
Standards) are declared documents generally available to the public and
appropriate for incorporation by reference. For this reason, these documents
will not be printed in the Virginia Register of Regulations. A copy of each
document is available for inspection at the Department of Labor and Industry,
Main Street Centre, 600 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, and in the
office of the Registrar of Regulations, 900 East Main Street, 11th Floor,
Richmond, Virginia 23219.
Statement of Final Agency Action: On September 17, 2019,
the Safety and Health Codes Board adopted Phase IV of federal OSHA's final rule
for the Standards Improvement Project, as published in 84 FR 21416 through 84
FR 21598 on May 14, 2019, with an effective date of November 15, 2019.
Federal Terms and State Equivalents: When the
regulations as set forth in the Standards Improvement Project-Phase IV are
applied to the Commissioner of the Department of Labor and Industry or to
Virginia employers, the following federal terms shall be considered to read as
follows:
Federal Terms
|
VOSH Equivalent
|
29 CFR
|
VOSH Standard
|
Assistant Secretary
|
Commissioner of Labor and Industry
|
Agency
|
Department
|
May 14, 2019
|
November 15, 2019
|
16VAC25-60-130. Construction industry standards.
A. The occupational safety or health standards adopted as
rules or regulations by the Virginia Safety and Health Codes Board either
directly, or by reference, from 29 CFR Part 1926 shall apply by their own terms
to all employers and employees engaged in either construction work or
construction related activities covered by the Virginia State Plan for
Occupational Safety and Health.
B. The employer shall comply with the manufacturer's
specifications and limitations applicable to the operation, training, use,
installation, inspection, testing, repair and maintenance of all machinery,
vehicles, tools, materials and equipment, unless specifically superseded by a
more stringent corresponding requirement in 29 CFR Part 1926. The use of any
machinery, vehicle, tool, material or equipment that is not in compliance with
any applicable requirement of the manufacturer is prohibited, and shall either
be identified by the employer as unsafe by tagging or locking the controls to
render them inoperable or be physically removed from its place of use or
operation.
C. For the purposes of the applicability of such Part 1926
standards, the key criteria utilized to make such a decision shall be the
activities taking place at the worksite, not the primary business of the
employer. Construction work shall generally include any building, altering,
repairing, improving, demolishing, painting or decorating any structure,
building, highway, or roadway and any draining, dredging, excavation, grading
or similar work upon real property. Construction also generally includes work
performed in traditional construction trades such as carpentry, roofing,
masonry work, plumbing, trenching and excavating, tunneling, and electrical
work. Construction does not include maintenance, alteration or repair of
mechanical devices, machinery, or equipment, even when the mechanical device,
machinery or equipment is part of a pre-existing structure.
D. The employer shall comply with the Virginia Department of
Transportation (VDOT) Work Area Protection Manual in lieu of the federal Manual
on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (Part VI of the MUTCD, 1988 2009
Edition, Revision 3 1 dated May 2012 and Revision 2 dated May 2012,
or Part VI of the MUTCD, Millennium Edition - referenced in
16VAC25-175-1926.200 through 16VAC25-175-1926.202) and
16VAC25-175-1926.201) when working under a contract for construction,
repair, or maintenance between the employer and the Commonwealth; agencies,
authorities, or instrumentalities of the Commonwealth; or any political
subdivision or public body of the Commonwealth when such contract stipulates
employer compliance with the VDOT Work Area Protection Manual in effect at the
time of contractual agreement.
E. Certain standards of 29 CFR Part 1910 have been
determined by federal OSHA to be applicable to construction and have been
adopted for this application by the board.
F. The standards adopted from 29 CFR Part 1910.19 and 29 CFR
Part 1910.20 containing respectively, special provisions regarding air
contaminants and requirements concerning access to employee exposure and
medical records shall apply to construction work as well as general industry.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6163; Filed September 23, 2019, 10:21 a.m.
TITLE 16. LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT
SAFETY AND HEALTH CODES BOARD
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
following regulatory action is exempt from Article 2 of the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 c of the Code of Virginia,
which excludes regulations that are necessary to meet the requirements of
federal law or regulations, provided such regulations do not differ materially
from those required by federal law or regulation. The Safety and Health Codes
Board will receive, consider, and respond to petitions by any interested person
at any time with respect to reconsideration or revision.
Titles of Regulations: 16VAC25-60. Administrative
Regulation for the Virginia Occupational Safety and Health Program (amending 16VAC25-60-130).
16VAC25-85. Recording and Reporting Occupational Injuries
and Illnesses (amending 16VAC25-85-1904.10).
16VAC25-90. Federal Identical General Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-90-1910.6,
16VAC25-90-1910.120, 16VAC25-90-1910.1001, Appendices D, E, H to
16VAC25-90-1910.1001, 16VAC25-90-1910.1017, 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, Appendices A,
C to 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, 16VAC25-90-1910.1025, 16VAC25-90-1910.1026,
16VAC25-90-1910.1027, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1027, 16VAC25-90-1910.1028,
16VAC25-90-1910.1029, Appendices A, B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1029, 16VAC25-90-1910.1030,
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, Appendices B-1, B-11, B-111, C, D to
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, 16VAC25-90-1910.1044, 16VAC25-90-1910.1045,
16VAC25-90-1910.1047, 16VAC25-90-1910.1048, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1048,
16VAC25-90-1910.1050, 16VAC25-90-1910.1051, Appendix F to 16VAC25-90-1910.1051,
16VAC25-90-1910.1052, Appendix B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1052,
16VAC25-90-1910.1053).
16VAC25-100. Federal Identical Shipyard Employment Standards (amending 16VAC25-100-1915.5,
16VAC25-100-1915.80, 16VAC25-100-1915.1001, Appendices D, E, I to
16VAC25-100-1915.1001, 16VAC25-100-1915.1026).
16VAC25-175. Federal Identical Construction Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-175-1926.6,
16VAC25-175-1926.50, 16VAC25-175-1926.55, 16VAC25-175-1926.60,
16VAC25-175-1926.62, 16VAC25-175-1926.64, 16VAC25-175-1926.104,
16VAC25-175-1926.200, 16VAC25-175-1926.201, 16VAC25-175-1926.250,
16VAC25-175-1926.800, 16VAC25-175-1926.1000, 16VAC25-175-1926.1001,
16VAC25-175-1926.1002, 16VAC25-175-1926.1003, 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, Appendices
D, E, I to 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, 16VAC25-175-1926.1126, 16VAC25-175-1926.1127,
16VAC25-175-1926.1129, 16VAC25-175-1926.1153; repeal 16VAC25-175-1926.202,
16VAC25-175-1926.203, Appendix A to Subpart W).
Statutory Authority: § 40.1-22 of the Code of
Virginia; Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-596).
Effective Date: November 15, 2019.
Agency Contact: Holly Trice, Senior Staff Attorney,
Department of Labor and Industry, 600 East Main Street, Suite 207, Richmond, VA
23219, telephone (804) 786-2641, FAX (804) 371-6524, or email
holly.trice@doli.virginia.gov.
Summary:
In a final rule, Standards Improvement Project - IV
(SIP-IV), federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) makes 14
revisions to existing standards in the recordkeeping, general industry,
maritime, and construction standards. SIP-IV removes or revises outdated,
duplicative, unnecessary, and inconsistent requirements in OSHA's safety and
health standards in 29 CFR.
More specifically, SIP-IV:
1. Revises § 1904.10(b)(6) of 29 CFR Part 104
(Occupational Injuries and Illness Recordkeeping and Reporting Standards) to
assist employers in complying with requirements for recording hearing loss by
adding a cross reference to § 1904.5.
2. Makes three revisions to Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous
Substances) of Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 as follows:
a. Remove the requirement that employers provide periodic
chest X-rays (CXR) to screen for lung cancer from Inorganic Arsenic
(§ 1910.1018), Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), and Acrylonitrile
(§ 1910.1045). OSHA is not removing (i) the requirement for a baseline CXR
in these or any other standards or (ii) the CXR requirements in standards where
CXR is used for purposes other than screening for lung cancer.
b. Allow but not require use of digital "CXRs" in
the medical surveillance provisions of Inorganic Arsenic (§ 1910.1018),
Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), Acrylonitrile (§ 1910.1045),
Asbestos (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, 1926.1101), and Cadmium (§§ 1910.1027
and 1926.1127) and allows other reasonably-sized standard X-ray films, such as
the 16-inch by 17-inch size, to be used in addition to the 14-inch by 17-inch
film specified in some standards.
c. Update terminology and references to (i) replace
''roentgenogram'' with ''X-ray"; (ii) eliminate references to semiannual
exams for certain employees in the Coke Oven Emissions appendices
(§ 1910.1029, Appendix A(VI) and Appendix B(II)(A)) as these exams were
eliminated in the second SIP rulemaking (70 FR 1112); (iii) in Appendix E of
each of its three asbestos standards (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, and
1926.1101), update terminology and clarify that classification must be in
accordance with the International Labour Organization (ILO) classification
system according to the Guidelines for the use of the ILO International
Classification of Radiographs of Pneumoconioses (revised edition 2011); and
(iv) specify that only ILO standard digital chest radiographic images are to be
used to classify digital CXRs and that digital CXRs are not to be printed out as
hard copies and then classified.
3. Makes four revisions to update lung function testing
requirements found in Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous Substances) of Part 1910,
Cotton Dust Standard (§ 1910.1043) including the following:
a. In § 1910(h)(2)(iii), require an evaluation of
forced expiratory volume (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC), and FEV1/FVC
against the lower limit of normal and percent predicted values to fully
characterize possible pulmonary impairment in exposed workers, which is
consistent with generally accepted current practices and supported by the
National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
b. Remove the old Knudson values from Appendix C, reserve
Appendix C for future use, and modify § 1910.1043(n)(1) to specify that only
Appendices B and D are mandatory.
c. Change two subheaders in The Respiratory Questionnaire
for Non-Textile Workers for the Cotton Industry (Appendix B-II to
§ 1910.1043), section "B. Occupational History Table," column
titled ''Tenure of Employment'' to read as follows: ''FROM (year)'' and ''TO
(year)''; the "Tenure of Employment" column contains boxes in which
dates of employment are entered.
d. Make changes to reflect the most recent spirometry
recommendations from American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society
(ATS/ERS) (Miller et al., 2005) in Appendix D to § 1910.1043, which sets
standards for spirometric measurements of pulmonary function.
4. Removes the term "feral cat" from the
definitions in § 1915.80.
5. Revises § 1926.50 to update the 911 service posting
requirements consistent with the current status of land-line and wireless
telephone technologies.
6. Makes several minor clarifications to § 1926.55,
including changing the phrase "threshold limit values" (TLV) to
"permissible exposure limits" (PELs), removing confusing phrases, and
fixing grammatical errors.
7. Replaces the entire regulatory text for the Process
Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals (PSM) Standard for Construction
at § 1926.64 with a cross reference to the identical general industry standard
at § 1910.119.
8. Revises the minimum breaking strength in the safety
belts, lifelines, and lanyards standard at § 1926.104(c) from 5,400 to
5,000 pounds to conform with the breaking strength requirements in the Fall
Protection Standard at § 1926.502(d)(9).
9. Revises Subpart G of Part 1926:
a. Update the version of Part 6 of the Manual on Uniform
Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) that is incorporated by reference to the
November 4, 2009, MUTCD (2009 Edition), including Revision 1 and Revision 2,
both dated May 2012 (74 FR 66730, 77 FR 28455, and 77 FR 28460).
b. Revise §§ 1926.200 through 1926.203 to (i) delete
references in §§ 1926.200(g)(2) and 1926.201(a) to the 1988 Edition and
Millennium Edition of the MUTCD and insert references to the 2009 Edition, (ii)
revise the regulatory text of § 1926.200 (g)(1) and (2) to eliminate
confusion regarding OSHA's interpretation of the existing text; (iii) delete
§ 1926.202 because it duplicates the requirements in the revisions to § 1926.200(g);
and (iv) delete § 1926.203 because the revisions to § 1926.202 make §
1926.203 unnecessary.
10. Revises § 1926.250(a)(2) to exclude all
single-family residential structures and woodframed multifamily residential
structures from the requirement of posting maximum safe load limits of floors
in storage areas.
11. Revises Subpart S (Underground Construction, Caissons,
Cofferdams, and Compressed Air) of Part 1926 to update
§ 1926.800(k)(10)(ii) for mobile diesel powered equipment used in ''other
than gassy operations'' underground by requiring compliance only with
§ 57.5067, pertaining to underground metal and nonmetal mines, instead of
§§ 75.1909, 75.1910, and 75.1911(a) through (i), pertaining to underground
coal mines.
12. Revises Subpart W (Rollover Protective
Structures; Overhead Protection) of Part 1926 by removing the provisions that
specify the test procedures and performance requirements found in
§§ 1926.1000, 1926.1001, 1926.1002, and 1926.1003 and replacing those
provisions with references to the underlying consensus standards from which
they were derived. (ISO 3471:2008, ISO 5700:2013, ISO 27850:2013.)
13. Revises Subpart Z of Part 1926 by removing and
reserving § 1926.1129, which regulated exposure to Coke Oven Emissions in
Construction; coke oven work is only found in general industry.
14. Makes multiple revisions to paragraphs and appendices
in Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 to remove Social Security number collection
requirements.
In this regulatory action, the board is adopting this final
rule and revising 16VAC25-60-130 D to update the reference to Part 6 of the
MUTCD to the November 4, 2009 MUTCD, including Revision 1 and Revision 2, both
dated May 2012.
Note on Incorporation by Reference: Pursuant to
§ 2.2-4103 of the Code of Virginia, 29 CFR Part 1904 (Recording and
Reporting Occupational Injuries and Illnesses), 29 CFR Part 1910
(Occupational Safety and Health Standards), 29 CFR 1915 (Shipyard
Employment Standards), and 29 CFR Part 1926 (Construction Industry
Standards) are declared documents generally available to the public and
appropriate for incorporation by reference. For this reason, these documents
will not be printed in the Virginia Register of Regulations. A copy of each
document is available for inspection at the Department of Labor and Industry,
Main Street Centre, 600 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, and in the
office of the Registrar of Regulations, 900 East Main Street, 11th Floor,
Richmond, Virginia 23219.
Statement of Final Agency Action: On September 17, 2019,
the Safety and Health Codes Board adopted Phase IV of federal OSHA's final rule
for the Standards Improvement Project, as published in 84 FR 21416 through 84
FR 21598 on May 14, 2019, with an effective date of November 15, 2019.
Federal Terms and State Equivalents: When the
regulations as set forth in the Standards Improvement Project-Phase IV are
applied to the Commissioner of the Department of Labor and Industry or to
Virginia employers, the following federal terms shall be considered to read as
follows:
Federal Terms
|
VOSH Equivalent
|
29 CFR
|
VOSH Standard
|
Assistant Secretary
|
Commissioner of Labor and Industry
|
Agency
|
Department
|
May 14, 2019
|
November 15, 2019
|
16VAC25-60-130. Construction industry standards.
A. The occupational safety or health standards adopted as
rules or regulations by the Virginia Safety and Health Codes Board either
directly, or by reference, from 29 CFR Part 1926 shall apply by their own terms
to all employers and employees engaged in either construction work or
construction related activities covered by the Virginia State Plan for
Occupational Safety and Health.
B. The employer shall comply with the manufacturer's
specifications and limitations applicable to the operation, training, use,
installation, inspection, testing, repair and maintenance of all machinery,
vehicles, tools, materials and equipment, unless specifically superseded by a
more stringent corresponding requirement in 29 CFR Part 1926. The use of any
machinery, vehicle, tool, material or equipment that is not in compliance with
any applicable requirement of the manufacturer is prohibited, and shall either
be identified by the employer as unsafe by tagging or locking the controls to
render them inoperable or be physically removed from its place of use or
operation.
C. For the purposes of the applicability of such Part 1926
standards, the key criteria utilized to make such a decision shall be the
activities taking place at the worksite, not the primary business of the
employer. Construction work shall generally include any building, altering,
repairing, improving, demolishing, painting or decorating any structure,
building, highway, or roadway and any draining, dredging, excavation, grading
or similar work upon real property. Construction also generally includes work
performed in traditional construction trades such as carpentry, roofing,
masonry work, plumbing, trenching and excavating, tunneling, and electrical
work. Construction does not include maintenance, alteration or repair of
mechanical devices, machinery, or equipment, even when the mechanical device,
machinery or equipment is part of a pre-existing structure.
D. The employer shall comply with the Virginia Department of
Transportation (VDOT) Work Area Protection Manual in lieu of the federal Manual
on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (Part VI of the MUTCD, 1988 2009
Edition, Revision 3 1 dated May 2012 and Revision 2 dated May 2012,
or Part VI of the MUTCD, Millennium Edition - referenced in
16VAC25-175-1926.200 through 16VAC25-175-1926.202) and
16VAC25-175-1926.201) when working under a contract for construction,
repair, or maintenance between the employer and the Commonwealth; agencies,
authorities, or instrumentalities of the Commonwealth; or any political
subdivision or public body of the Commonwealth when such contract stipulates
employer compliance with the VDOT Work Area Protection Manual in effect at the
time of contractual agreement.
E. Certain standards of 29 CFR Part 1910 have been
determined by federal OSHA to be applicable to construction and have been
adopted for this application by the board.
F. The standards adopted from 29 CFR Part 1910.19 and 29 CFR
Part 1910.20 containing respectively, special provisions regarding air
contaminants and requirements concerning access to employee exposure and
medical records shall apply to construction work as well as general industry.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6163; Filed September 23, 2019, 10:21 a.m.
TITLE 16. LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT
SAFETY AND HEALTH CODES BOARD
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
following regulatory action is exempt from Article 2 of the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 c of the Code of Virginia,
which excludes regulations that are necessary to meet the requirements of
federal law or regulations, provided such regulations do not differ materially
from those required by federal law or regulation. The Safety and Health Codes
Board will receive, consider, and respond to petitions by any interested person
at any time with respect to reconsideration or revision.
Titles of Regulations: 16VAC25-60. Administrative
Regulation for the Virginia Occupational Safety and Health Program (amending 16VAC25-60-130).
16VAC25-85. Recording and Reporting Occupational Injuries
and Illnesses (amending 16VAC25-85-1904.10).
16VAC25-90. Federal Identical General Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-90-1910.6,
16VAC25-90-1910.120, 16VAC25-90-1910.1001, Appendices D, E, H to
16VAC25-90-1910.1001, 16VAC25-90-1910.1017, 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, Appendices A,
C to 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, 16VAC25-90-1910.1025, 16VAC25-90-1910.1026,
16VAC25-90-1910.1027, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1027, 16VAC25-90-1910.1028,
16VAC25-90-1910.1029, Appendices A, B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1029, 16VAC25-90-1910.1030,
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, Appendices B-1, B-11, B-111, C, D to
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, 16VAC25-90-1910.1044, 16VAC25-90-1910.1045,
16VAC25-90-1910.1047, 16VAC25-90-1910.1048, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1048,
16VAC25-90-1910.1050, 16VAC25-90-1910.1051, Appendix F to 16VAC25-90-1910.1051,
16VAC25-90-1910.1052, Appendix B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1052,
16VAC25-90-1910.1053).
16VAC25-100. Federal Identical Shipyard Employment Standards (amending 16VAC25-100-1915.5,
16VAC25-100-1915.80, 16VAC25-100-1915.1001, Appendices D, E, I to
16VAC25-100-1915.1001, 16VAC25-100-1915.1026).
16VAC25-175. Federal Identical Construction Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-175-1926.6,
16VAC25-175-1926.50, 16VAC25-175-1926.55, 16VAC25-175-1926.60,
16VAC25-175-1926.62, 16VAC25-175-1926.64, 16VAC25-175-1926.104,
16VAC25-175-1926.200, 16VAC25-175-1926.201, 16VAC25-175-1926.250,
16VAC25-175-1926.800, 16VAC25-175-1926.1000, 16VAC25-175-1926.1001,
16VAC25-175-1926.1002, 16VAC25-175-1926.1003, 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, Appendices
D, E, I to 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, 16VAC25-175-1926.1126, 16VAC25-175-1926.1127,
16VAC25-175-1926.1129, 16VAC25-175-1926.1153; repeal 16VAC25-175-1926.202,
16VAC25-175-1926.203, Appendix A to Subpart W).
Statutory Authority: § 40.1-22 of the Code of
Virginia; Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-596).
Effective Date: November 15, 2019.
Agency Contact: Holly Trice, Senior Staff Attorney,
Department of Labor and Industry, 600 East Main Street, Suite 207, Richmond, VA
23219, telephone (804) 786-2641, FAX (804) 371-6524, or email
holly.trice@doli.virginia.gov.
Summary:
In a final rule, Standards Improvement Project - IV
(SIP-IV), federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) makes 14
revisions to existing standards in the recordkeeping, general industry,
maritime, and construction standards. SIP-IV removes or revises outdated,
duplicative, unnecessary, and inconsistent requirements in OSHA's safety and
health standards in 29 CFR.
More specifically, SIP-IV:
1. Revises § 1904.10(b)(6) of 29 CFR Part 104
(Occupational Injuries and Illness Recordkeeping and Reporting Standards) to
assist employers in complying with requirements for recording hearing loss by
adding a cross reference to § 1904.5.
2. Makes three revisions to Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous
Substances) of Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 as follows:
a. Remove the requirement that employers provide periodic
chest X-rays (CXR) to screen for lung cancer from Inorganic Arsenic
(§ 1910.1018), Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), and Acrylonitrile
(§ 1910.1045). OSHA is not removing (i) the requirement for a baseline CXR
in these or any other standards or (ii) the CXR requirements in standards where
CXR is used for purposes other than screening for lung cancer.
b. Allow but not require use of digital "CXRs" in
the medical surveillance provisions of Inorganic Arsenic (§ 1910.1018),
Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), Acrylonitrile (§ 1910.1045),
Asbestos (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, 1926.1101), and Cadmium (§§ 1910.1027
and 1926.1127) and allows other reasonably-sized standard X-ray films, such as
the 16-inch by 17-inch size, to be used in addition to the 14-inch by 17-inch
film specified in some standards.
c. Update terminology and references to (i) replace
''roentgenogram'' with ''X-ray"; (ii) eliminate references to semiannual
exams for certain employees in the Coke Oven Emissions appendices
(§ 1910.1029, Appendix A(VI) and Appendix B(II)(A)) as these exams were
eliminated in the second SIP rulemaking (70 FR 1112); (iii) in Appendix E of
each of its three asbestos standards (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, and
1926.1101), update terminology and clarify that classification must be in
accordance with the International Labour Organization (ILO) classification
system according to the Guidelines for the use of the ILO International
Classification of Radiographs of Pneumoconioses (revised edition 2011); and
(iv) specify that only ILO standard digital chest radiographic images are to be
used to classify digital CXRs and that digital CXRs are not to be printed out as
hard copies and then classified.
3. Makes four revisions to update lung function testing
requirements found in Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous Substances) of Part 1910,
Cotton Dust Standard (§ 1910.1043) including the following:
a. In § 1910(h)(2)(iii), require an evaluation of
forced expiratory volume (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC), and FEV1/FVC
against the lower limit of normal and percent predicted values to fully
characterize possible pulmonary impairment in exposed workers, which is
consistent with generally accepted current practices and supported by the
National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
b. Remove the old Knudson values from Appendix C, reserve
Appendix C for future use, and modify § 1910.1043(n)(1) to specify that only
Appendices B and D are mandatory.
c. Change two subheaders in The Respiratory Questionnaire
for Non-Textile Workers for the Cotton Industry (Appendix B-II to
§ 1910.1043), section "B. Occupational History Table," column
titled ''Tenure of Employment'' to read as follows: ''FROM (year)'' and ''TO
(year)''; the "Tenure of Employment" column contains boxes in which
dates of employment are entered.
d. Make changes to reflect the most recent spirometry
recommendations from American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society
(ATS/ERS) (Miller et al., 2005) in Appendix D to § 1910.1043, which sets
standards for spirometric measurements of pulmonary function.
4. Removes the term "feral cat" from the
definitions in § 1915.80.
5. Revises § 1926.50 to update the 911 service posting
requirements consistent with the current status of land-line and wireless
telephone technologies.
6. Makes several minor clarifications to § 1926.55,
including changing the phrase "threshold limit values" (TLV) to
"permissible exposure limits" (PELs), removing confusing phrases, and
fixing grammatical errors.
7. Replaces the entire regulatory text for the Process
Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals (PSM) Standard for Construction
at § 1926.64 with a cross reference to the identical general industry standard
at § 1910.119.
8. Revises the minimum breaking strength in the safety
belts, lifelines, and lanyards standard at § 1926.104(c) from 5,400 to
5,000 pounds to conform with the breaking strength requirements in the Fall
Protection Standard at § 1926.502(d)(9).
9. Revises Subpart G of Part 1926:
a. Update the version of Part 6 of the Manual on Uniform
Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) that is incorporated by reference to the
November 4, 2009, MUTCD (2009 Edition), including Revision 1 and Revision 2,
both dated May 2012 (74 FR 66730, 77 FR 28455, and 77 FR 28460).
b. Revise §§ 1926.200 through 1926.203 to (i) delete
references in §§ 1926.200(g)(2) and 1926.201(a) to the 1988 Edition and
Millennium Edition of the MUTCD and insert references to the 2009 Edition, (ii)
revise the regulatory text of § 1926.200 (g)(1) and (2) to eliminate
confusion regarding OSHA's interpretation of the existing text; (iii) delete
§ 1926.202 because it duplicates the requirements in the revisions to § 1926.200(g);
and (iv) delete § 1926.203 because the revisions to § 1926.202 make §
1926.203 unnecessary.
10. Revises § 1926.250(a)(2) to exclude all
single-family residential structures and woodframed multifamily residential
structures from the requirement of posting maximum safe load limits of floors
in storage areas.
11. Revises Subpart S (Underground Construction, Caissons,
Cofferdams, and Compressed Air) of Part 1926 to update
§ 1926.800(k)(10)(ii) for mobile diesel powered equipment used in ''other
than gassy operations'' underground by requiring compliance only with
§ 57.5067, pertaining to underground metal and nonmetal mines, instead of
§§ 75.1909, 75.1910, and 75.1911(a) through (i), pertaining to underground
coal mines.
12. Revises Subpart W (Rollover Protective
Structures; Overhead Protection) of Part 1926 by removing the provisions that
specify the test procedures and performance requirements found in
§§ 1926.1000, 1926.1001, 1926.1002, and 1926.1003 and replacing those
provisions with references to the underlying consensus standards from which
they were derived. (ISO 3471:2008, ISO 5700:2013, ISO 27850:2013.)
13. Revises Subpart Z of Part 1926 by removing and
reserving § 1926.1129, which regulated exposure to Coke Oven Emissions in
Construction; coke oven work is only found in general industry.
14. Makes multiple revisions to paragraphs and appendices
in Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 to remove Social Security number collection
requirements.
In this regulatory action, the board is adopting this final
rule and revising 16VAC25-60-130 D to update the reference to Part 6 of the
MUTCD to the November 4, 2009 MUTCD, including Revision 1 and Revision 2, both
dated May 2012.
Note on Incorporation by Reference: Pursuant to
§ 2.2-4103 of the Code of Virginia, 29 CFR Part 1904 (Recording and
Reporting Occupational Injuries and Illnesses), 29 CFR Part 1910
(Occupational Safety and Health Standards), 29 CFR 1915 (Shipyard
Employment Standards), and 29 CFR Part 1926 (Construction Industry
Standards) are declared documents generally available to the public and
appropriate for incorporation by reference. For this reason, these documents
will not be printed in the Virginia Register of Regulations. A copy of each
document is available for inspection at the Department of Labor and Industry,
Main Street Centre, 600 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, and in the
office of the Registrar of Regulations, 900 East Main Street, 11th Floor,
Richmond, Virginia 23219.
Statement of Final Agency Action: On September 17, 2019,
the Safety and Health Codes Board adopted Phase IV of federal OSHA's final rule
for the Standards Improvement Project, as published in 84 FR 21416 through 84
FR 21598 on May 14, 2019, with an effective date of November 15, 2019.
Federal Terms and State Equivalents: When the
regulations as set forth in the Standards Improvement Project-Phase IV are
applied to the Commissioner of the Department of Labor and Industry or to
Virginia employers, the following federal terms shall be considered to read as
follows:
Federal Terms
|
VOSH Equivalent
|
29 CFR
|
VOSH Standard
|
Assistant Secretary
|
Commissioner of Labor and Industry
|
Agency
|
Department
|
May 14, 2019
|
November 15, 2019
|
16VAC25-60-130. Construction industry standards.
A. The occupational safety or health standards adopted as
rules or regulations by the Virginia Safety and Health Codes Board either
directly, or by reference, from 29 CFR Part 1926 shall apply by their own terms
to all employers and employees engaged in either construction work or
construction related activities covered by the Virginia State Plan for
Occupational Safety and Health.
B. The employer shall comply with the manufacturer's
specifications and limitations applicable to the operation, training, use,
installation, inspection, testing, repair and maintenance of all machinery,
vehicles, tools, materials and equipment, unless specifically superseded by a
more stringent corresponding requirement in 29 CFR Part 1926. The use of any
machinery, vehicle, tool, material or equipment that is not in compliance with
any applicable requirement of the manufacturer is prohibited, and shall either
be identified by the employer as unsafe by tagging or locking the controls to
render them inoperable or be physically removed from its place of use or
operation.
C. For the purposes of the applicability of such Part 1926
standards, the key criteria utilized to make such a decision shall be the
activities taking place at the worksite, not the primary business of the
employer. Construction work shall generally include any building, altering,
repairing, improving, demolishing, painting or decorating any structure,
building, highway, or roadway and any draining, dredging, excavation, grading
or similar work upon real property. Construction also generally includes work
performed in traditional construction trades such as carpentry, roofing,
masonry work, plumbing, trenching and excavating, tunneling, and electrical
work. Construction does not include maintenance, alteration or repair of
mechanical devices, machinery, or equipment, even when the mechanical device,
machinery or equipment is part of a pre-existing structure.
D. The employer shall comply with the Virginia Department of
Transportation (VDOT) Work Area Protection Manual in lieu of the federal Manual
on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (Part VI of the MUTCD, 1988 2009
Edition, Revision 3 1 dated May 2012 and Revision 2 dated May 2012,
or Part VI of the MUTCD, Millennium Edition - referenced in
16VAC25-175-1926.200 through 16VAC25-175-1926.202) and
16VAC25-175-1926.201) when working under a contract for construction,
repair, or maintenance between the employer and the Commonwealth; agencies,
authorities, or instrumentalities of the Commonwealth; or any political
subdivision or public body of the Commonwealth when such contract stipulates
employer compliance with the VDOT Work Area Protection Manual in effect at the
time of contractual agreement.
E. Certain standards of 29 CFR Part 1910 have been
determined by federal OSHA to be applicable to construction and have been
adopted for this application by the board.
F. The standards adopted from 29 CFR Part 1910.19 and 29 CFR
Part 1910.20 containing respectively, special provisions regarding air
contaminants and requirements concerning access to employee exposure and
medical records shall apply to construction work as well as general industry.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6163; Filed September 23, 2019, 10:21 a.m.
TITLE 16. LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT
SAFETY AND HEALTH CODES BOARD
Final Regulation
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
following regulatory action is exempt from Article 2 of the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 c of the Code of Virginia,
which excludes regulations that are necessary to meet the requirements of
federal law or regulations, provided such regulations do not differ materially
from those required by federal law or regulation. The Safety and Health Codes
Board will receive, consider, and respond to petitions by any interested person
at any time with respect to reconsideration or revision.
Titles of Regulations: 16VAC25-60. Administrative
Regulation for the Virginia Occupational Safety and Health Program (amending 16VAC25-60-130).
16VAC25-85. Recording and Reporting Occupational Injuries
and Illnesses (amending 16VAC25-85-1904.10).
16VAC25-90. Federal Identical General Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-90-1910.6,
16VAC25-90-1910.120, 16VAC25-90-1910.1001, Appendices D, E, H to
16VAC25-90-1910.1001, 16VAC25-90-1910.1017, 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, Appendices A,
C to 16VAC25-90-1910.1018, 16VAC25-90-1910.1025, 16VAC25-90-1910.1026,
16VAC25-90-1910.1027, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1027, 16VAC25-90-1910.1028,
16VAC25-90-1910.1029, Appendices A, B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1029, 16VAC25-90-1910.1030,
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, Appendices B-1, B-11, B-111, C, D to
16VAC25-90-1910.1043, 16VAC25-90-1910.1044, 16VAC25-90-1910.1045,
16VAC25-90-1910.1047, 16VAC25-90-1910.1048, Appendix D to 16VAC25-90-1910.1048,
16VAC25-90-1910.1050, 16VAC25-90-1910.1051, Appendix F to 16VAC25-90-1910.1051,
16VAC25-90-1910.1052, Appendix B to 16VAC25-90-1910.1052,
16VAC25-90-1910.1053).
16VAC25-100. Federal Identical Shipyard Employment Standards (amending 16VAC25-100-1915.5,
16VAC25-100-1915.80, 16VAC25-100-1915.1001, Appendices D, E, I to
16VAC25-100-1915.1001, 16VAC25-100-1915.1026).
16VAC25-175. Federal Identical Construction Industry Standards (amending 16VAC25-175-1926.6,
16VAC25-175-1926.50, 16VAC25-175-1926.55, 16VAC25-175-1926.60,
16VAC25-175-1926.62, 16VAC25-175-1926.64, 16VAC25-175-1926.104,
16VAC25-175-1926.200, 16VAC25-175-1926.201, 16VAC25-175-1926.250,
16VAC25-175-1926.800, 16VAC25-175-1926.1000, 16VAC25-175-1926.1001,
16VAC25-175-1926.1002, 16VAC25-175-1926.1003, 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, Appendices
D, E, I to 16VAC25-175-1926.1101, 16VAC25-175-1926.1126, 16VAC25-175-1926.1127,
16VAC25-175-1926.1129, 16VAC25-175-1926.1153; repeal 16VAC25-175-1926.202,
16VAC25-175-1926.203, Appendix A to Subpart W).
Statutory Authority: § 40.1-22 of the Code of
Virginia; Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (P.L. 91-596).
Effective Date: November 15, 2019.
Agency Contact: Holly Trice, Senior Staff Attorney,
Department of Labor and Industry, 600 East Main Street, Suite 207, Richmond, VA
23219, telephone (804) 786-2641, FAX (804) 371-6524, or email
holly.trice@doli.virginia.gov.
Summary:
In a final rule, Standards Improvement Project - IV
(SIP-IV), federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) makes 14
revisions to existing standards in the recordkeeping, general industry,
maritime, and construction standards. SIP-IV removes or revises outdated,
duplicative, unnecessary, and inconsistent requirements in OSHA's safety and
health standards in 29 CFR.
More specifically, SIP-IV:
1. Revises § 1904.10(b)(6) of 29 CFR Part 104
(Occupational Injuries and Illness Recordkeeping and Reporting Standards) to
assist employers in complying with requirements for recording hearing loss by
adding a cross reference to § 1904.5.
2. Makes three revisions to Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous
Substances) of Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 as follows:
a. Remove the requirement that employers provide periodic
chest X-rays (CXR) to screen for lung cancer from Inorganic Arsenic
(§ 1910.1018), Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), and Acrylonitrile
(§ 1910.1045). OSHA is not removing (i) the requirement for a baseline CXR
in these or any other standards or (ii) the CXR requirements in standards where
CXR is used for purposes other than screening for lung cancer.
b. Allow but not require use of digital "CXRs" in
the medical surveillance provisions of Inorganic Arsenic (§ 1910.1018),
Coke Oven Emissions (§ 1910.1029), Acrylonitrile (§ 1910.1045),
Asbestos (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, 1926.1101), and Cadmium (§§ 1910.1027
and 1926.1127) and allows other reasonably-sized standard X-ray films, such as
the 16-inch by 17-inch size, to be used in addition to the 14-inch by 17-inch
film specified in some standards.
c. Update terminology and references to (i) replace
''roentgenogram'' with ''X-ray"; (ii) eliminate references to semiannual
exams for certain employees in the Coke Oven Emissions appendices
(§ 1910.1029, Appendix A(VI) and Appendix B(II)(A)) as these exams were
eliminated in the second SIP rulemaking (70 FR 1112); (iii) in Appendix E of
each of its three asbestos standards (§§ 1910.1001, 1915.1001, and
1926.1101), update terminology and clarify that classification must be in
accordance with the International Labour Organization (ILO) classification
system according to the Guidelines for the use of the ILO International
Classification of Radiographs of Pneumoconioses (revised edition 2011); and
(iv) specify that only ILO standard digital chest radiographic images are to be
used to classify digital CXRs and that digital CXRs are not to be printed out as
hard copies and then classified.
3. Makes four revisions to update lung function testing
requirements found in Subpart Z (Toxic and Hazardous Substances) of Part 1910,
Cotton Dust Standard (§ 1910.1043) including the following:
a. In § 1910(h)(2)(iii), require an evaluation of
forced expiratory volume (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC), and FEV1/FVC
against the lower limit of normal and percent predicted values to fully
characterize possible pulmonary impairment in exposed workers, which is
consistent with generally accepted current practices and supported by the
National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
b. Remove the old Knudson values from Appendix C, reserve
Appendix C for future use, and modify § 1910.1043(n)(1) to specify that only
Appendices B and D are mandatory.
c. Change two subheaders in The Respiratory Questionnaire
for Non-Textile Workers for the Cotton Industry (Appendix B-II to
§ 1910.1043), section "B. Occupational History Table," column
titled ''Tenure of Employment'' to read as follows: ''FROM (year)'' and ''TO
(year)''; the "Tenure of Employment" column contains boxes in which
dates of employment are entered.
d. Make changes to reflect the most recent spirometry
recommendations from American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society
(ATS/ERS) (Miller et al., 2005) in Appendix D to § 1910.1043, which sets
standards for spirometric measurements of pulmonary function.
4. Removes the term "feral cat" from the
definitions in § 1915.80.
5. Revises § 1926.50 to update the 911 service posting
requirements consistent with the current status of land-line and wireless
telephone technologies.
6. Makes several minor clarifications to § 1926.55,
including changing the phrase "threshold limit values" (TLV) to
"permissible exposure limits" (PELs), removing confusing phrases, and
fixing grammatical errors.
7. Replaces the entire regulatory text for the Process
Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals (PSM) Standard for Construction
at § 1926.64 with a cross reference to the identical general industry standard
at § 1910.119.
8. Revises the minimum breaking strength in the safety
belts, lifelines, and lanyards standard at § 1926.104(c) from 5,400 to
5,000 pounds to conform with the breaking strength requirements in the Fall
Protection Standard at § 1926.502(d)(9).
9. Revises Subpart G of Part 1926:
a. Update the version of Part 6 of the Manual on Uniform
Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) that is incorporated by reference to the
November 4, 2009, MUTCD (2009 Edition), including Revision 1 and Revision 2,
both dated May 2012 (74 FR 66730, 77 FR 28455, and 77 FR 28460).
b. Revise §§ 1926.200 through 1926.203 to (i) delete
references in §§ 1926.200(g)(2) and 1926.201(a) to the 1988 Edition and
Millennium Edition of the MUTCD and insert references to the 2009 Edition, (ii)
revise the regulatory text of § 1926.200 (g)(1) and (2) to eliminate
confusion regarding OSHA's interpretation of the existing text; (iii) delete
§ 1926.202 because it duplicates the requirements in the revisions to § 1926.200(g);
and (iv) delete § 1926.203 because the revisions to § 1926.202 make §
1926.203 unnecessary.
10. Revises § 1926.250(a)(2) to exclude all
single-family residential structures and woodframed multifamily residential
structures from the requirement of posting maximum safe load limits of floors
in storage areas.
11. Revises Subpart S (Underground Construction, Caissons,
Cofferdams, and Compressed Air) of Part 1926 to update
§ 1926.800(k)(10)(ii) for mobile diesel powered equipment used in ''other
than gassy operations'' underground by requiring compliance only with
§ 57.5067, pertaining to underground metal and nonmetal mines, instead of
§§ 75.1909, 75.1910, and 75.1911(a) through (i), pertaining to underground
coal mines.
12. Revises Subpart W (Rollover Protective
Structures; Overhead Protection) of Part 1926 by removing the provisions that
specify the test procedures and performance requirements found in
§§ 1926.1000, 1926.1001, 1926.1002, and 1926.1003 and replacing those
provisions with references to the underlying consensus standards from which
they were derived. (ISO 3471:2008, ISO 5700:2013, ISO 27850:2013.)
13. Revises Subpart Z of Part 1926 by removing and
reserving § 1926.1129, which regulated exposure to Coke Oven Emissions in
Construction; coke oven work is only found in general industry.
14. Makes multiple revisions to paragraphs and appendices
in Parts 1910, 1915, and 1926 to remove Social Security number collection
requirements.
In this regulatory action, the board is adopting this final
rule and revising 16VAC25-60-130 D to update the reference to Part 6 of the
MUTCD to the November 4, 2009 MUTCD, including Revision 1 and Revision 2, both
dated May 2012.
Note on Incorporation by Reference: Pursuant to
§ 2.2-4103 of the Code of Virginia, 29 CFR Part 1904 (Recording and
Reporting Occupational Injuries and Illnesses), 29 CFR Part 1910
(Occupational Safety and Health Standards), 29 CFR 1915 (Shipyard
Employment Standards), and 29 CFR Part 1926 (Construction Industry
Standards) are declared documents generally available to the public and
appropriate for incorporation by reference. For this reason, these documents
will not be printed in the Virginia Register of Regulations. A copy of each
document is available for inspection at the Department of Labor and Industry,
Main Street Centre, 600 East Main Street, Richmond, Virginia 23219, and in the
office of the Registrar of Regulations, 900 East Main Street, 11th Floor,
Richmond, Virginia 23219.
Statement of Final Agency Action: On September 17, 2019,
the Safety and Health Codes Board adopted Phase IV of federal OSHA's final rule
for the Standards Improvement Project, as published in 84 FR 21416 through 84
FR 21598 on May 14, 2019, with an effective date of November 15, 2019.
Federal Terms and State Equivalents: When the
regulations as set forth in the Standards Improvement Project-Phase IV are
applied to the Commissioner of the Department of Labor and Industry or to
Virginia employers, the following federal terms shall be considered to read as
follows:
Federal Terms
|
VOSH Equivalent
|
29 CFR
|
VOSH Standard
|
Assistant Secretary
|
Commissioner of Labor and Industry
|
Agency
|
Department
|
May 14, 2019
|
November 15, 2019
|
16VAC25-60-130. Construction industry standards.
A. The occupational safety or health standards adopted as
rules or regulations by the Virginia Safety and Health Codes Board either
directly, or by reference, from 29 CFR Part 1926 shall apply by their own terms
to all employers and employees engaged in either construction work or
construction related activities covered by the Virginia State Plan for
Occupational Safety and Health.
B. The employer shall comply with the manufacturer's
specifications and limitations applicable to the operation, training, use,
installation, inspection, testing, repair and maintenance of all machinery,
vehicles, tools, materials and equipment, unless specifically superseded by a
more stringent corresponding requirement in 29 CFR Part 1926. The use of any
machinery, vehicle, tool, material or equipment that is not in compliance with
any applicable requirement of the manufacturer is prohibited, and shall either
be identified by the employer as unsafe by tagging or locking the controls to
render them inoperable or be physically removed from its place of use or
operation.
C. For the purposes of the applicability of such Part 1926
standards, the key criteria utilized to make such a decision shall be the
activities taking place at the worksite, not the primary business of the
employer. Construction work shall generally include any building, altering,
repairing, improving, demolishing, painting or decorating any structure,
building, highway, or roadway and any draining, dredging, excavation, grading
or similar work upon real property. Construction also generally includes work
performed in traditional construction trades such as carpentry, roofing,
masonry work, plumbing, trenching and excavating, tunneling, and electrical
work. Construction does not include maintenance, alteration or repair of
mechanical devices, machinery, or equipment, even when the mechanical device,
machinery or equipment is part of a pre-existing structure.
D. The employer shall comply with the Virginia Department of
Transportation (VDOT) Work Area Protection Manual in lieu of the federal Manual
on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (Part VI of the MUTCD, 1988 2009
Edition, Revision 3 1 dated May 2012 and Revision 2 dated May 2012,
or Part VI of the MUTCD, Millennium Edition - referenced in
16VAC25-175-1926.200 through 16VAC25-175-1926.202) and
16VAC25-175-1926.201) when working under a contract for construction,
repair, or maintenance between the employer and the Commonwealth; agencies,
authorities, or instrumentalities of the Commonwealth; or any political
subdivision or public body of the Commonwealth when such contract stipulates
employer compliance with the VDOT Work Area Protection Manual in effect at the
time of contractual agreement.
E. Certain standards of 29 CFR Part 1910 have been
determined by federal OSHA to be applicable to construction and have been
adopted for this application by the board.
F. The standards adopted from 29 CFR Part 1910.19 and 29 CFR
Part 1910.20 containing respectively, special provisions regarding air
contaminants and requirements concerning access to employee exposure and
medical records shall apply to construction work as well as general industry.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6163; Filed September 23, 2019, 10:21 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF DENTISTRY
Emergency Regulation
Title of Regulation: 18VAC60-25. Regulations
Governing the Practice of Dental Hygiene (amending 18VAC60-25-40).
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-2722 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Dates: October 1, 2019, through March 31,
2021.
Agency Contact: Sandra Reen, Executive Director, Board
of Dentistry, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone
(804) 367-4437, FAX (804) 527-4428, or email sandra.reen@dhp.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
Section 2.2-4011 B of the Code of Virginia states that
agencies may adopt emergency regulations in situations in which Virginia
statutory law or the appropriation act or federal law or federal regulation
requires that a regulation be effective in 280 days or less from its enactment,
and the regulation is not exempt under the provisions of § 2.2-4006 A 4 of the
Code of Virginia.
Pursuant to Chapter 86 of the 2019 Acts of Assembly, the
amendments (i) adopt a protocol for dental hygienists employed by the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services practicing under
remote supervision of a dentist, (ii) update the protocol for remote
supervision of dental hygienists employed by the Virginia Department of Health,
and (iii) correct a citation.
Part II
Practice of Dental Hygiene
18VAC60-25-40. Scope of practice.
A. Pursuant to § 54.1-2722 of the Code, a licensed dental
hygienist may perform services that are educational, diagnostic, therapeutic,
or preventive under the direction and indirect, or general, or
remote supervision of a licensed dentist.
B. The following duties of a dentist shall not be delegated:
1. Final diagnosis and treatment planning;
2. Performing surgical or cutting procedures on hard or soft
tissue, except as may be permitted by subdivisions C 1 and D 1 of this section;
3. Prescribing or parenterally administering drugs or
medicaments, except a dental hygienist who meets the requirements of
18VAC60-25-100 C may parenterally administer Schedule VI local anesthesia to
patients 18 years of age or older;
4. Authorization of work orders for any appliance or
prosthetic device or restoration that is to be inserted into a patient's mouth;
5. Operation of high speed rotary instruments in the mouth;
6. Administration of deep sedation or general anesthesia and
moderate sedation;
7. Condensing, contouring, or adjusting any final, fixed, or
removable prosthodontic appliance or restoration in the mouth with the
exception of packing and carving amalgam and placing and shaping composite
resins by dental assistants II with advanced training as specified in
18VAC60-30-120;
8. Final positioning and attachment of orthodontic bonds and
bands; and
9. Final adjustment and fitting of crowns and bridges in
preparation for final cementation.
C. The following duties shall only be delegated to dental
hygienists under direction and may only be performed under indirect
supervision:
1. Scaling, root planing, or gingival curettage of natural and
restored teeth using hand instruments, slow-speed rotary instruments,
ultrasonic devices, and nonsurgical lasers with any sedation or anesthesia
administered.
2. Performing an initial examination of teeth and surrounding
tissues including the charting of carious lesions, periodontal pockets, or
other abnormal conditions for assisting the dentist in the diagnosis.
3. Administering nitrous oxide or local anesthesia by dental
hygienists qualified in accordance with the requirements of 18VAC60-25-100.
D. The following duties shall only be delegated to dental
hygienists and may be performed under indirect supervision or may be delegated
by written order in accordance with § 54.1-2722 D of the Code to be
performed under general supervision:
1. Scaling, root planning, or gingival curettage of natural
and restored teeth using hand instruments, slow-speed rotary instruments,
ultrasonic devices, and nonsurgical lasers with or without topical oral anesthetics.
2. Polishing of natural and restored teeth using air
polishers.
3. Performing a clinical examination of teeth and surrounding
tissues including the charting of carious lesions, periodontal pockets, or
other abnormal conditions for further evaluation and diagnosis by the dentist.
4. Subgingival irrigation or subgingival and gingival
application of topical Schedule VI medicinal agents pursuant to
§ 54.1-3408 J of the Code.
5. Duties appropriate to the education and experience of the
dental hygienist and the practice of the supervising dentist, with the
exception of those listed as nondelegable in subsection B of this section and
those restricted to indirect supervision in subsection C of this section.
E. The following duties may only be delegated under the
direction and direct supervision of a dentist to a dental assistant II:
1. Performing pulp capping procedures;
2. Packing and carving of amalgam restorations;
3. Placing and shaping composite resin restorations with a
slow speed handpiece;
4. Taking final impressions;
5. Use of a non-epinephrine retraction cord; and
6. Final cementation of crowns and bridges after adjustment
and fitting by the dentist.
F. A dental hygienist employed by the Virginia Department of
Health may provide educational and preventative dental care under remote
supervision, as defined in § 54.1-2722 D § 54.1-2722 E of
the Code, of a dentist employed by the Virginia Department of Health and in
accordance with the protocol adopted by the Commissioner of Health Protocol
adopted by Virginia Department of Health (VDH) for Dental Hygienists to
Practice in an Expanded Capacity under Remote Supervision by Public Health
Dentists, September 2012 May 2019, which is hereby incorporated
by reference.
G. A dental hygienist employed by the Virginia Department
of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS) may provide educational
and preventative dental care under remote supervision, as defined in §
54.1-2722 E of the Code, of a dentist employed by DBHDS and in accordance with
the Protocol for Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental
Services (DBHDS) Dental Hygienists to Practice in an Expanded Capacity under
Remote Supervision by DBHDS Dentists, May 2019, which is hereby incorporated by
reference.
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (18VAC60-25)
Protocol adopted by Virginia Department of Health for
Dental Hygienists to Practice in an Expanded Capacity under Remote Supervision
by Public Health Dentists, September 2012
Protocol
adopted by Virginia Department of Health (VDH) for Dental Hygienists to
Practice in an Expanded Capacity under Remote Supervision by Public Health
Dentists, May 2019
Protocol
for Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services (DBHDS)
Dental Hygienists to Practice in an Expanded Capacity under Remote Supervision
by DBHDS Dentists, May 2019
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6044; Filed September 30, 2019, 10:32 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF MEDICINE
Emergency Regulation
Title of Regulation: 18VAC85-50. Regulations
Governing the Practice of Physician Assistants (amending 18VAC85-50-10, 18VAC85-50-35, 18VAC85-50-40,
18VAC85-50-57, 18VAC85-50-101, 18VAC85-50-110, 18VAC85-50-115, 18VAC85-50-117,
18VAC85-50-140, 18VAC85-50-160, 18VAC85-50-181).
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-2951.1
of the Code of Virginia.
Effective Dates: October 1, 2019, through March 31,
2021.
Agency Contact: William L. Harp, M.D., Executive
Director, Board of Medicine, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233,
telephone (804) 367-4558, FAX (804) 527-4429, or email
william.harp@dhp.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
Section 2.2-4011 B of the Code of Virginia states that
agencies may adopt emergency regulations in situations in which Virginia
statutory law or the appropriation act or federal law or federal regulation
requires that a regulation be effective in 280 days or less from its enactment,
and the regulation is not exempt under the provisions of § 2.2-4006 A 4 of
the Code of Virginia.
Chapters 92 and 137 of the 2019 Acts of Assembly establish
the role of "patient care team podiatrist" as a provider of
management and leadership to physician assistants in the care of patients as
part of a patient care team and modify the supervision requirements for
physician assistants by establishing a patient care team model.
This emergency action replaces practice by a physician
assistant under the supervision of a physician or a podiatrist with practice in
collaboration and consultation with a patient care team physician or patient
care team podiatrist.
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC85-50-10. Definitions.
A. The following words and terms shall have the meanings
ascribed to them in § 54.1-2900 of the Code of Virginia:
"Board."
"Collaboration."
"Consultation."
"Patient care team physician."
"Patient care team podiatrist."
"Physician assistant."
B. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Group practice" means the practice of a group of
two or more doctors of medicine, osteopathy, or podiatry licensed by the board
who practice as a partnership or professional corporation.
"Institution" means a hospital, nursing home or
other health care facility, community health center, public health center,
industrial medicine or corporation clinic, a medical service facility, student
health center, or other setting approved by the board.
"NCCPA" means the National Commission on
Certification of Physician Assistants.
"Practice agreement" means a written or
electronic agreement developed by the supervising patient care
team physician or podiatrist and the physician assistant that
defines the supervisory relationship between the physician assistant and
the physician or podiatrist, the prescriptive authority of the physician
assistant, and the circumstances under which the physician or podiatrist
will see and evaluate the patient.
"Supervision" means the supervising physician
has on-going, regular communication with the physician assistant on the care
and treatment of patients, is easily available, and can be physically present
or accessible for consultation with the physician assistant within one hour.
18VAC85-50-35. Fees.
Unless otherwise provided, the following fees shall not be
refundable:
1. The initial application fee for a license, payable at the
time application is filed, shall be $130.
2. The biennial fee for renewal of an active license shall be
$135 and for renewal of an inactive license shall be $70, payable in each
odd-numbered year in the birth month of the licensee. For 2019, the fee for
renewal of an active license shall be $108, and the fee for renewal of an
inactive license shall be $54.
3. The additional fee for late renewal of licensure within one
renewal cycle shall be $50.
4. A restricted volunteer license shall expire 12 months from
the date of issuance and may be renewed without charge by receipt of a renewal
application that verifies that the physician assistant continues to comply with
provisions of § 54.1-2951.3 of the Code of Virginia.
5. The fee for review and approval of a new protocol
submitted following initial licensure shall be $15.
6. 5. The fee for reinstatement of a license
pursuant to § 54.1-2408.2 of the Code of Virginia shall be $2,000.
7. 6. The fee for a duplicate license shall be
$5.00, and the fee for a duplicate wall certificate shall be $15.
8. 7. The fee for a returned check shall be $35.
9. 8. The fee for a letter of good standing or
verification to another jurisdiction shall be $10.
10. 9. The fee for an application or for the
biennial renewal of a restricted volunteer license shall be $35, due in the
licensee's birth month. An additional fee for late renewal of licensure shall
be $15 for each renewal cycle.
Part II
Requirements for Practice as a Physician's Assistant
18VAC85-50-40. General requirements.
A. No person shall practice as a physician assistant in the
Commonwealth of Virginia except as provided in this chapter.
B. All services rendered by a physician assistant shall be
performed only under the continuous supervision of in accordance with
a practice agreement with a doctor of medicine, osteopathy, or podiatry
licensed by this board to practice in the Commonwealth.
18VAC85-50-57. Discontinuation of employment.
If for any reason the physician assistant discontinues
working in the employment and under the supervision of a licensed practitioner
with a patient care team physician or podiatrist, a new practice
agreement shall be entered into in order for the physician assistant
either to be reemployed by the same practitioner or to accept new employment
with another supervising physician patient care team physician or
podiatrist.
Part IV
Practice Requirements
18VAC85-50-101. Requirements for a practice agreement.
A. Prior to initiation of practice, a physician assistant and
his supervising patient care team physician or podiatrist
shall enter into a written or electronic practice agreement that spells out the
roles and functions of the assistant and is consistent with provisions of § 54.1-2952
of the Code of Virginia.
1. The supervising patient care team physician or
podiatrist shall be a doctor of medicine, osteopathy, or podiatry licensed
in the Commonwealth who has accepted responsibility for the supervision of
the service that a physician assistant renders.
2. Any such practice agreement shall take into account such
factors as the physician assistant's level of competence, the number of
patients, the types of illness treated by the physician or podiatrist,
the nature of the treatment, special procedures, and the nature of the
physician or podiatrist availability in ensuring direct physician or
podiatrist involvement at an early stage and regularly thereafter.
3. The practice agreement shall also provide an evaluation
process for the physician assistant's performance, including a requirement
specifying the time period, proportionate to the acuity of care and practice
setting, within which the supervising physician or podiatrist
shall review the record of services rendered by the physician assistant.
4. The practice agreement may include requirements for
periodic site visits by supervising licensees who supervise and direct the
patient care team physician or podiatrist to collaborate and consult with
physician assistants who provide services at a location other than where
the licensee physician or podiatrist regularly practices.
B. The board may require information regarding the level
degree of supervision with which the supervising collaboration
and consultation by the patient care team physician plans to supervise
the physician assistant for selected tasks or podiatrist. The board
may also require the supervising patient care team physician or
podiatrist to document the physician assistant's competence in
performing such tasks.
C. If the role of the physician assistant includes
prescribing drugs and devices, the written practice agreement shall include
those schedules and categories of drugs and devices that are within the scope
of practice and proficiency of the supervising patient care team
physician or podiatrist.
D. If the initial practice agreement did not include
prescriptive authority, there shall be an addendum to the practice agreement
for prescriptive authority.
E. If there are any changes in supervision consultation
and collaboration, authorization, or scope of practice, a revised practice
agreement shall be entered into at the time of the change.
18VAC85-50-110. Responsibilities of the supervisor patient
care team physician or podiatrist.
The supervising physician patient care team
physician or podiatrist shall:
1. Review the clinical course and treatment plan for any
patient who presents for the same acute complaint twice in a single episode of
care and has failed to improve as expected. The supervising physician or
podiatrist shall be involved with any patient with a continuing illness as
noted in the written or electronic practice agreement for the evaluation
process.
2. Be responsible for all invasive procedures.
a. Under supervision, a physician assistant may insert a
nasogastric tube, bladder catheter, needle, or peripheral intravenous catheter,
but not a flow-directed catheter, and may perform minor suturing, venipuncture,
and subcutaneous intramuscular or intravenous injection.
b. All other invasive procedures not listed in subdivision 2 a
of this section must be performed under supervision with the physician in the
room unless, after directly observing the performance of a specific invasive
procedure three times or more, the supervising patient care team
physician or podiatrist attests on the practice agreement to the
competence of the physician assistant to perform the specific procedure without
direct observation and supervision.
3. Be responsible for all prescriptions issued by the physician
assistant and attest to the competence of the assistant to prescribe drugs and
devices.
4. Be available at all times to collaborate and consult
with the physician assistant.
18VAC85-50-115. Responsibilities of the physician assistant.
A. The physician assistant shall not render independent
health care and shall:
1. Perform only those medical care services that are within
the scope of the practice and proficiency of the supervising patient
care team physician or podiatrist as prescribed in the physician
assistant's practice agreement. When a physician assistant is to be
supervised by an alternate supervising physician working outside the
scope of specialty of the supervising patient care team physician
or podiatrist, then the physician assistant's functions shall be limited
to those areas not requiring specialized clinical judgment, unless a separate
practice agreement has been executed for that alternate supervising patient
care team physician or podiatrist.
2. Prescribe only those drugs and devices as allowed in Part V
(18VAC85-50-130 et seq.) of this chapter.
3. Wear during the course of performing his duties
identification showing clearly that he is a physician assistant.
B. An alternate supervising patient care team
physician or podiatrist shall be a member of the same group, professional
corporation, or partnership of any licensee who supervises is the
patient care team physician or podiatrist for a physician assistant or
shall be a member of the same hospital or commercial enterprise with the supervising
patient care team physician or podiatrist. Such alternating supervising
physician or podiatrist shall be a physician or podiatrist
licensed in the Commonwealth who has accepted responsibility for the supervision
of the service that a physician assistant renders.
C. If, due to illness, vacation, or unexpected absence, the supervising
patient care team physician or podiatrist or alternate supervising
physician or podiatrist is unable to supervise the activities of his
physician assistant, such supervising patient care team physician
or podiatrist may temporarily delegate the responsibility to another
doctor of medicine, osteopathic medicine, or podiatry.
Temporary coverage may not exceed four weeks unless special
permission is granted by the board.
D. With respect to physician assistants employed by
institutions, the following additional regulations shall apply:
1. No physician assistant may render care to a patient unless
the physician or podiatrist responsible for that patient has signed the
practice agreement to act as supervising patient care team
physician or podiatrist for that physician assistant.
2. Any such practice agreement as described in subdivision 1
of this subsection shall delineate the duties which said patient care team
physician or podiatrist authorizes the physician assistant to perform.
3. The physician assistant shall, as soon as circumstances
may dictate, report an acute or significant finding or change in clinical
status to the supervising physician concerning the examination of the patient.
The physician assistant shall also record his findings in appropriate
institutional records.
E. Practice by a physician assistant in a hospital, including
an emergency department, shall be in accordance with § 54.1-2952 of the
Code of Virginia.
18VAC85-50-117. Authorization to use fluoroscopy.
A physician assistant working under the supervision of
a practice agreement with a licensed doctor of medicine or osteopathy
specializing in the field of radiology is authorized to use fluoroscopy for
guidance of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures provided such activity is
specified in his protocol and he has met the following qualifications:
1. Completion of at least 40 hours of structured didactic
educational instruction and at least 40 hours of supervised clinical experience
as set forth in the Fluoroscopy Educational Framework for the Physician
Assistant created by the American Academy of Physician Assistants (AAPA) and
the American Society of Radiologic Technologists (ASRT); and
2. Successful passage of the American Registry of Radiologic
Technologists (ARRT) Fluoroscopy Examination.
18VAC85-50-140. Approved drugs and devices.
A. The approved drugs and devices which the physician
assistant with prescriptive authority may prescribe, administer, or dispense
manufacturer's professional samples shall be in accordance with provisions of §
54.1-2952.1 of the Code of Virginia:
B. The physician assistant may prescribe only those
categories of drugs and devices included in the practice agreement. The supervising
patient care team physician or podiatrist retains the authority
to restrict certain drugs within these approved categories.
C. The physician assistant, pursuant to § 54.1-2952.1 of the
Code of Virginia, shall only dispense manufacturer's professional samples or
administer controlled substances in good faith for medical or therapeutic
purposes within the course of his professional practice.
18VAC85-50-160. Disclosure.
A. Each prescription for a Schedule II through V drug shall
bear the name of the supervising patient care team physician or
podiatrist and of the physician assistant.
B. The physician assistant shall disclose to the patient that
he is a licensed physician assistant, and also the name, address and telephone
number of the supervising patient care team physician or
podiatrist. Such disclosure shall either be included on the prescription or
be given in writing to the patient.
18VAC85-50-181. Pharmacotherapy for weight loss.
A. A practitioner shall not prescribe amphetamine, Schedule
II, for the purpose of weight reduction or control.
B. A practitioner shall not prescribe controlled substances,
Schedules III through VI, for the purpose of weight reduction or control in the
treatment of obesity, unless the following conditions are met:
1. An appropriate history and physical examination are
performed and recorded at the time of initiation of pharmacotherapy for obesity
by the prescribing physician, and the physician reviews the results of
laboratory work, as indicated, including testing for thyroid function;
2. If the drug to be prescribed could adversely affect cardiac
function, the physician shall review the results of an electrocardiogram
performed and interpreted within 90 days of initial prescribing for treatment
of obesity;
3. A diet and exercise program for weight loss is prescribed
and recorded;
4. The patient is seen within the first 30 days following
initiation of pharmacotherapy for weight loss, by the prescribing physician or
a licensed practitioner with prescriptive authority working under the
supervision of the prescribing physician, at which time a recording shall be
made of blood pressure, pulse, and any other tests as may be necessary for
monitoring potential adverse effects of drug therapy; and
5. The treating physician shall direct the follow-up care,
including the intervals for patient visits and the continuation of or any
subsequent changes in pharmacotherapy. Continuation of prescribing for
treatment of obesity shall occur only if the patient has continued progress
toward achieving or maintaining a target weight and has no significant adverse
effects from the prescribed program.
C. If specifically authorized in his practice agreement with
a supervising patient care team physician, a physician assistant
may perform the physical examination, review tests, and prescribe Schedules III
through VI controlled substances for treatment of obesity as specified in
subsection B of this section.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6083; Filed September 30, 2019, 10:33 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF OPTOMETRY
Final Regulation
Title of Regulation: 18VAC105-20. Regulations
Governing the Practice of Optometry (amending 18VAC105-20-5, 18VAC105-20-70; adding
18VAC105-20-48, 18VAC105-20-49).
Statutory Authority: § 54.1-2400 of the Code of
Virginia.
Effective Date: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Leslie L. Knachel, Executive Director,
Board of Optometry, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233,
telephone (804) 597-4130, FAX (804) 527-4471, or email
leslie.knachel@dhp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments to regulations for optometrists prescribing
controlled substances include (i) provisions for the management of acute pain
that require prescribing a dosage not to exceed seven days and include
requirements for the evaluation of the patient and limitations on quantity;
(ii) requirements for prescribing an opioid beyond seven days to include a
reevaluation of the patient, check of the Prescription Monitoring Program, and
specific information in the patient record; and (iii) if a TPA-certified
optometrist finds an opioid prescription for chronic pain is necessary, a
requirement to refer the patient to a physician or comply with Board of
Medicine regulations for managing chronic pain. The amendments replace
emergency regulations currently in effect.
Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: A
summary of comments made by the public and the agency's response may be
obtained from the promulgating agency or viewed at the office of the Registrar
of Regulations.
18VAC105-20-5. Definitions.
The following words and terms when used in this chapter shall
have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Acute pain" means pain that occurs within the
normal course of a disease or condition for which controlled substances may be
prescribed for no more than three months.
"Board" means the Virginia Board of Optometry.
"Chronic pain" means nonmalignant pain that goes
beyond the normal course of a disease or condition for which controlled
substances may be prescribed for a period greater than three months.
"Controlled substance" means drugs listed in the
Drug Control Act (§ 54.1-3400 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) in Schedules II
through V.
"MME" means morphine milligram equivalent.
"NBEO" means the National Board of Examiners in
Optometry.
"Prescription Monitoring Program" means the
electronic system within the Department of Health Professions that monitors the
dispensing of certain controlled substances.
"TPA" means therapeutic pharmaceutical agents.
"TPA certification" means authorization by the
Virginia Board of Optometry for an optometrist to treat diseases and abnormal
conditions of the human eye and its adnexa and to prescribe and administer
certain therapeutic pharmaceutical agents.
18VAC105-20-48. Prescribing an opioid for acute pain.
A. Nonpharmacologic and non-opioid treatment for pain
shall be given consideration prior to treatment with opioids. If an opioid is
considered necessary for the treatment of acute pain, a TPA-certified
optometrist shall follow the regulations for prescribing and treating with
opioids.
B. Prior to initiating treatment with a controlled
substance containing an opioid for a complaint of acute pain, a TPA-certified
optometrist shall perform a health history and physical examination appropriate
to the complaint, query the Prescription Monitoring Program as set forth in §
54.1-2522.1 of the Code of Virginia, and conduct an assessment of the patient's
history and risk of substance abuse.
C. Initiation of opioid treatment for all patients with
acute pain shall include the following:
1. A prescription for an opioid shall be a short-acting
opioid in the lowest effective dose for the fewest number of days, not to
exceed seven days as determined by the manufacturer's directions for use,
unless extenuating circumstances are clearly documented in the patient record.
2. A TPA-certified optometrist shall carefully consider and
document in the patient record the reasons to exceed 50 MME per day.
3. A prescription for naloxone should be considered for any
patient when any risk factor of prior overdose, substance misuse, or
concomitant use of benzodiazepine is present.
D. If another prescription for an opioid is to be written
beyond seven days, a TPA-certified optometrist shall:
1. Reevaluate the patient and document in the patient
record the continued need for an opioid prescription; and
2. Check the patient's prescription history in the
Prescription Monitoring Program.
E. The patient record shall include a description of the
pain, a presumptive diagnosis for the origin of the pain, an examination
appropriate to the complaint, a treatment plan, and the medication prescribed
(including date, type, dosage, strength, and quantity prescribed).
F. Due to a higher risk of fatal overdose when opioids are
prescribed for a patient also taking benzodiazepines, sedative hypnotics,
tramadol, or carisoprodol, a TPA-certified optometrist shall only co-prescribe
these substances when there are extenuating circumstances and shall document in
the patient recorda tapering plan to achieve the lowest possible effective
doses if these medications are prescribed.
18VAC105-20-49. Prescribing an opioid for chronic pain.
If a TPA-certified optometrist treats a patient for whom
an opioid prescription is necessary for chronic pain, he shall either:
1. Refer the patient to a doctor of medicine or osteopathic
medicine who is a pain management specialist; or
2. Comply with regulations of the Board of Medicine,
18VAC85-21-60 through 18VAC85-21-120, if he chooses to manage
the chronic pain with an opioid prescription.
18VAC105-20-70. Requirements for continuing education.
A. Each license renewal shall be conditioned upon submission
of evidence to the board of 20 hours of continuing education taken by the
applicant during the previous license period. A licensee who completes more
than 20 hours of continuing education in a year shall be allowed to carry
forward up to 10 hours of continuing education for the next annual renewal
cycle.
1. The 20 hours may include up to two hours of recordkeeping
for patient care, including coding for diagnostic and treatment devices and
procedures or the management of an optometry practice, provided that such
courses are not primarily for the purpose of augmenting the licensee's income
or promoting the sale of specific instruments or products.
2. For optometrists who are certified in the use of
therapeutic pharmaceutical agents, at least 10 of the required continuing
education hours shall be in the areas of ocular and general pharmacology,;
diagnosis and treatment of the human eye and its adnexa, including treatment
with new pharmaceutical agents, or; new or advanced clinical
devices, techniques, modalities, or procedures; or pain management.
3. At least 10 hours shall be obtained through real-time,
interactive activities, including in-person or electronic presentations,
provided that during the course of the presentation, the licensee and the
lecturer may communicate with one another.
4. A licensee may also include up to two hours of training in
cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR).
5. Two hours of the 20 hours required for annual renewal may
be satisfied through delivery of professional services, without compensation,
to low-income individuals receiving health services through a local health
department or a free clinic organized in whole or primarily for the delivery of
those services. One hour of continuing education may be credited for three
hours of providing such volunteer services, as documented by the health
department or free clinic.
B. Each licensee shall attest to fulfillment of continuing
education hours on the required annual renewal form. All continuing education
shall be completed prior to the renewal deadline unless an extension or waiver
has been granted by the Continuing Education Committee. A request for an
extension or waiver shall be received prior to the renewal deadline of
each year.
C. All continuing education courses shall be offered by an
approved sponsor or accrediting body listed in subsection G of this section.
Courses that are not approved by a board-recognized sponsor in advance shall
not be accepted for continuing education credit. For those courses that have a
post-test requirement, credit will only be given if the optometrist receives a
passing grade as indicated on the certificate.
D. Licensees shall maintain continuing education
documentation for a period of not less than three years. A random audit of
licensees may be conducted by the board which will require that the licensee
provide evidence substantiating participation in required continuing education
courses within 14 days of the renewal date.
E. Documentation of hours shall clearly indicate the name of
the continuing education provider and its affiliation with an approved sponsor
or accrediting body as listed in subsection G of this section. Documents that
do not have the required information shall not be accepted by the board for
determining compliance. Correspondence courses shall be credited according to
the date on which the post-test was graded as indicated on the continuing
education certificate.
F. A licensee shall be exempt from the continuing competency
requirements for the first renewal following the date of initial licensure by
examination in Virginia.
G. An approved continuing education course or program,
whether offered by correspondence, electronically, or in person, shall
be sponsored, accredited, or approved by one of the following:
1. The American Optometric Association and its constituent
organizations.
2. Regional optometric organizations.
3. State optometric associations and their affiliate local
societies.
4. Accredited colleges and universities providing optometric
or medical courses.
5. The American Academy of Optometry and its affiliate
organizations.
6. The American Academy of Ophthalmology and its affiliate
organizations.
7. The Virginia Academy of Optometry.
8. Council on Optometric Practitioner Education (COPE).
9. State or federal governmental agencies.
10. College of Optometrists in Vision Development.
11. The Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education
of the American Medical Association for Category 1 credit.
12. Providers of training in cardiopulmonary resuscitation
(CPR).
13. Optometric Extension Program.
H. In order to maintain approval for continuing education
courses, providers or sponsors shall:
1. Provide a certificate of attendance that shows the date,
location, presenter or lecturer, content hours of the course, and
contact information of the provider or sponsor for verification. The
certificate of attendance shall be based on verification by the sponsor of the
attendee's presence throughout the course, either provided by a post-test or by
a designated monitor.
2. Maintain documentation about the course and attendance for
at least three years following its completion.
I. Falsifying the attestation of compliance with continuing
education on a renewal form or failure to comply with continuing education
requirements may subject a licensee to disciplinary action by the board,
consistent with § 54.1-3215 of the Code of Virginia.
VA.R. Doc. No. R18-5205; Filed September 18, 2019, 11:13 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF PHARMACY
Proposed Regulation
Title of Regulation: 18VAC110-50. Regulations
Governing Wholesale Distributors, Manufacturers, and Warehousers (adding 18VAC110-50-55).
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-3307 of the
Code of Virginia.
Public Hearing Information:
December 9, 2019 - 9:05 a.m. - Department of Health
Professions, Perimeter Center, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 201, Board Room 2,
Richmond, VA 23233
Public Comment Deadline: December 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Caroline Juran, RPh, Executive Director,
Board of Pharmacy, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233-1463,
telephone (804) 367-4456, FAX (804) 527-4472, or email
caroline.juran@dhp.virginia.gov.
Basis: Regulations are promulgated under the general
authority of § 54.1-2400 of the Code of Virginia. The specific authority to
promulgate regulations for delivery of medical devices is in Chapters 241 and
242 of the 2018 Acts of Assembly, which added § 54.1-3415.1 of the Code of
Virginia.
Purpose: The primary purpose of the proposed action is
to implement legislative action that allows a permitted manufacturer, wholesale
distributor, warehouser, nonresident warehouser, third-party logistics
provider, or nonresident third-party logistics provider, or registered
nonresident manufacturer or nonresident wholesale distributor to deliver
Schedule VI prescription devices directly to an ultimate user's or consumer's
residence in accordance with an agreement signed with a medical equipment
supplier or a medical director.
The goal is to facilitate provision of Schedule VI devices more
economically and efficiently by allowing delivery to the ultimate user or
consumer without a party in the middle of the transaction having to physically
possess and store the devices and ensuring existence of an order or request
from a prescriber for the safety and integrity of prescription devices and the
protection of the patient or ultimate user. The medical equipment supplier may
have a valid order from a prescriber that is conveyed to a wholesale distributor
or other entity with whom there is an agreement. Before passage of Chapters 241
and 242 of the 2018 Acts of Assembly, the distributor or other entity did not
have legal authority to deliver directly to the consumer. Likewise, the
director of a home health agency may now request that oxygen be delivered
directly to a consumer's residence, rather than the agency possessing and
storing the oxygen with a subsequent delivery to the consumer or patient.
Substance: Board requirements for delivery of Schedule
VI devices are intended to implement the provisions of § 54.1-3415.1 of
the Code of Virginia, which requires an agreement between the delivering party
and a medical equipment supplier or a medical director. The agreement can cover
multiple entities under shared ownership so it does not become burdensome but
does ensure existence of an order or request from a prescriber.
Issues: The advantage to the public is direct delivery
of Schedule VI devices from an entity without delays and costs associated with
interim deliveries. There are no disadvantages to the public. There are no
advantages or disadvantages to the agency or the Commonwealth.
Department of Planning and Budget's Economic Impact
Analysis:
Summary of the Proposed Amendments to Regulation. Pursuant to Chapter
241 of the 2018 Acts of Assembly,1 the Board of Pharmacy (Board)
proposes to permanently allow certain regulated entities to deliver Schedule VI
medical devices directly to a consumer on behalf of an equipment supplier.
These changes have already been implemented under an emergency regulation.2
Result of Analysis. The benefits likely exceed the costs for
all proposed changes.
Estimated Economic Impact. Pursuant to the 2018 General
Assembly mandate, the Board proposes to permanently set out the requirements
for delivery of Schedule VI devices directly to an ultimate user or consumer on
behalf of a medical equipment supplier upon a valid order from a prescriber or
upon request from the medical director of home health agency, nursing home,
assisted living facility, or hospice.
Schedule VI devices are complex or invasive devices that have
the potential for harm if incorrectly used (e.g., nebulizer, ostomy bags,
catheters, etc.). Prior to the emergency regulation, direct delivery of these
devices to the ultimate user was not permitted. A medical supplier would have
to first obtain the possession of the device then deliver it to the ultimate
user. Under the new language, a medical supplier can enter into agreements with
its sources and have the device directly delivered to the patient. This change
eliminates the need to store the equipment at the medical equipment supplier
and an extra step in the purchase process. Thus, the change has the potential
to reduce storage/delivery costs and speed up the delivery. However, according
to the Department of Health Professions (DHP), some suppliers had already been
facilitating direct delivery and are unlikely to be affected other than coming
into compliance under the new language.
Businesses and Entities Affected. Currently, there are 28
manufacturers, 81 wholesale distributors, 98 warehousers, 5 third-party
logistics providers, 134 nonresident manufacturers, 673 nonresident wholesale
distributors, and 237 medical suppliers regulated by the Board. DHP has no
estimate on the number of entities that may take advantage of the new delivery
model permitted by the proposed changes.
Localities Particularly Affected. No locality is expected to be
particularly affected.
Projected Impact on Employment. The proposed amendments eliminate
the need to store Schedule VI devices at the medical suppliers' location and
may reduce the demand for labor associated with that type of storage.
Effects on the Use and Value of Private Property. The proposed
changes may benefit some medical equipment suppliers in terms of reduced
storage/delivery costs which would positively affect their asset values.
Real Estate Development Costs. The proposed amendments do not
affect real estate development costs.
Small Businesses:
Definition. Pursuant to § 2.2-4007.04 of the Code of Virginia,
small business is defined as "a business entity, including its affiliates,
that (i) is independently owned and operated and (ii) employs fewer than 500
full-time employees or has gross annual sales of less than $6 million."
Costs and Other Effects. How many of the medical equipment
suppliers are small business is not known. However, the proposed amendments may
reduce the storage/delivery costs for some medical equipment suppliers as
discussed above.
Alternative Method that Minimizes Adverse Impact. The proposed
amendments do not adversely affect small businesses.
Adverse Impacts:
Businesses. The proposed amendments do not adversely affect
businesses.
Localities. The proposed amendments do not adversely affect
localities.
Other Entities. The proposed amendments do not adversely affect
other entities.
_______________________
1http://lis.virginia.gov/cgi-bin/legp604.exe?181+ful+CHAP0241
2https://townhall.virginia.gov/l/ViewStage.cfm?stageid=8333
Agency's Response to Economic Impact Analysis: The Board
of Pharmacy concurs with the analysis of the Department of Planning and Budget.
Summary:
Chapters 241 and 242 of the 2018 Acts of Assembly, which
enacted § 54.1-3415.1 of the Code of Virginia, establish the requirements for
delivery of Schedule VI devices directly to an ultimate user or consumer on
behalf of a medical equipment supplier upon a valid order from a prescriber or
upon request from the medical director of a home health agency, nursing home,
assisted living facility, or hospice. The proposed action adds 18VAC110-50-55
to implement Chapters 241 and 242.
18VAC110-50-55. Delivery of Schedule VI devices.
A. In accordance with the provisions of subsection A of § 54.1-3415.1
of the Code of Virginia, a manufacturer, nonresident manufacturer, wholesale
distributor, nonresident wholesaler distributor, third-party logistics
provider, nonresident third-party logistics provider, warehouser, or
nonresident warehouser licensed, permitted, or registered in Virginia may
deliver Schedule VI prescription devices directly to an ultimate user or
consumer on behalf of a medical equipment supplier.
1. Such delivery shall only occur in accordance with an
agreement between a delivering entity named in this subsection and a medical
equipment supplier in compliance with law and regulation.
2. The agreement shall be between an individual delivering
entity or multiple delivering entities under shared ownership and an individual
medical equipment supplier or multiple medical equipment suppliers under shared
ownership. The agreement shall be applicable to all ultimate users or consumers
receiving services from the medical equipment supplier who require delivery of
Schedule VI prescription devices.
3. The medical equipment supplier shall represent to the
delivering entity that it has complied with the provisions of § 54.1-3415.1
of the Code of Virginia regarding the existence of a valid order from a
prescriber for the delivery of a Schedule VI prescription device to an ultimate
user or consumer. Validation of orders of prescribers shall be the
responsibility of the medical equipment supplier upon request of the board or
delivering entity.
B. In accordance with the provisions of subsection B of § 54.1-3415.1
of the Code of Virginia, a manufacturer, nonresident manufacturer, wholesale
distributor, nonresident wholesaler distributor, third-party logistics provider,
nonresident third-party logistics provider, warehouser, or nonresident
warehouser licensed, permitted, or registered in Virginia may deliver Schedule
VI prescription devices directly to an ultimate user's or consumer's residence
to be administered by persons authorized to administer such devices, provided
that (i) such delivery is made on behalf of a medical director of a home health
agency, nursing home, assisted living facility, or hospice who has requested
the distribution of the Schedule VI prescription device and directs the
delivery of such device to the ultimate user's or consumer's residence and (ii)
the medical director on whose behalf such Schedule VI prescription device is
being delivered has entered into an agreement with the manufacturer, nonresident
manufacturer, wholesale distributor, nonresident wholesale distributor,
warehouser, nonresident warehouser, third-party logistics provider, or
nonresident third-party logistics provider for such delivery.
1. Such delivery shall only occur in accordance with an
agreement between a delivering entity authorized in this subsection and a
medical director of a home health agency, nursing home, assisted living
facility, or hospice and in compliance with law and regulation.
2. The agreement shall be between an individual delivering
entity or multiple delivering entities under shared ownership and the medical
director of an individual home health agency, nursing home, assisted living
facility, or hospice, or multiple such entities under shared ownership. The
agreement shall be applicable to all ultimate users or consumers of the home
health agency, nursing home, assisted living facility, or hospice who require
delivery of Schedule VI prescription devices.
3. The home health agency, nursing home, assisted living
facility, or hospice shall represent to the delivering entity that it has
complied with provisions of § 54.1-3415.1 of the Code of Virginia regarding the
existence of a request from a prescriber for the delivery of a Schedule VI
prescription device to an ultimate user or consumer. Validation of the request
from a prescriber shall be the responsibility of the home health agency,
nursing home, assisted living facility, or hospice upon request of the board or
delivering entity.
C. The agreement, as required by subdivisions A 1 and B 1
of this section, shall be in written or electronic format and shall be retained
in a format available upon request to the board at all times the agreement is
in effect and for two years after the date the agreement is terminated or
concluded.
D. An agreement shall not contain any patient specific or
patient health information that would be subject to the provisions of the
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, P.L. No. 104-191.
VA.R. Doc. No. R19-5526; Filed September 18, 2019, 11:59 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF PHYSICAL THERAPY
Emergency Regulation
Title of Regulation: 18VAC112-20. Regulations
Governing the Practice of Physical Therapy (amending 18VAC112-20-10, 18VAC112-20-27,
18VAC112-20-60, 18VAC112-20-65, 18VAC112-20-90, 18VAC112-20-130,
18VAC112-20-140, 18VAC112-20-200; adding 18VAC112-20-82).
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-3474 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Dates: January 1, 2020, through June 30, 2021.
Agency Contact: Corie Tillman Wolf, Executive Director,
Board of Physical Therapy, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233,
telephone (804) 367-4674, FAX (804) 527-4413, or email
ptboard@dhp.virginia.gov.
Preamble:
Section 2.2-4011 B of the Code of Virginia states that
agencies may adopt emergency regulations in situations in which Virginia
statutory law or the appropriation act requires that a regulation be effective
in 280 days or less from its enactment, and the regulation is not exempt under
the provisions of § 2.2-4006 A 4 of the Code of Virginia.
The amendments are necessary for Virginia to participate in
the Physical Therapy Compact, which allows a physical therapist or physical
therapist assistant who has obtained a compact privilege to practice in the
Commonwealth without a Virginia license. To comply with compact rules, the
amendments require all applicants for licensure to have criminal background
checks and all holders of a compact privilege to adhere to the laws and
regulations governing practice in Virginia. As permitted by the compact rules,
the amendments set the fee in Virginia at $50, which is similar to the fee
charged by other states.
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC112-20-10. Definitions.
In addition to the words and terms defined in § §§
54.1-3473 and 54.1-3486 of the Code of Virginia, the following words and
terms when used in this chapter shall have the following meanings unless the
context clearly indicates otherwise:
"Active practice" means a minimum of 160 hours of
professional practice as a physical therapist or physical therapist assistant
within the 24-month period immediately preceding renewal. Active practice may
include supervisory, administrative, educational, or consultative
activities or responsibilities for the delivery of such services.
"Approved program" means an educational program
accredited by the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education of
the American Physical Therapy Association.
"Assessment tool" means oPTion or any other
self-directed assessment tool approved by FSBPT.
"CLEP" means the College Level Examination Program.
"Compact" means the Physical Therapy Licensure
Compact (§ 54.1-3485 of the Code of Virginia).
"Contact hour" means 60 minutes of time spent in
continuing learning activity exclusive of breaks, meals, or vendor
exhibits.
"Direct supervision" means a physical therapist or
a physical therapist assistant is physically present and immediately available
and is fully responsible for the physical therapy tasks or activities being
performed.
"Discharge" means the discontinuation of
interventions in an episode of care that have been provided in an unbroken
sequence in a single practice setting and related to the physical therapy
interventions for a given condition or problem.
"Evaluation" means a process in which the physical
therapist makes clinical judgments based on data gathered during an examination
or screening in order to plan and implement a treatment intervention, provide
preventive care, reduce risks of injury and impairment, or provide for
consultation.
"FCCPT" means the Foreign Credentialing Commission
on Physical Therapy.
"FSBPT" means the Federation of State Boards of
Physical Therapy.
"General supervision" means a physical therapist
shall be available for consultation.
"National examination" means the examinations
developed and administered by the Federation of State Boards of Physical
Therapy and approved by the board for licensure as a physical therapist or
physical therapist assistant.
"Physical Therapy Compact Commission" or
"commission" means the national administrative body whose membership
consists of all states that have enacted the compact.
"Reevaluation" means a process in which the
physical therapist makes clinical judgments based on data gathered during an
examination or screening in order to determine a patient's response to the
treatment plan and care provided.
"Support personnel" means a person who is
performing designated routine tasks related to physical therapy under the
direction and supervision of a physical therapist or physical therapist
assistant within the scope of this chapter.
"TOEFL" means the Test of English as a Foreign
Language.
"Trainee" means a person seeking licensure as a
physical therapist or physical therapist assistant who is undergoing a
traineeship.
"Traineeship" means a period of active clinical
practice during which an applicant for licensure as a physical therapist or
physical therapist assistant works under the direct supervision of a physical
therapist approved by the board.
"TSE" means the Test of Spoken English.
"Type 1" means continuing learning activities
offered by an approved organization as specified in 18VAC112-20-131.
"Type 2" means continuing learning activities which
may or may not be offered by an approved organization but shall be activities
considered by the learner to be beneficial to practice or to continuing learning.
18VAC112-20-27. Fees.
A. Unless otherwise provided, fees listed in this section
shall not be refundable.
B. Licensure by examination.
1. The application fee shall be $140 for a physical therapist
and $100 for a physical therapist assistant.
2. The fees for taking all required examinations shall be paid
directly to the examination services.
C. Licensure by endorsement. The fee for licensure by
endorsement shall be $140 for a physical therapist and $100 for a physical
therapist assistant.
D. Licensure renewal and reinstatement.
1. The fee for active license renewal for a physical therapist
shall be $135 and for a physical therapist assistant shall be $70 and shall be
due by December 31 in each even-numbered year.
2. The fee for an inactive license renewal for a physical
therapist shall be $70 and for a physical therapist assistant shall be $35 and
shall be due by December 31 in each even-numbered year.
3. A fee of $50 for a physical therapist and $25 for a
physical therapist assistant for processing a late renewal within one renewal
cycle shall be paid in addition to the renewal fee.
4. The fee for reinstatement of a license that has expired for
two or more years shall be $180 for a physical therapist and $120 for a
physical therapist assistant and shall be submitted with an application for
licensure reinstatement.
E. Other fees.
1. The fee for an application for reinstatement of a license
that has been revoked shall be $1,000; the fee for an application for
reinstatement of a license that has been suspended shall be $500.
2. The fee for a duplicate license shall be $5, and the fee
for a duplicate wall certificate shall be $15.
3. The fee for a returned check shall be $35.
4. The fee for a letter of good standing/verification standing
or verification to another jurisdiction shall be $10.
5. The application fee for direct access certification shall
be $75 for a physical therapist to obtain certification to provide services
without a referral.
6. The state fee for obtaining or renewing a compact
privilege to practice in Virginia shall be $50.
18VAC112-20-60. Requirements for licensure by examination.
Every applicant for initial licensure by examination shall
submit:
1. Documentation of having met the educational requirements
specified in 18VAC112-20-40 or 18VAC112-20-50;
2. The required application, fees, and credentials to
the board, including a criminal history background check as required by §
54.1-3484 of the Code of Virginia; and
3. Documentation of passage of the national examination as
prescribed by the board.
18VAC112-20-65. Requirements for licensure by endorsement.
A. A physical therapist or physical therapist assistant who
holds a current, unrestricted license in the United States, its territories,
the District of Columbia, or Canada may be licensed in Virginia by endorsement.
B. An applicant for licensure by endorsement shall submit:
1. Documentation of having met the educational requirements
prescribed in 18VAC112-20-40 or 18VAC112-20-50. In lieu of meeting such
requirements, an applicant may provide evidence of clinical practice consisting
of at least 2,500 hours of patient care during the five years immediately
preceding application for licensure in Virginia with a current, unrestricted
license issued by another U.S. United States jurisdiction;
2. The required application, fees, and credentials to the
board, including a criminal history background check as required by §
54.1-3484 of the Code of Virginia;
3. A current report from the Healthcare Integrity and
Protection Data Bank (HIPDB);
4. Evidence of completion of 15 hours of continuing education
for each year in which the applicant held a license in another U.S. United
States jurisdiction, or 60 hours obtained within the past four years;
5. Documentation of passage of an examination equivalent to
the Virginia examination at the time of initial licensure or documentation of
passage of an examination required by another state at the time of initial
licensure in that state; and
6. Documentation of active practice in physical therapy in
another U.S. United States jurisdiction for at least 320 hours
within the four years immediately preceding his application for licensure. A
physical therapist who does not meet the active practice requirement shall:
a. Successfully complete 320 hours in a traineeship in
accordance with requirements in 18VAC112-20-140; or
b. Document that he attained at least Level 2 on the
FSBPT assessment tool within the two years preceding application for licensure
in Virginia and successfully complete 160 hours in a traineeship in accordance
with the requirements in 18VAC112-20-140.
C. A physical therapist assistant seeking licensure by
endorsement who has not actively practiced physical therapy for at least 320
hours within the four years immediately preceding his application for licensure
shall successfully complete 320 hours in a traineeship in accordance with the
requirements in 18VAC112-20-140.
18VAC112-20-82. Requirements for a compact privilege.
To obtain a compact privilege to practice physical therapy
in Virginia, a physical therapist or physical therapist assistant licensed in a
remote state shall comply with the rules adopted by the Physical Therapy
Compact Commission in effect at the time of application to the commission.
18VAC112-20-90. General responsibilities.
A. The physical therapist shall be responsible for managing
all aspects of the physical therapy care of each patient and shall provide:
1. The initial evaluation for each patient and its
documentation in the patient record;
2. Periodic reevaluation, including documentation of the
patient's response to therapeutic intervention; and
3. The documented status of the patient at the time of
discharge, including the response to therapeutic intervention. If a patient is
discharged from a health care facility without the opportunity for the physical
therapist to reevaluate the patient, the final note in the patient record may
document patient status.
B. The physical therapist shall communicate the overall plan
of care to the patient or his the patient's legally authorized
representative and shall also communicate with a referring doctor of medicine,
osteopathy, chiropractic, podiatry, or dental surgery,; nurse
practitioner; or physician assistant to the extent required by §
54.1-3482 of the Code of Virginia.
C. A physical therapist assistant may assist the physical
therapist in performing selected components of physical therapy intervention to
include treatment, measurement, and data collection, but not to
include the performance of an evaluation as defined in 18VAC112-20-10.
D. A physical therapist assistant's visits to a patient may
be made under general supervision.
E. A physical therapist providing services with a direct
access certification as specified in § 54.1-3482 of the Code of Virginia
shall utilize the Direct Access Patient Attestation and Medical Release Form
prescribed by the board or otherwise include in the patient record the
information, attestation and written consent required by subsection B of §
54.1-3482 of the Code of Virginia.
F. A physical therapist or physical therapist assistant
practicing in Virginia on a compact privilege shall comply with all applicable
laws and regulations pertaining to physical therapy practice in Virginia.
18VAC112-20-130. Biennial renewal of license.
A. A physical therapist and physical therapist assistant who
intends to continue practice shall renew his license biennially by December 31
in each even-numbered year and pay to the board the renewal fee prescribed in
18VAC112-20-27.
B. A licensee whose licensure has not been renewed by the
first day of the month following the month in which renewal is required shall
pay a late fee as prescribed in 18VAC112-20-27.
C. In order to renew an active license, a licensee shall be
required to:
1. Complete a minimum of 160 hours of active practice in the
preceding two years; and
2. Comply with continuing competency requirements set forth in
18VAC112-20-131.
D. In order to renew a compact privilege to practice in
Virginia, the holder shall comply with the rules adopted by the Physical
Therapy Compact Commission in effect at the time of the renewal.
18VAC112-20-140. Traineeship requirements.
A. The traineeship shall be approved by the board and under
the direction and supervision of a licensed physical therapist.
B. Supervision and identification of trainees:
1. There shall be a limit of two physical therapists assigned
to provide supervision for each trainee.
2. The supervising physical therapist shall countersign
patient documentation (i.e., notes, records, charts) for services provided by a
trainee.
3. The trainee shall wear identification designating them as a
"physical therapist trainee" or a "physical therapist assistant
trainee."
C. Completion of traineeship.
1. The physical therapist supervising the trainee shall submit
a report to the board at the end of the required number of hours on forms
supplied by the board.
2. If the traineeship is not successfully completed at the end
of the required hours, as determined by the supervising physical therapist, the
president of the board or his designee shall determine if a new traineeship
shall commence. If the president of the board determines that a new traineeship
shall not commence, then the application for licensure shall be denied.
3. The second traineeship may be served under a different
supervising physical therapist and may be served in a different organization
than the initial traineeship. If the second traineeship is not successfully
completed, as determined by the supervising physical therapist, then the application
for licensure shall be denied.
D. A traineeship shall not be approved for an
applicant who has not completed a criminal background check for initial
licensure pursuant to § 54.1-3484 of the Code of Virginia.
18VAC112-20-200. Advertising ethics.
A. Any statement specifying a fee, whether standard,
discounted, or free, for professional services that does not include the
cost of all related procedures, services, and products which that,
to a substantial likelihood, will be necessary for the completion of the
advertised service as it would be understood by an ordinarily prudent person
shall be deemed to be deceptive or misleading, or both. Where reasonable
disclosure of all relevant variables and considerations is made, a statement of
a range of prices for specifically described services shall not be deemed to be
deceptive or misleading.
B. Advertising a discounted or free service, examination, or
treatment and charging for any additional service, examination, or treatment
that is performed as a result of and within 72 hours of the initial office
visit in response to such advertisement is unprofessional conduct unless such
professional services rendered are as a result of a bona fide emergency. This
provision may not be waived by agreement of the patient and the practitioner.
C. Advertisements of discounts shall disclose the full fee
that has been discounted. The practitioner shall maintain documented evidence
to substantiate the discounted fees and shall make such information available
to a consumer upon request.
D. A licensee or holder of a compact privilege shall
not use the term "board certified" or any similar words or phrase
calculated to convey the same meaning in any advertising for his practice
unless he holds certification in a clinical specialty issued by the American
Board of Physical Therapy Specialties.
E. A licensee or holder of a compact privilege of the
board shall not advertise information that is false, misleading, or deceptive.
For an advertisement for a single practitioner, it shall be presumed that the
practitioner is responsible and accountable for the validity and truthfulness
of its content. For an advertisement for a practice in which there is more than
one practitioner, the name of the practitioner or practitioners
responsible and accountable for the content of the advertisement shall be
documented and maintained by the practice for at least two years.
F. Documentation, scientific and otherwise, supporting claims
made in an advertisement shall be maintained and available for the board's
review for at least two years.
VA.R. Doc. No. R20-6119; Filed September 18, 2019, 1:42 p.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF COUNSELING
Final Regulation
Title of Regulation: 18VAC115-70. Regulations
Governing the Registration of Peer Recovery Specialists (adding 18VAC115-70-10 through 18VAC115-70-90).
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-3505 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Jaime Hoyle, Executive Director, Board
of Counseling, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone
(804) 367-4406, FAX (804) 527-4435, or email jaime.hoyle@dhp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
Pursuant to Chapters 418 and 426 of the 2017 Acts of
Assembly, the new regulation (i) establishes the fees required for registration
and renewal of registration; (ii) specifies the qualification for registration,
which is evidence of meeting the requirements set out in regulations of the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services; (iii) requires that
to maintain registration, a registrant complete eight hours of continuing
education with a minimum of two hours devoted to ethics; (iv) sets standards of
practice to include practicing within the specialist's competency area,
practicing in a manner that does not endanger public health and safety,
maintaining confidentiality, and avoiding dual relationships that would impair
objectivity and increase risk of client exploitation; and (v) makes violations
of standards of practice or of applicable law or regulation grounds for
disciplinary action by the board.
Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: No
public comments were received by the promulgating agency.
CHAPTER 70
REGULATIONS GOVERNING THE REGISTRATION OF PEER RECOVERY SPECIALISTS
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC115-70-10. Definitions.
"Applicant" means a person applying for
registration as a peer recovery specialist.
"Board" means the Virginia Board of Counseling.
"DBHDS" means the Virginia Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental Services.
"Mental health professional" means a person who
by education and experience is professionally qualified and licensed in
Virginia to provide counseling interventions designed to facilitate an
individual's achievement of human development goals and remediate mental,
emotional, or behavioral disorders and associated distresses that interfere
with mental health and development.
"Peer recovery specialist" means a person who by
education and experience is professionally qualified in accordance with 12VAC35-250
to provide collaborative services to assist individuals in achieving sustained
recovery from the effects of mental illness or addiction, or both.
"Registered peer recovery specialist" or
"registrant" means a person who by education and experience is
professionally qualified in accordance with 12VAC35-250 and registered by the
board to provide collaborative services to assist individuals in achieving
sustained recovery from the effects of mental illness or addiction, or both. A
registered peer recovery specialist shall provide such services as an employee
or independent contractor of DBHDS, a provider licensed by the DBHDS, a
practitioner licensed by or holding a permit issued from the Department of
Health Professions, or a facility licensed by the Department of Health.
18VAC115-70-20. Fees required by the board.
A. The board has established the following fees applicable
to the registration of peer recovery specialists:
Registration
|
$30
|
Renewal of registration
|
$30
|
Late renewal
|
$20
|
Reinstatement of a lapsed registration
|
$60
|
Duplicate certificate of registration
|
$10
|
Returned check
|
$35
|
Reinstatement following revocation or suspension
|
$500
|
B. Unless otherwise provided, fees established by the
board shall not be refundable.
18VAC115-70-30. Current name and address.
Each registrant shall furnish the board the registrant's
current name and address of record. Any change of name or address of record or
public address if different from the address of record, shall be furnished to
the board within 60 days of such change. It shall be the duty and
responsibility of each registrant to inform the board of the registrant's
current address.
Part II
Requirements for Registration and Renewal
18VAC115-70-40. Requirements for registration as a peer
recovery specialist.
A. An applicant for registration shall submit:
1. A completed application on forms provided by the board
and any applicable fee as prescribed in 18VAC115-70-20; and
2. A current report from the National Practitioner Data
Bank (NPDB).
B. An applicant for registration as a peer recovery
specialist shall provide evidence of meeting all requirements for peer recovery
specialists set by DBHDS in 12VAC35-250-30.
18VAC115-70-50. Annual renewal of registration.
All registrants shall renew their registration on or
before June 30 of each year. Along with the renewal form, the registrant shall
submit the renewal fee as prescribed in 18VAC115-70-20.
18VAC115-70-60. Continued competency requirements for
renewal of peer recovery specialist registration.
A. Registered peer recovery specialists shall be required
to have completed a minimum of eight contact hours of continuing education for
each annual registration renewal. A minimum of [ one
two ] of these hours shall be in courses that emphasize ethics.
Registered peer recovery specialists shall complete
continuing competency activities that focus on increasing knowledge or skills
in one or more of the following areas:
1. Current body of mental health or substance abuse
knowledge;
2. Promoting services, supports, and strategies for the
recovery process;
3. Crisis intervention;
4. Values for role of peer recovery specialist;
5. Basic principles related to health and wellness;
6. Stage appropriate pathways in recovery support;
7. Ethics and boundaries;
8. Cultural sensitivity and practice;
9. Trauma and impact on recovery;
10. Community resources; or
11. Delivering peer services within agencies and
organizations.
B. The following organizations, associations, or
institutions are approved by the board to provide continuing education:
1. Federal, state, or local governmental agencies, public
school systems, or licensed health [ or mental health ] facilities.
2. [ A national or state recovery-oriented
association or organization recognized by the profession.
3. A national behavioral health organization or
certification body recognized by the board.
4. An agency or organization holding approval by DBHDS as a
certifying body for peer recovery specialists.
5. ] The American Association for Marriage and
Family Therapy and its state affiliates.
[ 3. 6. ] The American
Association of State Counseling Boards.
[ 4. 7. ] The American
Counseling Association and its state and local affiliates.
[ 5. 8. ] The American
Psychological Association and its state affiliates.
[ 6. 9. ] The Commission on
Rehabilitation Counselor Certification.
[ 7. 10. ] NAADAC, the
Association for Addiction Professionals and its state and local affiliates.
[ 8. 11. ] National
Association of Social Workers.
[ 9. 12. ] National Board for
Certified Counselors.
[ 10. A national behavioral health organization or
certification body recognized by the board.
11. 13. ] Individuals or
organizations that have been approved as continuing competency sponsors by the
American Association of State Counseling Boards or a counseling board in
another state.
[ 12. An agency or organization approved by DBHDS.
14. Regionally accredited colleges or universities. ]
C. Attestation of completion of continuing education is
not required for the first renewal following initial registration in Virginia.
D. The board may grant an extension for good cause of up
to one year for the completion of continuing education requirements upon
written request from the registrant prior to the renewal date. Such an
extension shall not relieve the registrant of the continuing education
requirement.
E. The board may grant an exemption for all or part of the
continuing education requirements due to circumstances beyond the control of
the registrant such as temporary disability, mandatory military service, or
officially declared disasters upon written request from the registrant prior to
the renewal date.
F. All registrants shall maintain original documentation
of official transcripts showing credit hours earned or certificates of
participation for a period of three years following renewal.
G. The board may conduct an audit of registrants to verify
compliance with the requirement for a renewal period. Upon request, a
registrant shall provide documentation as follows:
1. Official transcripts showing credit hours earned; or
2. Certificates of participation.
H. Continuing education hours required by a disciplinary
order shall not be used to satisfy renewal requirements.
Part III
Standards of Practice; Disciplinary Actions; Reinstatement
18VAC115-70-70. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public health, safety, and
welfare and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in
determining the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose
activities are regulated by the board.
B. Persons registered by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare.
2. Be able to justify all services rendered to clients as
necessary.
3. Practice only within the competency area for which they
are qualified by training or experience.
4. Report to the board known or suspected violations of the
laws and regulations governing the practice of registered peer recovery
specialists.
5. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates, or other
forms of remuneration for referral of clients for professional services and
make appropriate consultations and referrals based on the best interest of
clients.
6. Stay abreast of new developments, concepts, and
practices that are necessary to providing appropriate services.
7. Document the need for and steps taken to terminate
services when it becomes clear that the client is not benefiting from the
relationship [ or the client has decided to discontinue the
relationship ].
C. In regard to confidentiality and client records,
persons registered by the board shall:
1. Not willfully or negligently breach the confidentiality
between a practitioner and a client. A breach of confidentiality that is
required or permitted by applicable law or beyond the control of the
practitioner shall not be considered negligent or willful.
2. Disclose client records to others only in accordance
with applicable law.
3. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees
of the requirements of confidentiality, and provide for the destruction of
records that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client
confidentiality.
4. Maintain timely, accurate, legible, and complete written
or electronic records for each client, to include dates of service and
identifying information to substantiate [ treatment
the recovery, resiliency, and wellness ] plan, client progress, and
termination.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons registered by
the board shall:
1. Not engage in dual relationships with clients or former
clients that are harmful to the client's well-being, that would impair the
practitioner's objectivity and professional judgment, or that would increase
the risk of client exploitation. This prohibition includes such activities as
providing services to close friends, former sexual partners, employees, or
relatives or engaging in business relationships with clients.
2. Not engage in sexual intimacies or romantic relationships
with current clients. For at least five years after cessation or termination of
professional services, practitioners shall not engage in sexual intimacies or
romantic relationships with a client or those included in collateral
therapeutic services. Because sexual or romantic relationships are potentially
exploitative, the practitioner shall bear the burden of demonstrating that
there has been no exploitation. A client's consent to, initiation of, or
participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a practitioner does not
change the nature of the conduct nor lift the regulatory prohibition.
3. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties
of obligations, responsibilities, and loyalties to third parties.
E. Upon learning of evidence that indicates a reasonable
probability that another mental health service provider, as defined in
§ 54.1-2400.1 of the Code of Virginia, is or may be guilty of a violation
of standards of conduct as defined in statute or regulation, persons registered
by the board shall advise their clients of the client's right to report such
misconduct to the Department of Health Professions in accordance with
§ 54.1-2400.4 of the Code of Virginia.
18VAC115-70-80. Grounds for revocation, suspension,
restriction, or denial of registration.
In accordance with subdivision 7 of § 54.1-2400 of the
Code of Virginia, the board may revoke, suspend, restrict, or decline to issue
or renew a registration based upon the following conduct:
1. Conviction of a felony or of a misdemeanor involving
moral turpitude or violation of or aid to another in violating any provision of
Chapter 35 (§ 54.1-3500 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia, any
other statute applicable to the practice of registered peer recovery
specialists, or any provision of this chapter;
2. Procuring, attempting to procure, or maintaining a
registration by fraud or misrepresentation;
3. Conducting one's practice in such a manner so as to make
it a danger to the health and welfare of one's clients or to the public, or if
one is unable to practice with reasonable skill and safety to clients by reason
of illness or abusive use of alcohol, drugs, narcotics, chemicals, or any other
type of material or as a result of any mental or physical condition;
4. Violating or abetting another person in the violation of
any provision of any statute applicable to the practice of peer recovery
specialists or [ qualified ] mental health
professionals or any provision of this chapter;
5. Performance of functions outside the board-registered
area of competency;
6. Performance of an act likely to deceive, defraud, or
harm the public;
7. Intentional or negligent conduct that causes or is
likely to cause injury to a client;
8. Action taken against a health or mental health license,
certification, registration, or application in Virginia or other jurisdiction;
9. Failure to cooperate with an employee of the Department
of Health Professions in the conduct of an investigation; or
10. Failure to report evidence of child abuse or neglect as
required in § 63.2-1509 of the Code of Virginia or elder abuse or neglect as
required in § 63.2-1606 of the Code of Virginia.
18VAC115-70-90. Late renewal and reinstatement.
A. A person whose registration has expired may renew it
within one year after its expiration date by paying the late renewal fee and
the registration fee as prescribed in 18VAC115-70-20 for the year in which the
registration was not renewed and by providing documentation of completion of
continuing education as prescribed in 18VAC115-70-60.
B. A person who fails to renew registration after one year
or more shall:
1. Apply for reinstatement;
2. Pay the reinstatement fee for a lapsed registration; and
3. Submit evidence of current certification as a peer
recovery specialist as prescribed by DBHDS in 12VAC35-250-30.
C. A person whose registration has been suspended or who
has been denied reinstatement by board order, having met the terms of the
order, may submit a new application and fee for reinstatement of registration
as prescribed in 18VAC115-70-20. Any person whose registration has been revoked
by the board may, three years subsequent to such board action, submit a new
application and fee for reinstatement of registration as prescribed in
18VAC115-70-20. The board in its discretion may, after an administrative
proceeding, grant the reinstatement sought in this subsection.
NOTICE: The following
form used in administering the regulation was filed by the agency. The form is
not being published; however, online users of this issue of the Virginia
Register of Regulations may click on the name of the form with a hyperlink to
access it. The form is also available from the agency contact or may be viewed
at the Office of the Registrar of Regulations, 900 East Main Street, 11th
Floor, Richmond, Virginia 23219.
FORMS (18VAC115-70)
The following form is available online only at https://www.license.dhp.virginia.gov/apply/:
Registered Peer Recovery Specialists Application and
Instructions
VA.R. Doc. No. R18-5240; Filed September 18, 2019, 11:12 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF COUNSELING
Final Regulation
Title of Regulation: 18VAC115-80. Regulations
Governing the Registration of Qualified Mental Health Professionals (adding 18VAC115-80-10 through
18VAC115-80-110).
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-3505 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Jaime Hoyle, Executive Director, Board
of Counseling, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233, telephone
(804) 367-4406, FAX (804) 527-4435, or email jaime.hoyle@dhp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
Pursuant to Chapters 418 and
426 of the 2017 Acts of Assembly, the new regulation (i) establishes the fees
required for registration and renewal of registration; (ii) specifies the
education and experience necessary to qualify for registration, which includes
a requirement of eight hours of continuing education with a minimum of one hour
in ethics; (iii) sets standards of practice for qualified mental health
professionals to include practicing within their competency area, practicing in
a manner that does not endanger public health and safety, maintaining
confidentiality, and avoiding dual relationships that would impair objectivity
and increase risk of client exploitation; and (iv) makes violation of standards
of practice or of applicable law or regulation grounds for disciplinary action
by the board.
The proposed section
"grandfathering" individuals who had been practicing before December
31, 2018, was not adopted for the final regulation.
Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: A
summary of comments made by the public and the agency's response may be
obtained from the promulgating agency or viewed at the office of the Registrar
of Regulations.
CHAPTER 80
REGULATIONS GOVERNING THE REGISTRATION OF QUALIFIED MENTAL HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
Part I
General Provisions
18VAC115-80-10. Definitions.
"Accredited" means a school that is listed as
accredited on the U.S. Department of Education College Accreditation database
found on the U.S. Department of Education website. If education was obtained
outside the United States, the board may accept a report from a credentialing
service that deems the degree and coursework is equivalent to a course of study
at an accredited school.
"Applicant" means a person applying for
registration as a qualified mental health professional.
"Board" means the Virginia Board of Counseling.
"Collaborative mental health services" means
those rehabilitative supportive services that are provided by a qualified
mental health professional, as set forth in a service plan under the direction
of and in collaboration with either a mental health professional licensed in
Virginia or a person under supervision that has been approved by the Board of
Counseling, Board of Psychology, or Board of Social Work as a prerequisite for
licensure.
"DBHDS" means the Virginia Department of
Behavioral Health and Developmental Services.
"Face-to-face" means the physical presence of
the individuals involved in the supervisory relationship or the use of
technology that provides real-time, visual, and audio contact among the
individuals involved.
"Mental health professional" means a person who
by education and experience is professionally qualified and licensed in
Virginia to provide counseling interventions designed to facilitate an
individual's achievement of human development goals and remediate mental,
emotional, or behavioral disorders and associated distresses that interfere
with mental health and development.
"Qualified mental health professional" or
"QMHP" means a person who by education and experience is
professionally qualified and registered by the board to provide collaborative
mental health services for adults or children. A QMHP shall not engage in
independent or autonomous practice. A QMHP shall provide such services as an
employee or independent contractor of DBHDS, the Department of Corrections, or
a provider licensed by DBHDS.
"Qualified mental health professional-adult" or
"QMHP-A" means a registered QMHP who is trained and experienced in
providing mental health services to adults who have a mental illness. A QMHP-A
shall provide such services as an employee or independent contractor of DBHDS,
the Department of Corrections, or a provider licensed by DBHDS.
"Qualified mental health professional-child" or
"QMHP-C" means a registered QMHP who is trained and experienced in
providing mental health services to children or adolescents up to the age of 22
who have a mental illness. A QMHP-C shall provide such services as an employee
or independent contractor of DBHDS, the Department of Corrections, or a
provider licensed by DBHDS.
"Registrant" means a QMHP registered with the
board.
18VAC115-80-20. Fees required by the board.
A. The board has established the following fees applicable
to the registration of qualified mental health professionals:
Registration
|
$50
|
Renewal of registration
|
$30
|
Late renewal
|
$20
|
Reinstatement of a lapsed registration
|
$75
|
Duplicate certificate of registration
|
$10
|
Returned check
|
$35
|
Reinstatement following revocation or suspension
|
$500
|
B. Unless otherwise provided, fees established by the
board shall not be refundable.
18VAC115-80-30. Current name and address.
Each registrant shall furnish the board his current name
and address of record. Any change of name or address of record or public
address if different from the address of record shall be furnished to the board
within 60 days of such change. It shall be the duty and responsibility of each
registrant to inform the board of his current address.
Part II
Requirements for Registration
18VAC115-80-40. Requirements for registration as a qualified
mental health professional-adult.
A. An applicant for registration shall submit:
1. A completed application on forms provided by the board
and any applicable fee as prescribed in 18VAC115-80-20; [ and ]
2. A current report from the National Practitioner Data
Bank (NPDB) [ ; and
3. Verification of any other mental health or health
professional license, certification, or registration ever held in another
jurisdiction ].
B. An applicant for registration as a QMHP-A shall provide
evidence of:
1. A master's degree in psychology, social work,
counseling, substance abuse, or marriage and family therapy [ , as
verified by an official transcript, ] from an accredited college or
university with an internship or practicum of at least 500 hours of experience
with persons who have mental illness;
2. A master's or bachelor's degree in human services or a
related field [ , as verified by an official transcript, ]
from an accredited college with no less than 1,500 hours of supervised
experience to be obtained within a five-year period immediately preceding
application for registration and as specified in subsection C of this section;
3. A bachelor's degree [ , as verified by an
official transcript, ] from an accredited college in an unrelated field
that includes at least 15 semester credits or 22 quarter hours in a human services
field and with no less than 3,000 hours of supervised experience to be obtained
within a five-year period immediately preceding application for registration
and as specified in subsection C of this section;
4. A registered nurse licensed in Virginia with no less
than 1,500 hours of supervised experience to be obtained within a five-year
period immediately preceding application for registration and as specified in
subsection C of this section; or
5. A licensed occupational therapist with [ an
internship or practicum of at least 500 hours with persons with mental illness
or ] no less than 1,500 hours of supervised experience to be
obtained within a five-year period immediately preceding application for
registration and as specified in subsection C of this section.
C. Experience required for registration.
1. To be registered as a QMHP-A, an applicant who does not
have a master's degree as set forth in subdivision B 1 of this section shall
provide documentation of experience in providing direct services to individuals
as part of a population of adults with mental illness in a setting where mental
health treatment, practice, observation, or diagnosis occurs. The services
provided shall be appropriate to the practice of a QMHP-A and under the
supervision of a licensed mental health professional or a person under
supervision that has been approved by the Board of Counseling, Board of
Psychology, or Board of Social Work as a prerequisite for licensure.
Supervision obtained in another United States jurisdiction shall be provided by
a mental health professional licensed in Virginia or licensed in that
jurisdiction.
2. Supervision shall consist of face-to-face training in
the services of a QMHP-A until the supervisor determines competency in the
provision of such services, after which supervision may be indirect in which
the supervisor is either on-site or immediately available for consultation with
the person being trained.
3. Hours obtained in a bachelor's or master's level
internship or practicum in a human services field may be counted toward
completion of the required hours of experience.
4. A person receiving supervised training to qualify as a
QMHP-A may register with the board. A trainee registration shall expire five
years from its date of issuance.
18VAC115-80-50. Requirements for registration as a qualified
mental health professional-child.
A. An applicant for registration shall submit:
1. A completed application on
forms provided by the board and any applicable fee as prescribed in
18VAC115-80-20; [ and ]
2. A current report from the National Practitioner Data
Bank (NPDB) [ ; and
3. Verification of any other mental health or health
professional license, certification, or registration ever held in another
jurisdiction ].
B. An applicant for registration as a QMHP-C shall provide
evidence of:
1. A master's degree in psychology, social work,
counseling, substance abuse, or marriage and family therapy [ , as
verified by an official transcript, ] from an accredited college or
university with an internship or practicum of at least 500 hours of experience
with persons who have mental illness;
2. A master's or bachelor's degree in a human services
field or in special education [ , as verified by an official
transcript, ] from an accredited college with no less than 1,500
hours of supervised experience to be obtained within a five-year period
immediately preceding application for registration and as specified in
subsection C of this section;
3. A registered nurse licensed in Virginia with no less
than 1,500 hours of supervised experience to be obtained within a five-year
period immediately preceding application for registration and as specified in
subsection C of this section; or
4. A licensed occupational therapist with [ an
internship or practicum of at least 500 hours with persons with mental illness
or ] no less than 1,500 hours of supervised experience to be
obtained within a five-year period immediately preceding application for
registration and as specified in subsection C of this section.
C. Experience required for registration.
1. To be registered as a QMHP-C, an applicant who does not
have a master's degree as set forth in subdivision B 1 of this section shall
provide documentation of 1,500 hours of experience in providing direct services
to individuals as part of a population of children or adolescents with mental
illness in a setting where mental health treatment, practice, observation, or
diagnosis occurs. The services provided shall be appropriate to the practice of
a QMHP-C and under the supervision of a licensed mental health professional or
a person under supervision that has been approved by the Board of Counseling,
Board of Psychology, or Board of Social Work as a prerequisite for licensure.
Supervision obtained in another United States jurisdiction shall be provided by
a mental health professional licensed in Virginia or licensed in that
jurisdiction.
2. Supervision shall consist of face-to-face training in
the services of a QMHP-C until the supervisor determines competency in the
provision of such services, after which supervision may be indirect in which
the supervisor is either on-site or immediately available for consultation with
the person being trained.
3. Hours obtained in a bachelor's or master's level
internship or practicum in a human services field may be counted toward
completion of the required hours of experience.
4. A person receiving supervised training to qualify as a
QMHP-C may register with the board. A trainee registration shall expire five
years from its date of issuance.
18VAC115-80-60. [ Registration of qualified mental
health professionals with prior experience Reserved ].
[ Until December 31, 2018, persons who have been
employed as QMHPs prior to December 31, 2017, may be registered with the board
by submission of a completed application, payment of the application fee, and
submission of an attestation from an employer that they met the qualifications
for a QMHP-A or a QMHP-C during the time of employment. Such persons may
continue to renew their registrations without meeting current requirements for
registration provided they do not allow their registrations to lapse or have
board action to revoke or suspend, in which case they shall meet the
requirements for reinstatement. ]
Part III
Renewal of Registration
18VAC115-80-70. Annual renewal of registration.
All registrants shall renew their registrations on or
before June 30 of each year. Along with the renewal form, the registrant shall
submit the renewal fee as prescribed in 18VAC115-80-20.
18VAC115-80-80. Continued competency requirements for
renewal of registration.
A. Qualified mental health professionals shall be required
to have completed a minimum of eight contact hours of continuing education for
each annual registration renewal. Persons who hold registration both as a
QMHP-A and QMHP-C shall only be required to complete eight contact hours. A
minimum of one of these hours shall be in a course that emphasizes ethics.
B. Qualified mental health professionals shall complete
continuing competency activities that focus on increasing knowledge or skills
in areas directly related to the services provided by a QMHP.
C. The following organizations, associations, or
institutions are approved by the board to provide continuing education,
provided the hours are directly related to the provision of mental health
services:
1. Federal, state, or local
governmental agencies, public school systems, licensed health facilities, or an
agency licensed by DBDHS; and
2. Entities approved for continuing education by a health
regulatory board within the Department of Health Professions.
D. Attestation of completion of continuing education is
not required for the first renewal following initial registration in Virginia.
E. The board may grant an extension for good cause of up
to one year for the completion of continuing education requirements upon
written request from the registrant prior to the renewal date. Such extension
shall not relieve the registrant of the continuing education requirement.
F. The board may grant an exemption for all or part of the
continuing education requirements due to circumstances beyond the control of
the registrant, such as temporary disability, mandatory military service, or
officially declared disasters, upon written request from the registrant prior
to the renewal date.
G. All registrants shall maintain original documentation
of official transcripts showing credit hours earned or certificates of
participation for a period of three years following renewal.
H. The board may conduct an audit of registrants to verify
compliance with the requirement for a renewal period. Upon request, a
registrant shall provide documentation as follows:
1. Official transcripts showing credit hours earned; or
2. Certificates of participation.
I. Continuing education hours required by a disciplinary
order shall not be used to satisfy renewal requirements.
Part IV
Standards of Practice, Disciplinary Action, and Reinstatement
18VAC115-80-90. Standards of practice.
A. The protection of the public health, safety, and
welfare and the best interest of the public shall be the primary guide in
determining the appropriate professional conduct of all persons whose
activities are regulated by the board.
B. Persons registered by the board shall:
1. Practice in a manner that is in the best interest of the
public and does not endanger the public health, safety, or welfare.
2. Practice only within the competency area for which they
are qualified by training or experience and shall not provide clinical mental
health services for which a license is required pursuant to Chapters 35 (§
54.1-3500 et seq.), 36 (§ 54.1-3600 et seq.), and 37 (§ 54.1-3700 et seq.) of
the Code of Virginia.
3. Report to the board known or suspected violations of the
laws and regulations governing the practice of qualified mental health
professionals.
4. Neither accept nor give commissions, rebates, or other
forms of remuneration for the referral of clients for professional services and
make appropriate consultations and referrals based on the interest of patients
or clients.
5. Stay abreast of new developments, concepts, and
practices that are necessary to providing appropriate services.
C. In regard to confidentiality and client records,
persons registered by the board shall:
1. Not willfully or negligently breach the confidentiality
between a practitioner and a client. A breach of confidentiality that is
required or permitted by applicable law or beyond the control of the
practitioner shall not be considered negligent or willful.
2. Disclose client records to others only in accordance
with applicable law.
3. Maintain client records securely, inform all employees
of the requirements of confidentiality, and provide for the destruction of
records that are no longer useful in a manner that ensures client
confidentiality.
4. Maintain timely, accurate, legible, and complete written
or electronic records for each client, to include dates of service and
identifying information to substantiate treatment plan, client progress, and
termination.
D. In regard to dual relationships, persons registered by
the board shall:
1. Not engage in dual relationships with clients or former
clients that are harmful to the client's well-being, that would impair the
practitioner's objectivity and professional judgment, or that would increase
the risk of client exploitation. This prohibition includes such activities as
providing services to close friends, former sexual partners, employees, or
relatives or engaging in business relationships with clients.
2. Not engage in sexual intimacies or romantic
relationships with current clients. For at least five years after cessation or
termination of professional services, practitioners shall not engage in sexual
intimacies or romantic relationships with a client or those included in
collateral therapeutic services. Because sexual or romantic relationships are
potentially exploitative, the practitioner shall bear the burden of
demonstrating that there has been no exploitation. A client's consent to,
initiation of, or participation in sexual behavior or involvement with a
practitioner does not change the nature of the conduct nor lift the regulatory
prohibition.
3. Recognize conflicts of interest and inform all parties
of obligations, responsibilities, and loyalties to third parties.
E. Upon learning of evidence that indicates a reasonable
probability that another mental health service provider, as defined in §
54.1-2400.1 of the Code of Virginia, is or may be guilty of a violation of
standards of conduct as defined in statute or regulation, persons registered by
the board shall advise their clients of the client's right to report such
misconduct to the Department of Health Professions in accordance with §
54.1-2400.4 of the Code of Virginia.
18VAC115-80-100. Grounds for revocation, suspension,
restriction, or denial of registration.
In accordance with subdivision 7 of § 54.1-2400 of the
Code of Virginia, the board may revoke, suspend, restrict, or decline to issue
or renew a registration based upon the following conduct:
1. Conviction of a felony, or of a misdemeanor involving
moral turpitude, or violation of or aid to another in violating any provision
of Chapter 35 (§ 54.1-3500 et seq.) of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia, any
other statute applicable to the practice of qualified mental health
professionals, or any provision of this chapter;
2. Procuring, attempting to procure, or maintaining a
registration by fraud or misrepresentation;
3. Conducting one's practice in such a manner so as to make
it a danger to the health and welfare of one's clients or to the public, or if
one is unable to practice with reasonable skill and safety to clients by reason
of illness or abusive use of alcohol, drugs, narcotics, chemicals, or any other
type of material or as a result of any mental or physical condition;
4. Violating or abetting another person in the violation of
any provision of any statute applicable to the practice of qualified mental
health professionals or any regulation in this chapter;
5. Performance of functions outside the board-registered
area of competency;
6. Performance of an act likely to deceive, defraud, or
harm the public;
7. Intentional or negligent conduct that causes or is
likely to cause injury to a client;
8. Action taken against a health or mental health license,
certification, registration, or application in Virginia or other jurisdiction;
9. Failure to cooperate with an employee of the Department
of Health Professions in the conduct of an investigation; or
10. Failure to report evidence of child abuse or neglect as
required in § 63.2-1509 of the Code of Virginia or elder abuse or neglect as
required in § 63.2-1606 of the Code of Virginia.
18VAC115-80-110. Late renewal and reinstatement.
A. A person whose registration has expired may renew it
within one year after its expiration date by paying the late renewal fee and
the registration fee as prescribed in 18VAC115-80-20 for the year in which the
registration was not renewed and by providing documentation of completion of continuing
education as prescribed in 18VAC115-80-80.
B. A person who fails to renew registration after one year
or more shall:
1. Apply for reinstatement;
2. Pay the reinstatement fee for a lapsed registration; and
3. Submit evidence of completion of 20 hours of continuing
education consistent with requirements of 18VAC115-80-80.
C. A person whose registration has been suspended or who
has been denied reinstatement by board order, having met the terms of the
order, may submit a new application and fee for reinstatement of registration
as prescribed in 18VAC115-80-20. Any person whose registration has been revoked
by the board may, three years subsequent to such board action, submit a new
application and fee for reinstatement of registration as prescribed in 18VAC115-80-20.
The board in its discretion may, after an administrative proceeding, grant the
reinstatement sought in this subsection.
NOTICE: The following
forms used in administering the regulation are not being published. The forms
are available in electronic online form only at the listed website. Questions
regarding agency forms should be directed to the agency contact.
FORMS (18VAC115-80)
The following forms are available online only at https://www.license.dhp.virginia.gov/apply/:
Qualified Mental Health Profession-Adult, Application and
Instructions
Qualified Mental Health Profession-Child, Application and
Instructions
[ Qualified Mental Health Profession-Adult,
Grandfathering Application and Instructions
Qualified Mental Health Profession-Child, Grandfathering
Application and Instructions ]
Supervised Trainee, Application and Instructions
[ Verification
of Supervised Experience for a Qualified Mental Health Profession-Adult (eff.
10/2018)
Verification
of supervised experience for a Qualified Mental Health Profession-Child (eff.
10/2018)
Verification
of Internship/Practicum for a Qualified Mental Health Profession (eff. 7/2018) ]
VA.R. Doc. No. R18-5242; Filed September 18, 2019, 11:13 a.m.
TITLE 18. PROFESSIONAL AND OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING
BOARD OF SOCIAL WORK
Final Regulation
Title of Regulation: 18VAC140-20. Regulations
Governing the Practice of Social Work (amending 18VAC140-20-105).
Statutory Authority: §§ 54.1-2400 and 54.1-3708 of the
Code of Virginia.
Effective Date: November 13, 2019.
Agency Contact: Jaime Hoyle, Executive Director, Board
of Social Work, 9960 Mayland Drive, Suite 300, Richmond, VA 23233-1463,
telephone (804) 367-4406, FAX (804) 527-4435, or email jaime.hoyle@dhp.virginia.gov.
Summary:
The amendments increase the continuing education hours
required for license renewal pertaining to ethics or the standards of practice
to a minimum of six hours every two years for licensed clinical social workers
and a minimum of three hours every two years for licensed social workers. The
only change to the proposed regulation is the update of required forms.
Summary of Public Comments and Agency's Response: No
public comments were received by the promulgating agency.
18VAC140-20-105. Continued competency requirements for renewal
of an active license.
A. Licensed clinical social workers shall be required to have
completed a minimum of 30 contact hours of continuing education. LBSWs and
LMSWs shall be required to have completed a minimum of 15 contact hours of
continuing education prior to licensure renewal in even years. Courses or
activities shall be directly related to the practice of social work or another
behavioral health field. A minimum of two six of those hours for
licensed clinical social workers and a minimum of three of those hours for
licensed social workers must pertain to ethics or the standards of practice
for the behavioral health professions or to laws governing the practice of
social work in Virginia. Up to two continuing education hours required for
renewal may be satisfied through delivery of social work services, without
compensation, to low-income individuals receiving health services through a
local health department or a free clinic organized in whole or primarily for
the delivery of those services, as verified by the department or
clinic. Three hours of volunteer service is required for one hour of
continuing education credit.
1. The board may grant an extension for good cause of up to
one year for the completion of continuing education requirements upon written
request from the licensee prior to the renewal date. Such extension shall not
relieve the licensee of the continuing education requirement.
2. The board may grant an exemption for all or part of the
continuing education requirements due to circumstances beyond the control of
the licensee such as temporary disability, mandatory military service, or
officially declared disasters upon written request from the licensee prior to the
renewal date.
B. Hours may be obtained from a combination of board-approved
activities in the following two categories:
1. Category I. Formally Organized Learning Activities. A
minimum of 20 hours for licensed clinical social workers or 10 hours for licensed
social workers shall be documented in this category, which shall include one or
more of the following:
a. Regionally accredited university or college academic
courses in a behavioral health discipline. A maximum of 15 hours will be
accepted for each academic course.
b. Continuing education programs offered by universities or
colleges accredited by the Council on Social Work Education.
c. Workshops, seminars, conferences, or courses in the
behavioral health field offered by federal, state or local social service
agencies, public school systems, or licensed health facilities and
licensed hospitals.
d. Workshops, seminars, conferences, or courses in the
behavioral health field offered by an individual or organization that has been
certified or approved by one of the following:
(1) The Child Welfare League of America and its state and
local affiliates.
(2) The National Association of Social Workers and its state
and local affiliates.
(3) The National Association of Black Social Workers and its
state and local affiliates.
(4) The Family Service Association of America and its state
and local affiliates.
(5) The Clinical Social Work Association and its state and
local affiliates.
(6) The Association of Social Work Boards.
(7) Any state social work board.
2. Category II. Individual Professional Activities. A maximum
of 10 of the required 30 hours for licensed clinical social workers or a maximum
of five of the required 15 hours for licensed social workers may be earned in
this category, which shall include one or more of the following:
a. Participation in an Association of Social Work Boards item
writing workshop. (Activity will count for a maximum of two hours.)
b. Publication of a professional social work-related book or
initial preparation or presentation of a social work-related course. (Activity
will count for a maximum of 10 hours.)
c. Publication of a professional social work-related article
or chapter of a book, or initial preparation or presentation of a social
work-related in-service training, seminar, or workshop. (Activity will count
for a maximum of five hours.)
d. Provision of a continuing education program sponsored or
approved by an organization listed under Category I. (Activity will count for a
maximum of two hours and will only be accepted one time for any specific
program.)
e. Field instruction of graduate students in a Council on
Social Work Education-accredited school. (Activity will count for a maximum of
two hours.)
f. Serving as an officer or committee member of one of the
national professional social work associations listed under subdivision B 1 d
of this section or as a member of a state social work licensing board.
(Activity will count for a maximum of two hours.)
g. Attendance at formal staffings at federal, state, or local
social service agencies, public school systems, or licensed health facilities
and licensed hospitals. (Activity will count for a maximum of five hours.)
h. Individual or group study including listening to audio
tapes, viewing video tapes, or reading, professional books or
articles. (Activity will count for a maximum of five hours.)
NOTICE: Forms used in
administering the regulation have been filed by the agency. The forms are not
being published; however, online users of this issue of the Virginia Register
of Regulations may click on the name of a form with a hyperlink to access it.
The forms are also available from the agency contact or may be viewed at the
Office of the Registrar of Regulations, 900 East Main Street, 11th Floor,
Richmond, Virginia 23219.
FORMS (18VAC140-20)
[ Instructions and Application for Registration of
Supervision Post-Graduate Degree Supervised Experience for LCSW (rev. 6/11).
Social Worker Licensure Application (rev. 8/07).
Clinical Social Worker Licensure Application (rev. 8/08).
Verification of Clinical Supervision (rev. 1/11).
Verification of Supervised Field Placement/Practicum (rev.
6/11).
Out of State Licensure Verification (rev. 8/07).
Licensure Verification of Out-of-State Supervisor (rev.
8/07).
Form for Reporting Social Work Attendance at Formal
Staffing (rev. 8/07).
Form for Reporting Social Work Independent Study (rev.
8/07).
General Information Electronic application instructions
for Licensure by Examination as a Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW),
with Application Instructions (rev. 8/07).
General Information Electronic application instructions
for Licensure by Endorsement as a Licensed Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW),
with Application Instructions (rev. 8/07).
General Information Electronic application instructions
for Licensure by Examination as a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) and
Application Instructions (rev. 4/11).
General Information Electronic application instructions
for Licensure by Endorsement as a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) and
Application Instructions (rev. 4/11).
Instructions and Application for Registration of
Supervision for LSW (rev. 9/09).
Application for Registration of Supervision -
Post-Bachelor's Degree Supervised Experience for LSW (rev. 9/09).
Clinical Social Worker Reinstatement Application for LCSW,
LMSW, LBSW (rev. 4/08).
Social Work Reinstatement Application (rev. 4/08).
Clinical Social Worker Licensure Application -
Reinstatement Following Disciplinary Action for LCSW, LMSW, LBSW (rev. 4/08).
Continuing Education Summary Form (rev. 8/07).
Verification
of Clinical Supervision (rev. 8/2016)
Request
for Termination of Supervision (rev. 11/2015)
Application for Initial and Add or Change Registration of
Supervision toward LCSW licensure, online form available at https://www.dhp.virginia.gov/social/social_forms.htm
Application for Licensure by Examination and Endorsement
as a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, online form available at https://www.dhp.virginia.gov/social/social_forms.htm
Electronic
Application Instructions for Licensure by Examination as a Licensed
Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW) (rev. 8/2019)
Electronic
Application Instructions for Licensure by Endorsement as a Licensed
Baccalaureate Social Worker (LBSW) (rev. 8/2019)
Electronic
Application Instructions for Licensure by Examination as a Licensed Master's
Social Worker (LMSW) (rev. 8/2019)
Electronic
application instructions for Licensure by Endorsement as a Licensed Master's
Social Worker (LMSW) (rev. 8/2019)
Electronic
Application Instructions for Licensure by Examination as a Licensed Clinical
Social Worker (LCSW) (rev. 8/2019)
Electronic
application instructions for Licensure by Endorsement as a Licensed Clinical
Social Worker (LCSW) (rev. 8/2019)
Instructions
and Application for Registration of Supervision for LSW (rev. 9/2015)
Reinstatement
Application for LCSW, LMSW, LBSW (rev. 12/2013)
Reinstatement
Following Disciplinary Action for LCSW, LMSW, LBSW (rev. 12/2013)
Social
Work Name-Address Change Form (rev. 5/2018)
Request
for Inactive Status of Current Social Work License (rev. 7/2017)
Request
for Change of Status - Inactive to Active (rev. 7/2017)
Request
for Verification of Virginia License (rev. 7/2017)
Request
for Late Renewal (rev. 6/2017) ]
VA.R. Doc. No. R18-5436; Filed September 24, 2019, 9:36 a.m.