Amended in Assembly June 22, 2016

Amended in Senate May 31, 2016

Amended in Senate April 21, 2016

Amended in Senate April 12, 2016

Amended in Senate April 7, 2016

Senate BillNo. 1039


Introduced by Senator Hill

February 12, 2016


An act to amend Sections 115.6, 144, 146, 651, 656, 683, 800, 805, 805.1, 805.5, 805.6, 810,begin insert 1944,end insert 2052.5, 2423, 2733, 2746.51, 2786.5, 2811, 2811.5, 2815, 2815.5, 2816, 2830.7, 2836.3, 2838.2, 4128.2, 4170, 4175, 4830, 4999, 4999.2,begin delete 8031,end delete 8516, and 8518 of, to amend, repeal, and add Sections 4400, 7137, and 7153.3 of, to add Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 1460) to Division 2 of, to repeal Sections 4999.1, 4999.3, 4999.4, and 4999.6 of, to repeal Article 22 (commencing with Section 2460) of Chapter 5 of Division 2 of, and to repeal and addbegin delete Sectionend deletebegin insert Sections 2546.9, 2565, 2566, 2566.1, andend insert 4999.5 of, the Business and Professions Code, to amend Section 13401 of the Corporations Code, to amend Section 1348.8 of the Health and Safety Code, and to amend Section 10279 of the Insurance Code, relating to professions and vocations, and making an appropriation therefor.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SB 1039, as amended, Hill. Professions and vocations.

(1) Existing law requires the Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development to establish the Health Professions Education Foundation to, among other things, solicit and receive funds for the purpose of providing scholarships, as specified.

The bill would state the intent of the Legislature to enact future legislation that would establish a Dental Corps Scholarship Program, as specified, to increase the supply of dentists serving in medically underserved areas.

begin insert

(2) Existing law, the Dental Practice Act, requires the Dental Hygiene Committee of California to establish by resolution the amount of the fees that relate to the licensing of a registered dental hygienist, a registered dental hygienist in alternative practice, and a registered dental hygienist in extended functions. Existing law prohibits the biennial renewal fee from exceeding $160. Existing law requires these fees to be deposited in the State Dental Hygiene Fund and makes these moneys subject to appropriation by the Legislature.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would instead prohibit the biennial renewal fee from exceeding $500.

end insert
begin delete

(2)

end delete

begin insert(3)end insert The Medical Practice Act creates, within the jurisdiction of the Medical Board of California, the California Board of Podiatric Medicine.begin delete Under the act, certificates to practice podiatric medicine and registrations of spectacle lens dispensers and contact lens dispensers, among others, expire on a certain date during the second year of a 2-year term if not renewed.end delete

This bill wouldbegin delete instead createend deletebegin insert removeend insert the California Board of Podiatric Medicinebegin delete inend deletebegin insert from the jurisdiction of the Medical Board of California and would instead establish it withinend insert the Department of Consumerbegin delete Affairs, and would make conforming and related changes. The bill would discontinue the above-described requirement for the expiration of the registrations of spectacle lens dispensers and contact lens dispensers.end deletebegin insert Affairs. The bill would revise and recast the podiatry provisions in this regard.end insert

begin insert

Existing law establishes various fees applicable to certificates to practice podiatric medicine, including, but not limited to, an application fee, a duplicate wall certificate fee, a duplicate renewal receipt, a letter of good standing fee or a letter for a loan deferment fee, a fee for the issuance of a resident’s license, a filing fee to appeal the failure of an oral examination, and a fee for continuing education approval. Existing law also establishes a fee for ankle certification for persons licensed prior to January 1, 1984. Existing law requires these fees to be deposited in the Board of Podiatric Medicine Fund and makes these fees subject to appropriation by the Legislature.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would delete that ankle certification fee and would increase the amounts of those other fees.

end insert
begin insert

(4) Existing law makes the State Board of Optometry responsible for the regulation of nonresident contact lens sellers, registered dispensing opticians, spectacle lens dispensers, and contact lens dispensers. Existing law establishes regulatory fees in this regard, including, but not limited to, an initial registration fee, a renewal fee, and a delinquency fee. Existing law requires these fees to be deposited in the Dispensing Opticians Fund and makes these fees available, subject to appropriation, to the State Board of Optometry.

end insert
begin insert

This bill would establish a specified minimum and maximum application fee amount for nonresident contact lens sellers, registered dispensing opticians, and spectacle lens dispensers. The bill would also establish increased minimum and maximum amounts for those already established fees. The bill would authorize the State Board of Optometry to periodically revise and fix these fees, as specified.

end insert
begin delete

(3)

end delete

begin insert(5)end insert The Nursing Practice Act provides for the licensure and regulation of nurse practitioners by the Board of Registered Nursing, which is within the Department of Consumer Affairs, and requires the board to adopt regulations establishing standards for continuing education for licensees, as specified. That act requires providers of continuing education programs approved by the board to make records of continuing education courses given to registered nurses available for board inspection. That act also prescribes various fees to be paid by licensees and applicants for licensure, and requires these fees to be credited to the Board of Registered Nursing Fund, which is a continuously appropriated fund as it pertains to fees collected by the board.

This bill would require that the content of a continuing education course be based on generally accepted scientific principles. The bill would also require the board to audit continuing education providers, at least once every 5 years, to ensure adherence to regulatory requirements, and to withhold or rescind approval from any provider that is in violation of regulatory requirements. The bill would raise specified fees, and would provide for additional fees, to be paid by licensees and applicants for licensure pursuant to that act. By increasing fees deposited into a continuously appropriated fund, this bill would make an appropriation.

begin delete

(4)

end delete

begin insert(6)end insert The Pharmacy Law provides for the licensure and regulation of pharmacists by the California State Board of Pharmacy within the Department of Consumer Affairs. That law prescribes various fees to be paid by licensees and applicants for licensure, and requires all fees collected on behalf of the board to be credited to the Pharmacy Board Contingent Fund, which is a continuously appropriated fund as it pertains to fees collected by the board.

This bill would, on and after July 1, 2017, modify specified fees to be paid by licensees and applicants for licensure pursuant to that act. By increasing fees deposited into a continuously appropriated fund, this bill would make an appropriation.

begin delete

(5)

end delete

begin insert(7)end insert The Veterinary Medicine Practice Act provides for the licensure and regulation of veterinarians by the Veterinary Medical Board, which is within the Department of Consumer Affairs. Under the act, it is unlawful and a misdemeanor for any person to practice veterinary medicine in this state unless he or she holds a valid, unexpired, and unrevoked license issued by the board, except under specified circumstances, including when regularly licensed veterinarians in actual consultation from other states or when regularly licensed veterinarians are actually called from other states to attend cases in this state and do not open an office or appoint a place to do business within the state.

This bill would replace those exceptions with an exception for veterinarians holding a current, valid license in good standing in another state or country who provide assistance to a California licensed veterinarian and attend on a specific case, subject to specified conditions.

begin delete

(6)

end delete

begin insert(8)end insert Existing law requires businesses that employ, or contract or subcontract with, the full-time equivalent of 5 or more persons functioning as health care professionals, as defined, whose primary function is to provide telephone medical advice, that provide telephone medical advice services to a patient at a California address to be registered with the Telephone Medical Advice Services Bureau and further requires telephone medical advice services to comply with the requirements established by the Department of Consumer Affairs, as specified.

This bill would discontinue the requirement that those businesses be registered with the bureau, would instead make the respective healing arts licensing boards responsible for enforcing those requirements and any other laws and regulations affecting those health care professionals licensed in California, and would make conforming and related changes.

begin delete

(7)

end delete

begin insert(9)end insert The Contractors’ State License Law provides for the licensure and regulation of contractors by the Contractors’ State License Board within the Department of Consumer Affairs. That law also prescribes various fees to be paid by licensees and applicants for licensure, requires the board to set the fees by regulation, and requires fees and civil penalties received under that law to be deposited in the Contractors’ License Fund, which is a continuously appropriated fund as it pertains to fees collected by the board.

This bill, on and after July 1, 2017, would raise specified fees, would instead authorize the board to set the fees by regulation, and would require the board to establish criteria for the approval of expedited processing of applications, as specified. By increasing fees deposited into a continuously appropriated fund, this bill would make an appropriation.

begin delete

(8) Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of shorthand reporters by the Court Reporters Board of California within the Department of Consumer Affairs. That law authorizes the board, by resolution, to establish a fee for the renewal of a certificate issued by the board, and prohibits the fee from exceeding $125, as specified. Under existing law, all fees and revenues received by the board are deposited into the Court Reporters’ Fund, which is a continuously appropriated fund as it pertains to fees collected by the board.

end delete
begin delete

This bill would raise that fee limit to $250. By authorizing an increase in a fee deposited into a continuously appropriated fund, this bill would make an appropriation.

end delete
begin delete

(9)

end delete

begin insert(10)end insert Existing law provides for the licensure and regulation of structural pest control operators and registered companies by the Structural Pest Control Board, which is within the Department of Consumer Affairs, and requires a licensee to pay a specified license fee. Existing law makes any violation of those provisions punishable as a misdemeanor. Existing law places certain requirements on a registered company or licensee with regards to wood destroying pests or organisms, including that a registered company or licensee is prohibited from commencing work on a contract until an inspection has been made by a licensed Branch 3 field representative or operator, that the address of each property inspected or upon which work was completed is required to be reported to the board, as specified, and that a written inspection report be prepared and delivered to the person requesting the inspection or his or her agent. Existing law requires the original inspection report to be submitted to the board upon demand. Existing law requires that written report to contain certain information, including a foundation diagram or sketch of the structure or portions of the structure inspected, and requires the report, and any contract entered into, to expressly state if a guarantee for the work is made, and if so, the terms and time period of the guarantee. Existing law establishes the Structural Pest Control Fund, which is a continuously appropriated fund as it pertains to fees collected by the board.

This bill would require the operator who is conducting the inspection prior to the commencement of work to be employed by a registered company, except as specified. The bill would not require the address of an inspection report prepared for use by an attorney for litigation to be reported to the board or assessed a filing fee. The bill would require instead that the written inspection report be prepared and delivered to the person requesting it, the property owner, or the property owner’s designated agent, as specified. The bill would allow an inspection report to be a complete, limited, supplemental, or reinspection report, as defined. The bill would require all inspection reports to be submitted to the board and maintained with field notes, activity forms, and notices of completion until one year after the guarantee expires if the guarantee extends beyond 3 years. The bill would require the inspection report to clearly list the infested or infected wood members or parts of the structure identified in the required diagram or sketch. By placing new requirements on a registered company or licensee, this bill would expand an existing crime and would, therefore, impose a state-mandated local program.

Existing law requires a registered company to prepare a notice of work completed to give to the owner of the property when the work is completed.

This bill would make this provision only applicable to work relating to wood destroying pests and organisms.

begin delete

(10)

end delete

begin insert(11)end insert The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.

This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.

Vote: majority. Appropriation: yes. Fiscal committee: yes. State-mandated local program: yes.

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

P7    1

SECTION 1.  

It is the intent of the Legislature to enact future
2legislation that would establish a Dental Corps Scholarship
3Program within the Health Professions Education Foundation to
4increase the supply of dentists serving in medically underserved
5areas.

6

SEC. 2.  

Section 115.6 of the Business and Professions Code
7 is amended to read:

8

115.6.  

(a) A board within the department shall, after
9appropriate investigation, issue the following eligible temporary
10licenses to an applicant if he or she meets the requirements set
11forth in subdivision (c):

12(1) Registered nurse license by the Board of Registered Nursing.

13(2) Vocational nurse license issued by the Board of Vocational
14Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians of the State of California.

15(3) Psychiatric technician license issued by the Board of
16Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians of the State of
17California.

18(4) Speech-language pathologist license issued by the
19Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology and Hearing Aid
20Dispensers Board.

21(5) Audiologist license issued by the Speech-Language
22Pathology and Audiology and Hearing Aid Dispensers Board.

23(6) Veterinarian license issued by the Veterinary Medical Board.

24(7) All licenses issued by the Board for Professional Engineers,
25Land Surveyors, and Geologists.

26(8) All licenses issued by the Medical Board of California.

27(9) All licenses issued by the California Board of Podiatric
28Medicine.

29(b) The board may conduct an investigation of an applicant for
30purposes of denying or revoking a temporary license issued
31pursuant to this section. This investigation may include a criminal
32background check.

33(c) An applicant seeking a temporary license pursuant to this
34section shall meet the following requirements:

P8    1(1) The applicant shall supply evidence satisfactory to the board
2that the applicant is married to, or in a domestic partnership or
3other legal union with, an active duty member of the Armed Forces
4of the United States who is assigned to a duty station in this state
5under official active duty military orders.

6(2) The applicant shall hold a current, active, and unrestricted
7license that confers upon him or her the authority to practice, in
8another state, district, or territory of the United States, the
9profession or vocation for which he or she seeks a temporary
10license from the board.

11(3) The applicant shall submit an application to the board that
12shall include a signed affidavit attesting to the fact that he or she
13meets all of the requirements for the temporary license and that
14the information submitted in the application is accurate, to the best
15of his or her knowledge. The application shall also include written
16verification from the applicant’s original licensing jurisdiction
17stating that the applicant’s license is in good standing in that
18jurisdiction.

19(4) The applicant shall not have committed an act in any
20jurisdiction that would have constituted grounds for denial,
21 suspension, or revocation of the license under this code at the time
22the act was committed. A violation of this paragraph may be
23grounds for the denial or revocation of a temporary license issued
24by the board.

25(5) The applicant shall not have been disciplined by a licensing
26entity in another jurisdiction and shall not be the subject of an
27unresolved complaint, review procedure, or disciplinary proceeding
28conducted by a licensing entity in another jurisdiction.

29(6) The applicant shall, upon request by a board, furnish a full
30set of fingerprints for purposes of conducting a criminal
31background check.

32(d) A board may adopt regulations necessary to administer this
33section.

34(e) A temporary license issued pursuant to this section may be
35immediately terminated upon a finding that the temporary
36licenseholder failed to meet any of the requirements described in
37subdivision (c) or provided substantively inaccurate information
38that would affect his or her eligibility for temporary licensure.
39Upon termination of the temporary license, the board shall issue
40a notice of termination that shall require the temporary
P9    1licenseholder to immediately cease the practice of the licensed
2profession upon receipt.

3(f) An applicant seeking a temporary license as a civil engineer,
4geotechnical engineer, structural engineer, land surveyor,
5professional geologist, professional geophysicist, certified
6engineering geologist, or certified hydrogeologist pursuant to this
7section shall successfully pass the appropriate California-specific
8examination or examinations required for licensure in those
9respective professions by the Board for Professional Engineers,
10Land Surveyors, and Geologists.

11(g) A temporary license issued pursuant to this section shall
12expire 12 months after issuance, upon issuance of an expedited
13license pursuant to Section 115.5, or upon denial of the application
14for expedited licensure by the board, whichever occurs first.

15

SEC. 3.  

Section 144 of the Business and Professions Code is
16amended to read:

17

144.  

(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an agency
18designated in subdivision (b) shall require an applicant to furnish
19to the agency a full set of fingerprints for purposes of conducting
20criminal history record checks. Any agency designated in
21subdivision (b) may obtain and receive, at its discretion, criminal
22history information from the Department of Justice and the United
23States Federal Bureau of Investigation.

24(b) Subdivision (a) applies to the following:

25(1) California Board of Accountancy.

26(2) State Athletic Commission.

27(3) Board of Behavioral Sciences.

28(4) Court Reporters Board of California.

29(5) State Board of Guide Dogs for the Blind.

30(6) California State Board of Pharmacy.

31(7) Board of Registered Nursing.

32(8) Veterinary Medical Board.

33(9) Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians.

34(10) Respiratory Care Board of California.

35(11) Physical Therapy Board of California.

36(12) Physician Assistant Committee of the Medical Board of
37California.

38(13) Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology and Hearing
39Aid Dispenser Board.

40(14) Medical Board of California.

P10   1(15) State Board of Optometry.

2(16) Acupuncture Board.

3(17) Cemetery and Funeral Bureau.

4(18) Bureau of Security and Investigative Services.

5(19) Division of Investigation.

6(20) Board of Psychology.

7(21) California Board of Occupational Therapy.

8(22) Structural Pest Control Board.

9(23) Contractors’ State License Board.

10(24) Naturopathic Medicine Committee.

11(25) Professional Fiduciaries Bureau.

12(26) Board for Professional Engineers, Land Surveyors, and
13Geologists.

14(27) Bureau of Medical Marijuana Regulation.

15(28) California Board of Podiatric Medicine.

16(c) For purposes of paragraph (26) of subdivision (b), the term
17“applicant” shall be limited to an initial applicant who has never
18been registered or licensed by the board or to an applicant for a
19new licensure or registration category.

20

SEC. 4.  

Section 146 of the Business and Professions Code is
21amended to read:

22

146.  

(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a
23violation of any code section listed in subdivision (c) is an
24infraction subject to the procedures described in Sections 19.6 and
2519.7 of the Penal Code when either of the following applies:

26(1) A complaint or a written notice to appear in court pursuant
27to Chapter 5c (commencing with Section 853.5) of Title 3 of Part
282 of the Penal Code is filed in court charging the offense as an
29infraction unless the defendant, at the time he or she is arraigned,
30after being advised of his or her rights, elects to have the case
31proceed as a misdemeanor.

32(2) The court, with the consent of the defendant and the
33prosecution, determines that the offense is an infraction in which
34event the case shall proceed as if the defendant has been arraigned
35on an infraction complaint.

36(b) Subdivision (a) does not apply to a violation of the code
37sections listed in subdivision (c) if the defendant has had his or
38her license, registration, or certificate previously revoked or
39suspended.

P11   1(c) The following sections require registration, licensure,
2certification, or other authorization in order to engage in certain
3businesses or professions regulated by this code:

4(1) Section 1474.

5(2) Sections 2052 and 2054.

6(3) Section 2630.

7(4) Section 2903.

8(5) Section 3575.

9(6) Section 3660.

10(7) Sections 3760 and 3761.

11(8) Section 4080.

12(9) Section 4825.

13(10) Section 4935.

14(11) Section 4980.

15(12) Section 4989.50.

16(13) Section 4996.

17(14) Section 4999.30.

18(15) Section 5536.

19(16) Section 6704.

20(17) Section 6980.10.

21(18) Section 7317.

22(19) Section 7502 or 7592.

23(20) Section 7520.

24(21) Section 7617 or 7641.

25(22) Subdivision (a) of Section 7872.

26(23) Section 8016.

27(24) Section 8505.

28(25) Section 8725.

29(26) Section 9681.

30(27) Section 9840.

31(28) Subdivision (c) of Section 9891.24.

32(29) Section 19049.

33(d) Notwithstanding any other law, a violation of any of the
34sections listed in subdivision (c), which is an infraction, is
35punishable by a fine of not less than two hundred fifty dollars
36($250) and not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000). No portion
37of the minimum fine may be suspended by the court unless as a
38condition of that suspension the defendant is required to submit
39proof of a current valid license, registration, or certificate for the
40profession or vocation that was the basis for his or her conviction.

P12   1

SEC. 5.  

Section 651 of the Business and Professions Code is
2amended to read:

3

651.  

(a) It is unlawful for any person licensed under this
4division or under any initiative act referred to in this division to
5disseminate or cause to be disseminated any form of public
6communication containing a false, fraudulent, misleading, or
7deceptive statement, claim, or image for the purpose of or likely
8to induce, directly or indirectly, the rendering of professional
9services or furnishing of products in connection with the
10professional practice or business for which he or she is licensed.
11A “public communication” as used in this section includes, but is
12not limited to, communication by means of mail, television, radio,
13motion picture, newspaper, book, list or directory of healing arts
14practitioners, Internet, or other electronic communication.

15(b) A false, fraudulent, misleading, or deceptive statement,
16claim, or image includes a statement or claim that does any of the
17following:

18(1) Contains a misrepresentation of fact.

19(2) Is likely to mislead or deceive because of a failure to disclose
20material facts.

21(3) (A) Is intended or is likely to create false or unjustified
22expectations of favorable results, including the use of any
23photograph or other image that does not accurately depict the
24results of the procedure being advertised or that has been altered
25in any manner from the image of the actual subject depicted in the
26photograph or image.

27(B) Use of any photograph or other image of a model without
28clearly stating in a prominent location in easily readable type the
29fact that the photograph or image is of a model is a violation of
30subdivision (a). For purposes of this paragraph, a model is anyone
31other than an actual patient, who has undergone the procedure
32being advertised, of the licensee who is advertising for his or her
33services.

34(C) Use of any photograph or other image of an actual patient
35that depicts or purports to depict the results of any procedure, or
36presents “before” and “after” views of a patient, without specifying
37in a prominent location in easily readable type size what procedures
38were performed on that patient is a violation of subdivision (a).
39Any “before” and “after” views (i) shall be comparable in
40 presentation so that the results are not distorted by favorable poses,
P13   1lighting, or other features of presentation, and (ii) shall contain a
2statement that the same “before” and “after” results may not occur
3for all patients.

4(4) Relates to fees, other than a standard consultation fee or a
5range of fees for specific types of services, without fully and
6specifically disclosing all variables and other material factors.

7(5) Contains other representations or implications that in
8reasonable probability will cause an ordinarily prudent person to
9misunderstand or be deceived.

10(6) Makes a claim either of professional superiority or of
11performing services in a superior manner, unless that claim is
12relevant to the service being performed and can be substantiated
13with objective scientific evidence.

14(7) Makes a scientific claim that cannot be substantiated by
15reliable, peer reviewed, published scientific studies.

16(8) Includes any statement, endorsement, or testimonial that is
17likely to mislead or deceive because of a failure to disclose material
18facts.

19(c) Any price advertisement shall be exact, without the use of
20phrases, including, but not limited to, “as low as,” “and up,”
21“lowest prices,” or words or phrases of similar import. Any
22advertisement that refers to services, or costs for services, and that
23uses words of comparison shall be based on verifiable data
24substantiating the comparison. Any person so advertising shall be
25prepared to provide information sufficient to establish the accuracy
26of that comparison. Price advertising shall not be fraudulent,
27deceitful, or misleading, including statements or advertisements
28of bait, discount, premiums, gifts, or any statements of a similar
29nature. In connection with price advertising, the price for each
30product or service shall be clearly identifiable. The price advertised
31for products shall include charges for any related professional
32services, including dispensing and fitting services, unless the
33advertisement specifically and clearly indicates otherwise.

34(d) Any person so licensed shall not compensate or give anything
35of value to a representative of the press, radio, television, or other
36communication medium in anticipation of, or in return for,
37professional publicity unless the fact of compensation is made
38known in that publicity.

39(e) Any person so licensed may not use any professional card,
40professional announcement card, office sign, letterhead, telephone
P14   1directory listing, medical list, medical directory listing, or a similar
2professional notice or device if it includes a statement or claim
3that is false, fraudulent, misleading, or deceptive within the
4meaning of subdivision (b).

5(f) Any person so licensed who violates this section is guilty of
6a misdemeanor. A bona fide mistake of fact shall be a defense to
7this subdivision, but only to this subdivision.

8(g) Any violation of this section by a person so licensed shall
9constitute good cause for revocation or suspension of his or her
10license or other disciplinary action.

11(h) Advertising by any person so licensed may include the
12following:

13(1) A statement of the name of the practitioner.

14(2) A statement of addresses and telephone numbers of the
15offices maintained by the practitioner.

16(3) A statement of office hours regularly maintained by the
17practitioner.

18(4) A statement of languages, other than English, fluently spoken
19by the practitioner or a person in the practitioner’s office.

20(5) (A) A statement that the practitioner is certified by a private
21or public board or agency or a statement that the practitioner limits
22his or her practice to specific fields.

23(B) A statement of certification by a practitioner licensed under
24Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 3000) shall only include a
25statement that he or she is certified or eligible for certification by
26a private or public board or parent association recognized by that
27practitioner’s licensing board.

28(C) A physician and surgeon licensed under Chapter 5
29(commencing with Section 2000) by the Medical Board of
30California may include a statement that he or she limits his or her
31practice to specific fields, but shall not include a statement that he
32or she is certified or eligible for certification by a private or public
33board or parent association, including, but not limited to, a
34multidisciplinary board or association, unless that board or
35association is (i) an American Board of Medical Specialties
36member board, (ii) a board or association with equivalent
37requirements approved by that physician and surgeon’s licensing
38board, or (iii) a board or association with an Accreditation Council
39for Graduate Medical Education approved postgraduate training
40program that provides complete training in that specialty or
P15   1subspecialty. A physician and surgeon licensed under Chapter 5
2(commencing with Section 2000) by the Medical Board of
3California who is certified by an organization other than a board
4or association referred to in clause (i), (ii), or (iii) shall not use the
5term “board certified” in reference to that certification, unless the
6physician and surgeon is also licensed under Chapter 4
7(commencing with Section 1600) and the use of the term “board
8certified” in reference to that certification is in accordance with
9subparagraph (A). A physician and surgeon licensed under Chapter
105 (commencing with Section 2000) by the Medical Board of
11California who is certified by a board or association referred to in
12clause (i), (ii), or (iii) shall not use the term “board certified” unless
13the full name of the certifying board is also used and given
14comparable prominence with the term “board certified” in the
15statement.

16For purposes of this subparagraph, a “multidisciplinary board
17or association” means an educational certifying body that has a
18psychometrically valid testing process, as determined by the
19Medical Board of California, for certifying medical doctors and
20other health care professionals that is based on the applicant’s
21education, training, and experience.

22For purposes of the term “board certified,” as used in this
23subparagraph, the terms “board” and “association” mean an
24organization that is an American Board of Medical Specialties
25 member board, an organization with equivalent requirements
26approved by a physician and surgeon’s licensing board, or an
27organization with an Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical
28Education approved postgraduate training program that provides
29complete training in a specialty or subspecialty.

30The Medical Board of California shall adopt regulations to
31establish and collect a reasonable fee from each board or
32association applying for recognition pursuant to this subparagraph.
33The fee shall not exceed the cost of administering this
34subparagraph. Notwithstanding Section 2 of Chapter 1660 of the
35Statutes of 1990, this subparagraph shall become operative July
361, 1993. However, an administrative agency or accrediting
37organization may take any action contemplated by this
38subparagraph relating to the establishment or approval of specialist
39requirements on and after January 1, 1991.

P16   1(D) A doctor of podiatric medicine licensed under Chapter 3.5
2(commencing with Section 1460) by the California Board of
3Podiatric Medicine may include a statement that he or she is
4certified or eligible or qualified for certification by a private or
5public board or parent association, including, but not limited to, a
6multidisciplinary board or association, if that board or association
7meets one of the following requirements: (i) is approved by the
8Council on Podiatric Medical Education, (ii) is a board or
9association with equivalent requirements approved by the
10California Board of Podiatric Medicine, or (iii) is a board or
11association with the Council on Podiatric Medical Education
12approved postgraduate training programs that provide training in
13podiatric medicine and podiatric surgery. A doctor of podiatric
14medicine licensed under Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section
151460) by the California Board of Podiatric Medicine who is
16certified by a board or association referred to in clause (i), (ii), or
17(iii) shall not use the term “board certified” unless the full name
18of the certifying board is also used and given comparable
19prominence with the term “board certified” in the statement. A
20doctor of podiatric medicine licensed under Chapter 3.5
21(commencing with Section 1460) by the California Board of
22Podiatric Medicine who is certified by an organization other than
23a board or association referred to in clause (i), (ii), or (iii) shall not
24use the term “board certified” in reference to that certification.

25For purposes of this subparagraph, a “multidisciplinary board
26or association” means an educational certifying body that has a
27psychometrically valid testing process, as determined by the
28California Board of Podiatric Medicine, for certifying doctors of
29podiatric medicine that is based on the applicant’s education,
30training, and experience. For purposes of the term “board certified,”
31as used in this subparagraph, the terms “board” and “association”
32mean an organization that is a Council on Podiatric Medical
33Education approved board, an organization with equivalent
34requirements approved by the California Board of Podiatric
35Medicine, or an organization with a Council on Podiatric Medical
36Education approved postgraduate training program that provides
37training in podiatric medicine and podiatric surgery.

38The California Board of Podiatric Medicine shall adopt
39regulations to establish and collect a reasonable fee from each
40board or association applying for recognition pursuant to this
P17   1subparagraph, to be deposited in the State Treasury in the Podiatry
2Fund, pursuant to Section 1499. The fee shall not exceed the cost
3of administering this subparagraph.

4(6) A statement that the practitioner provides services under a
5specified private or public insurance plan or health care plan.

6(7) A statement of names of schools and postgraduate clinical
7training programs from which the practitioner has graduated,
8together with the degrees received.

9(8) A statement of publications authored by the practitioner.

10(9) A statement of teaching positions currently or formerly held
11by the practitioner, together with pertinent dates.

12(10) A statement of his or her affiliations with hospitals or
13clinics.

14(11) A statement of the charges or fees for services or
15commodities offered by the practitioner.

16(12) A statement that the practitioner regularly accepts
17installment payments of fees.

18(13) Otherwise lawful images of a practitioner, his or her
19physical facilities, or of a commodity to be advertised.

20(14) A statement of the manufacturer, designer, style, make,
21trade name, brand name, color, size, or type of commodities
22advertised.

23(15) An advertisement of a registered dispensing optician may
24include statements in addition to those specified in paragraphs (1)
25to (14), inclusive, provided that any statement shall not violate
26subdivision (a), (b), (c), or (e) or any other section of this code.

27(16) A statement, or statements, providing public health
28information encouraging preventative or corrective care.

29(17) Any other item of factual information that is not false,
30fraudulent, misleading, or likely to deceive.

31(i) Each of the healing arts boards and examining committees
32within Division 2 shall adopt appropriate regulations to enforce
33this section in accordance with Chapter 3.5 (commencing with
34Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government
35Code.

36Each of the healing arts boards and committees and examining
37committees within Division 2 shall, by regulation, define those
38efficacious services to be advertised by businesses or professions
39under their jurisdiction for the purpose of determining whether
40advertisements are false or misleading. Until a definition for that
P18   1service has been issued, no advertisement for that service shall be
2disseminated. However, if a definition of a service has not been
3issued by a board or committee within 120 days of receipt of a
4request from a licensee, all those holding the license may advertise
5the service. Those boards and committees shall adopt or modify
6regulations defining what services may be advertised, the manner
7in which defined services may be advertised, and restricting
8advertising that would promote the inappropriate or excessive use
9of health services or commodities. A board or committee shall not,
10by regulation, unreasonably prevent truthful, nondeceptive price
11or otherwise lawful forms of advertising of services or
12commodities, by either outright prohibition or imposition of
13onerous disclosure requirements. However, any member of a board
14or committee acting in good faith in the adoption or enforcement
15of any regulation shall be deemed to be acting as an agent of the
16state.

17(j) The Attorney General shall commence legal proceedings in
18the appropriate forum to enjoin advertisements disseminated or
19about to be disseminated in violation of this section and seek other
20appropriate relief to enforce this section. Notwithstanding any
21other provision of law, the costs of enforcing this section to the
22respective licensing boards or committees may be awarded against
23any licensee found to be in violation of any provision of this
24section. This shall not diminish the power of district attorneys,
25county counsels, or city attorneys pursuant to existing law to seek
26appropriate relief.

27(k) A physician and surgeon licensed pursuant to Chapter 5
28(commencing with Section 2000) by the Medical Board of
29California or a doctor of podiatric medicine licensed pursuant to
30Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 1460) by the California
31Board of Podiatric Medicine who knowingly and intentionally
32violates this section may be cited and assessed an administrative
33fine not to exceed ten thousand dollars ($10,000) per event. Section
34125.9 shall govern the issuance of this citation and fine except that
35the fine limitations prescribed in paragraph (3) of subdivision (b)
36of Section 125.9 shall not apply to a fine under this subdivision.

37

SEC. 6.  

Section 656 of the Business and Professions Code is
38amended to read:

39

656.  

Whenever any person has engaged, or is about to engage,
40in any acts or practices that constitute, or will constitute, a violation
P19   1of this article, the superior court in and for the county wherein the
2acts or practices take place, or are about to take place, may issue
3an injunction, or other appropriate order, restraining the conduct
4on application of the State Board of Optometry, the Medical Board
5of California, the California Board of Podiatric Medicine, the
6Osteopathic Medical Board of California, the Attorney General,
7or the district attorney of the county.

8The proceedings under this section shall be governed by Chapter
93 (commencing with Section 525) of Title 7 of Part 2 of the Code
10of Civil Procedure.

11The remedy provided for in this section shall be in addition to,
12and not a limitation upon, the authority provided by any other
13provision of this code.

14

SEC. 7.  

Section 683 of the Business and Professions Code is
15amended to read:

16

683.  

(a) A board shall report, within 10 working days, to the
17State Department of Health Care Services the name and license
18number of a person whose license has been revoked, suspended,
19surrendered, made inactive by the licensee, or placed in another
20category that prohibits the licensee from practicing his or her
21profession. The purpose of the reporting requirement is to prevent
22reimbursement by the state for Medi-Cal and Denti-Cal services
23provided after the cancellation of a provider’s professional license.

24(b) “Board,” as used in this section, means the Dental Board of
25California, the Medical Board of California, the Board of
26Psychology, the State Board of Optometry, the California State
27Board of Pharmacy, the Osteopathic Medical Board of California,
28the State Board of Chiropractic Examiners, the Board of Behavioral
29Sciences, the California Board of Podiatric Medicine, and the
30California Board of Occupational Therapy.

31

SEC. 8.  

Section 800 of the Business and Professions Code is
32amended to read:

33

800.  

(a) The Medical Board of California, the California Board
34of Podiatric Medicine, the Board of Psychology, the Dental Board
35of California, the Dental Hygiene Committee of California, the
36Osteopathic Medical Board of California, the State Board of
37Chiropractic Examiners, the Board of Registered Nursing, the
38Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians of the
39State of California, the State Board of Optometry, the Veterinary
40Medical Board, the Board of Behavioral Sciences, the Physical
P20   1Therapy Board of California, the California State Board of
2Pharmacy, the Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology and
3Hearing Aid Dispensers Board, the California Board of
4Occupational Therapy, the Acupuncture Board, and the Physician
5 Assistant Board shall each separately create and maintain a central
6file of the names of all persons who hold a license, certificate, or
7similar authority from that board. Each central file shall be created
8and maintained to provide an individual historical record for each
9licensee with respect to the following information:

10(1) Any conviction of a crime in this or any other state that
11constitutes unprofessional conduct pursuant to the reporting
12requirements of Section 803.

13(2) Any judgment or settlement requiring the licensee or his or
14her insurer to pay any amount of damages in excess of three
15thousand dollars ($3,000) for any claim that injury or death was
16proximately caused by the licensee’s negligence, error or omission
17in practice, or by rendering unauthorized professional services,
18pursuant to the reporting requirements of Section 801 or 802.

19(3) Any public complaints for which provision is made pursuant
20to subdivision (b).

21(4) Disciplinary information reported pursuant to Section 805,
22including any additional exculpatory or explanatory statements
23submitted by the licentiate pursuant to subdivision (f) of Section
24805. If a court finds, in a final judgment, that the peer review
25resulting in the 805 report was conducted in bad faith and the
26licensee who is the subject of the report notifies the board of that
27finding, the board shall include that finding in the central file. For
28purposes of this paragraph, “peer review” has the same meaning
29as defined in Section 805.

30(5) Information reported pursuant to Section 805.01, including
31any explanatory or exculpatory information submitted by the
32licensee pursuant to subdivision (b) of that section.

33(b) (1) Each board shall prescribe and promulgate forms on
34which members of the public and other licensees or certificate
35holders may file written complaints to the board alleging any act
36of misconduct in, or connected with, the performance of
37professional services by the licensee.

38(2) If a board, or division thereof, a committee, or a panel has
39failed to act upon a complaint or report within five years, or has
P21   1found that the complaint or report is without merit, the central file
2shall be purged of information relating to the complaint or report.

3(3) Notwithstanding this subdivision, the Board of Psychology,
4the Board of Behavioral Sciences, and the Respiratory Care Board
5of California shall maintain complaints or reports as long as each
6board deems necessary.

7(c) (1) The contents of any central file that are not public
8records under any other provision of law shall be confidential
9except that the licensee involved, or his or her counsel or
10representative, shall have the right to inspect and have copies made
11of his or her complete file except for the provision that may
12disclose the identity of an information source. For the purposes of
13this section, a board may protect an information source by
14providing a copy of the material with only those deletions necessary
15to protect the identity of the source or by providing a
16comprehensive summary of the substance of the material.
17Whichever method is used, the board shall ensure that full
18disclosure is made to the subject of any personal information that
19could reasonably in any way reflect or convey anything detrimental,
20disparaging, or threatening to a licensee’s reputation, rights,
21benefits, privileges, or qualifications, or be used by a board to
22make a determination that would affect a licensee’s rights, benefits,
23privileges, or qualifications. The information required to be
24disclosed pursuant to Section 803.1 shall not be considered among
25the contents of a central file for the purposes of this subdivision.

26(2) The licensee may, but is not required to, submit any
27additional exculpatory or explanatory statement or other
28information that the board shall include in the central file.

29(3) Each board may permit any law enforcement or regulatory
30agency when required for an investigation of unlawful activity or
31for licensing, certification, or regulatory purposes to inspect and
32have copies made of that licensee’s file, unless the disclosure is
33otherwise prohibited by law.

34(4) These disclosures shall effect no change in the confidential
35status of these records.

36

SEC. 9.  

Section 805 of the Business and Professions Code is
37amended to read:

38

805.  

(a) As used in this section, the following terms have the
39following definitions:

40(1) (A) “Peer review” means both of the following:

P22   1(i) A process in which a peer review body reviews the basic
2qualifications, staff privileges, employment, medical outcomes,
3or professional conduct of licentiates to make recommendations
4for quality improvement and education, if necessary, in order to
5do either or both of the following:

6(I) Determine whether a licentiate may practice or continue to
7practice in a health care facility, clinic, or other setting providing
8medical services, and, if so, to determine the parameters of that
9 practice.

10(II) Assess and improve the quality of care rendered in a health
11care facility, clinic, or other setting providing medical services.

12(ii) Any other activities of a peer review body as specified in
13subparagraph (B).

14(B) “Peer review body” includes:

15(i) A medical or professional staff of any health care facility or
16clinic licensed under Division 2 (commencing with Section 1200)
17of the Health and Safety Code or of a facility certified to participate
18in the federal Medicare program as an ambulatory surgical center.

19(ii) A health care service plan licensed under Chapter 2.2
20(commencing with Section 1340) of Division 2 of the Health and
21Safety Code or a disability insurer that contracts with licentiates
22to provide services at alternative rates of payment pursuant to
23Section 10133 of the Insurance Code.

24(iii) Any medical, psychological, marriage and family therapy,
25social work, professional clinical counselor, dental, or podiatric
26professional society having as members at least 25 percent of the
27eligible licentiates in the area in which it functions (which must
28include at least one county), which is not organized for profit and
29which has been determined to be exempt from taxes pursuant to
30Section 23701 of the Revenue and Taxation Code.

31(iv) A committee organized by any entity consisting of or
32employing more than 25 licentiates of the same class that functions
33for the purpose of reviewing the quality of professional care
34provided by members or employees of that entity.

35(2) “Licentiate” means a physician and surgeon, doctor of
36podiatric medicine, clinical psychologist, marriage and family
37therapist, clinical social worker, professional clinical counselor,
38dentist, or physician assistant. “Licentiate” also includes a person
39authorized to practice medicine pursuant to Section 2113 or 2168.

P23   1(3) “Agency” means the relevant state licensing agency having
2regulatory jurisdiction over the licentiates listed in paragraph (2).

3(4) “Staff privileges” means any arrangement under which a
4licentiate is allowed to practice in or provide care for patients in
5a health facility. Those arrangements shall include, but are not
6limited to, full staff privileges, active staff privileges, limited staff
7privileges, auxiliary staff privileges, provisional staff privileges,
8temporary staff privileges, courtesy staff privileges, locum tenens
9arrangements, and contractual arrangements to provide professional
10services, including, but not limited to, arrangements to provide
11outpatient services.

12(5) “Denial or termination of staff privileges, membership, or
13employment” includes failure or refusal to renew a contract or to
14renew, extend, or reestablish any staff privileges, if the action is
15based on medical disciplinary cause or reason.

16(6) “Medical disciplinary cause or reason” means that aspect
17of a licentiate’s competence or professional conduct that is
18reasonably likely to be detrimental to patient safety or to the
19delivery of patient care.

20(7) “805 report” means the written report required under
21subdivision (b).

22(b) The chief of staff of a medical or professional staff or other
23chief executive officer, medical director, or administrator of any
24 peer review body and the chief executive officer or administrator
25of any licensed health care facility or clinic shall file an 805 report
26with the relevant agency within 15 days after the effective date on
27which any of the following occur as a result of an action of a peer
28review body:

29(1) A licentiate’s application for staff privileges or membership
30is denied or rejected for a medical disciplinary cause or reason.

31(2) A licentiate’s membership, staff privileges, or employment
32is terminated or revoked for a medical disciplinary cause or reason.

33(3) Restrictions are imposed, or voluntarily accepted, on staff
34privileges, membership, or employment for a cumulative total of
3530 days or more for any 12-month period, for a medical disciplinary
36cause or reason.

37(c) If a licentiate takes any action listed in paragraph (1), (2),
38or (3) after receiving notice of a pending investigation initiated
39for a medical disciplinary cause or reason or after receiving notice
40that his or her application for membership or staff privileges is
P24   1denied or will be denied for a medical disciplinary cause or reason,
2the chief of staff of a medical or professional staff or other chief
3executive officer, medical director, or administrator of any peer
4review body and the chief executive officer or administrator of
5any licensed health care facility or clinic where the licentiate is
6employed or has staff privileges or membership or where the
7licentiate applied for staff privileges or membership, or sought the
8renewal thereof, shall file an 805 report with the relevant agency
9within 15 days after the licentiate takes the action.

10(1) Resigns or takes a leave of absence from membership, staff
11privileges, or employment.

12(2) Withdraws or abandons his or her application for staff
13privileges or membership.

14(3) Withdraws or abandons his or her request for renewal of
15staff privileges or membership.

16(d) For purposes of filing an 805 report, the signature of at least
17one of the individuals indicated in subdivision (b) or (c) on the
18completed form shall constitute compliance with the requirement
19to file the report.

20(e) An 805 report shall also be filed within 15 days following
21the imposition of summary suspension of staff privileges,
22membership, or employment, if the summary suspension remains
23in effect for a period in excess of 14 days.

24(f) A copy of the 805 report, and a notice advising the licentiate
25of his or her right to submit additional statements or other
26information, electronically or otherwise, pursuant to Section 800,
27shall be sent by the peer review body to the licentiate named in
28the report. The notice shall also advise the licentiate that
29information submitted electronically will be publicly disclosed to
30those who request the information.

31The information to be reported in an 805 report shall include the
32name and license number of the licentiate involved, a description
33of the facts and circumstances of the medical disciplinary cause
34or reason, and any other relevant information deemed appropriate
35by the reporter.

36A supplemental report shall also be made within 30 days
37following the date the licentiate is deemed to have satisfied any
38terms, conditions, or sanctions imposed as disciplinary action by
39the reporting peer review body. In performing its dissemination
40functions required by Section 805.5, the agency shall include a
P25   1copy of a supplemental report, if any, whenever it furnishes a copy
2of the original 805 report.

3If another peer review body is required to file an 805 report, a
4health care service plan is not required to file a separate report
5with respect to action attributable to the same medical disciplinary
6cause or reason. If the Medical Board of California or a licensing
7agency of another state revokes or suspends, without a stay, the
8license of a physician and surgeon, a peer review body is not
9required to file an 805 report when it takes an action as a result of
10the revocation or suspension. If the California Board of Podiatric
11Medicine or a licensing agency of another state revokes or
12suspends, without a stay, the license of a doctor of podiatric
13medicine, a peer review body is not required to file an 805 report
14when it takes an action as a result of the revocation or suspension.

15(g) The reporting required by this section shall not act as a
16waiver of confidentiality of medical records and committee reports.
17The information reported or disclosed shall be kept confidential
18except as provided in subdivision (c) of Section 800 and Sections
19803.1 and 2027, provided that a copy of the report containing the
20information required by this section may be disclosed as required
21by Section 805.5 with respect to reports received on or after
22January 1, 1976.

23(h) The Medical Board of California, the California Board of
24Podiatric Medicine, the Osteopathic Medical Board of California,
25and the Dental Board of California shall disclose reports as required
26by Section 805.5.

27(i) An 805 report shall be maintained electronically by an agency
28for dissemination purposes for a period of three years after receipt.

29(j) No person shall incur any civil or criminal liability as the
30result of making any report required by this section.

31(k) A willful failure to file an 805 report by any person who is
32designated or otherwise required by law to file an 805 report is
33punishable by a fine not to exceed one hundred thousand dollars
34($100,000) per violation. The fine may be imposed in any civil or
35administrative action or proceeding brought by or on behalf of any
36agency having regulatory jurisdiction over the person regarding
37whom the report was or should have been filed. If the person who
38is designated or otherwise required to file an 805 report is a
39licensed physician and surgeon, the action or proceeding shall be
40brought by the Medical Board of California. If the person who is
P26   1designated or otherwise required to file an 805 report is a licensed
2doctor of podiatric medicine, the action or proceeding shall be
3brought by the California Board of Podiatric Medicine. The fine
4shall be paid to that agency but not expended until appropriated
5by the Legislature. A violation of this subdivision may constitute
6unprofessional conduct by the licentiate. A person who is alleged
7to have violated this subdivision may assert any defense available
8at law. As used in this subdivision, “willful” means a voluntary
9and intentional violation of a known legal duty.

10(l) Except as otherwise provided in subdivision (k), any failure
11by the administrator of any peer review body, the chief executive
12officer or administrator of any health care facility, or any person
13who is designated or otherwise required by law to file an 805
14report, shall be punishable by a fine that under no circumstances
15shall exceed fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) per violation. The
16fine may be imposed in any civil or administrative action or
17proceeding brought by or on behalf of any agency having
18regulatory jurisdiction over the person regarding whom the report
19was or should have been filed. If the person who is designated or
20otherwise required to file an 805 report is a licensed physician and
21surgeon, the action or proceeding shall be brought by the Medical
22Board of California. If the person who is designated or otherwise
23required to file an 805 report is a licensed doctor of podiatric
24medicine, the action or proceeding shall be brought by the
25California Board of Podiatric Medicine. The fine shall be paid to
26that agency but not expended until appropriated by the Legislature.
27The amount of the fine imposed, not exceeding fifty thousand
28dollars ($50,000) per violation, shall be proportional to the severity
29of the failure to report and shall differ based upon written findings,
30including whether the failure to file caused harm to a patient or
31created a risk to patient safety; whether the administrator of any
32peer review body, the chief executive officer or administrator of
33any health care facility, or any person who is designated or
34otherwise required by law to file an 805 report exercised due
35diligence despite the failure to file or whether they knew or should
36have known that an 805 report would not be filed; and whether
37there has been a prior failure to file an 805 report. The amount of
38the fine imposed may also differ based on whether a health care
39facility is a small or rural hospital as defined in Section 124840
40of the Health and Safety Code.

P27   1(m) A health care service plan licensed under Chapter 2.2
2(commencing with Section 1340) of Division 2 of the Health and
3 Safety Code or a disability insurer that negotiates and enters into
4a contract with licentiates to provide services at alternative rates
5of payment pursuant to Section 10133 of the Insurance Code, when
6determining participation with the plan or insurer, shall evaluate,
7on a case-by-case basis, licentiates who are the subject of an 805
8report, and not automatically exclude or deselect these licentiates.

9

SEC. 10.  

Section 805.1 of the Business and Professions Code
10 is amended to read:

11

805.1.  

(a) The Medical Board of California, the California
12Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Osteopathic Medical Board of
13California, and the Dental Board of California shall be entitled to
14inspect and copy the following documents in the record of any
15disciplinary proceeding resulting in action that is required to be
16reported pursuant to Section 805:

17(1) Any statement of charges.

18(2) Any document, medical chart, or exhibits in evidence.

19(3) Any opinion, findings, or conclusions.

20(4) Any certified copy of medical records, as permitted by other
21applicable law.

22(b) The information so disclosed shall be kept confidential and
23not subject to discovery, in accordance with Section 800, except
24that it may be reviewed, as provided in subdivision (c) of Section
25800, and may be disclosed in any subsequent disciplinary hearing
26conducted pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter
275 (commencing with Section 11500) of Part 1 of Division 3 of
28Title 2 of the Government Code).

29

SEC. 11.  

Section 805.5 of the Business and Professions Code
30 is amended to read:

31

805.5.  

(a) Prior to granting or renewing staff privileges for
32any physician and surgeon, psychologist, podiatrist, or dentist, any
33health facility licensed pursuant to Division 2 (commencing with
34Section 1200) of the Health and Safety Code, any health care
35service plan or medical care foundation, the medical staff of the
36institution, a facility certified to participate in the federal Medicare
37Program as an ambulatory surgical center, or an outpatient setting
38accredited pursuant to Section 1248.1 of the Health and Safety
39Code shall request a report from the Medical Board of California,
40the Board of Psychology, thebegin delete Cagiforniaend deletebegin insert Californiaend insert Board of
P28   1Podiatric Medicine, the Osteopathic Medical Board of California,
2or the Dental Board of California to determine if any report has
3been made pursuant to Section 805 indicating that the applying
4physician and surgeon, psychologist, podiatrist, or dentist has been
5denied staff privileges, been removed from a medical staff, or had
6his or her staff privileges restricted as provided in Section 805.
7The request shall include the name and California license number
8of the physician and surgeon, psychologist, podiatrist, or dentist.
9Furnishing of a copy of the 805 report shall not cause the 805
10report to be a public record.

11(b) Upon a request made by, or on behalf of, an institution
12described in subdivision (a) or its medical staff the board shall
13furnish a copy of any report made pursuant to Section 805 as well
14as any additional exculpatory or explanatory information submitted
15electronically to the board by the licensee pursuant to subdivision
16(f) of that section. However, the board shall not send a copy of a
17report (1) if the denial, removal, or restriction was imposed solely
18because of the failure to complete medical records, (2) if the board
19has found the information reported is without merit, (3) if a court
20finds, in a final judgment, that the peer review, as defined in
21Section 805, resulting in the report was conducted in bad faith and
22the licensee who is the subject of the report notifies the board of
23that finding, or (4) if a period of three years has elapsed since the
24report was submitted. This three-year period shall be tolled during
25any period the licentiate has obtained a judicial order precluding
26disclosure of the report, unless the board is finally and permanently
27precluded by judicial order from disclosing the report. If a request
28is received by the board while the board is subject to a judicial
29order limiting or precluding disclosure, the board shall provide a
30disclosure to any qualified requesting party as soon as practicable
31after the judicial order is no longer in force.

32If the board fails to advise the institution within 30 working days
33following its request for a report required by this section, the
34institution may grant or renew staff privileges for the physician
35and surgeon, psychologist, podiatrist, or dentist.

36(c) Any institution described in subdivision (a) or its medical
37staff that violates subdivision (a) is guilty of a misdemeanor and
38shall be punished by a fine of not less than two hundred dollars
39($200) nor more than one thousand two hundred dollars ($1,200).

P29   1

SEC. 12.  

Section 805.6 of the Business and Professions Code
2 is amended to read:

3

805.6.  

(a) The Medical Board of California, the California
4Board of Podiatric Medicine, the Osteopathic Medical Board, and
5the Dental Board of California shall establish a system of electronic
6notification that is either initiated by the board or can be accessed
7by qualified subscribers, and that is designed to achieve early
8notification to qualified recipients of the existence of new reports
9that are filed pursuant to Section 805.

10(b) The State Department of Health Services shall notify the
11appropriate licensing agency of any reporting violations pursuant
12to Section 805.

13(c) The Department of Managed Health Care shall notify the
14appropriate licensing agency of any reporting violations pursuant
15to Section 805.

16

SEC. 13.  

Section 810 of the Business and Professions Code is
17amended to read:

18

810.  

(a) It shall constitute unprofessional conduct and grounds
19for disciplinary action, including suspension or revocation of a
20license or certificate, for a health care professional to do any of
21the following in connection with his or her professional activities:

22(1) Knowingly present or cause to be presented any false or
23fraudulent claim for the payment of a loss under a contract of
24insurance.

25(2) Knowingly prepare, make, or subscribe any writing, with
26intent to present or use the same, or to allow it to be presented or
27used in support of any false or fraudulent claim.

28(b) It shall constitute cause for revocation or suspension of a
29license or certificate for a health care professional to engage in
30any conduct prohibited under Section 1871.4 of the Insurance Code
31or Section 549 or 550 of the Penal Code.

32(c) (1) It shall constitute cause for automatic suspension of a
33license or certificate issued pursuant to Chapter 3.5 (commencing
34with Section 1460), Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 1600),
35Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), Chapter 6.6
36(commencing with Section 2900), Chapter 7 (commencing with
37Section 3000), or Chapter 9 (commencing with Section 4000), or
38pursuant to the Chiropractic Act or the Osteopathic Act, if a
39licensee or certificate holder has been convicted of any felony
40involving fraud committed by the licensee or certificate holder in
P30   1conjunction with providing benefits covered by worker’s
2 compensation insurance, or has been convicted of any felony
3involving Medi-Cal fraud committed by the licensee or certificate
4holder in conjunction with the Medi-Cal program, including the
5Denti-Cal element of the Medi-Cal program, pursuant to Chapter
67 (commencing with Section 14000), or Chapter 8 (commencing
7with Section 14200), of Part 3 of Division 9 of the Welfare and
8Institutions Code. The board shall convene a disciplinary hearing
9to determine whether or not the license or certificate shall be
10suspended, revoked, or some other disposition shall be considered,
11including, but not limited to, revocation with the opportunity to
12petition for reinstatement, suspension, or other limitations on the
13license or certificate as the board deems appropriate.

14(2) It shall constitute cause for automatic suspension and for
15revocation of a license or certificate issued pursuant to Chapter
163.5 (commencing with Section 1460), Chapter 4 (commencing
17with Section 1600), Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000),
18Chapter 6.6 (commencing with Section 2900), Chapter 7
19(commencing with Section 3000), or Chapter 9 (commencing with
20Section 4000), or pursuant to the Chiropractic Act or the
21Osteopathic Act, if a licensee or certificate holder has more than
22one conviction of any felony arising out of separate prosecutions
23involving fraud committed by the licensee or certificate holder in
24conjunction with providing benefits covered by worker’s
25compensation insurance, or in conjunction with the Medi-Cal
26program, including the Denti-Cal element of the Medi-Cal program
27pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 14000), or
28Chapter 8 (commencing with Section 14200), of Part 3 of Division
299 of the Welfare and Institutions Code. The board shall convene
30a disciplinary hearing to revoke the license or certificate and an
31order of revocation shall be issued unless the board finds mitigating
32circumstances to order some other disposition.

33(3) It is the intent of the Legislature that paragraph (2) apply to
34a licensee or certificate holder who has one or more convictions
35prior to January 1, 2004, as provided in this subdivision.

36(4) Nothing in this subdivision shall preclude a board from
37suspending or revoking a license or certificate pursuant to any
38other provision of law.

39(5) “Board,” as used in this subdivision, means the Dental Board
40of California, the Medical Board of California, the California Board
P31   1of Podiatric Medicine, the Board of Psychology, the State Board
2 of Optometry, the California State Board of Pharmacy, the
3Osteopathic Medical Board of California, and the State Board of
4Chiropractic Examiners.

5(6) “More than one conviction,” as used in this subdivision,
6means that the licensee or certificate holder has one or more
7convictions prior to January 1, 2004, and at least one conviction
8on or after that date, or the licensee or certificate holder has two
9or more convictions on or after January 1, 2004. However, a
10licensee or certificate holder who has one or more convictions
11prior to January 1, 2004, but who has no convictions and is
12currently licensed or holds a certificate after that date, does not
13have “more than one conviction” for the purposes of this
14subdivision.

15(d) As used in this section, health care professional means any
16person licensed or certified pursuant to this division, or licensed
17pursuant to the Osteopathic Initiative Act, or the Chiropractic
18Initiative Act.

19

SEC. 14.  

Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 1460) is added
20to Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code, to read:

21 

22Chapter  3.5. Podiatric Medicine
23

 

24

1460.  

(a) There is created within the Department of Consumer
25Affairs a California Board of Podiatric Medicine.

26(b) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2017,
27and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
28is enacted before January 1, 2017, deletes or extends that date.
29Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the repeal of this
30section renders the California Board of Podiatric Medicine subject
31to review by the appropriate policy committees of the Legislature.

32

1460.1.  

Protection of the public shall be the highest priority
33for the California Board of Podiatric Medicine in exercising its
34licensing, regulatory, and disciplinary functions. Whenever the
35protection of the public is inconsistent with other interests sought
36to be promoted, the protection of the public shall be paramount.

37

1461.  

As used in this chapter:

38(a) “Board” means the California Board of Podiatric Medicine.

P32   1(b) “Podiatric licensing authority” refers to any officer, board,
2commission, committee, or department of another state that may
3issue a license to practice podiatric medicine.

4

1462.  

The board shall consist of seven members, three of whom
5shall be public members. Not more than one member of the board
6shall be a full-time faculty member of a college or school of
7podiatric medicine.

8The Governor shall appoint the four members qualified as
9provided in Section 2463 and one public member. The Senate
10Rules Committee and the Speaker of the Assembly shall each
11appoint a public member.

12

1463.  

Each member of the board, except the public members,
13shall be appointed from persons having all of the following
14qualifications:

15(a) Be a citizen of this state for at least five years next preceding
16his or her appointment.

17(b) Be a graduate of a recognized school or college of podiatric
18medicine.

19(c) Have a valid certificate to practice podiatric medicine in this
20state.

21(d) Have engaged in the practice of podiatric medicine in this
22state for at least five years next preceding his or her appointment.

23

1464.  

The public members shall be appointed from persons
24having all of the following qualifications:

25(a) Be a citizen of this state for at least five years next preceding
26his or her appointment.

27(b) Shall not be an officer or faculty member of any college,
28school, or other institution engaged in podiatric medical instruction.

29(c) Shall not be a licentiate of the board or of any board under
30this division or of any board created by an initiative act under this
31division.

32

1465.  

No person who directly or indirectly owns any interest
33in any college, school, or other institution engaged in podiatric
34medical instruction shall be appointed to the board nor shall any
35incumbent member of the board have or acquire any interest, direct
36or indirect, in any such college, school, or institution.

37

1466.  

All members of the board shall be appointed for terms
38of four years. Vacancies shall immediately be filled by the
39appointing power for the unexpired portion of the terms in which
P33   1they occur. No person shall serve as a member of the board for
2more than two consecutive terms.

3

1467.  

(a) The board may convene from time to time as it deems
4necessary.

5(b) Four members of the board constitute a quorum for the
6transaction of business at any meeting.

7(c) It shall require the affirmative vote of a majority of those
8members present at a meeting, those members constituting at least
9a quorum, to pass any motion, resolution, or measure.

10(d) The board shall annually elect one of its members to act as
11president and a member to act as vice president who shall hold
12their respective positions at the pleasure of the board. The president
13may call meetings of the board and any duly appointed committee
14at a specified time and place.

15

1468.  

Notice of each meeting of the board shall be given in
16accordance with the Bagley-Keene Open Meeting Act (Article 9
17(commencing with Section 11120) of Chapter 1 of Part 1 of
18Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code).

19

1469.  

Each member of the board shall receive per diem and
20expenses as provided in Section 2016.

21

1470.  

The board may adopt, amend, or repeal, in accordance
22with the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (Chapter
233.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 1 of
24Title 2 of the Government Code), regulations necessary to enable
25the board to carry into effect the provisions of law relating to the
26practice of podiatric medicine.

27

1471.  

Except as provided by Section 159.5, the board may
28employ, within the limits of the funds received by the board, all
29personnel necessary to carry out this chapter and the provisions
30of Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000) relating to podiatric
31medicine.

32

1472.  

(a) The certificate to practice podiatric medicine
33authorizes the holder to practice podiatric medicine.

34(b) As used in this chapter, “podiatric medicine” means the
35diagnosis, medical, surgical, mechanical, manipulative, and
36electrical treatment of the human foot, including the ankle and
37tendons that insert into the foot and the nonsurgical treatment of
38the muscles and tendons of the leg governing the functions of the
39foot.

P34   1(c) A doctor of podiatric medicine shall not administer an
2anesthetic other than local. If an anesthetic other than local is
3required for any procedure, the anesthetic shall be administered
4by another licensed health care practitioner who is authorized to
5administer the required anesthetic within the scope of his or her
6practice.

7(d) (1) A doctor of podiatric medicine may do the following:

8(A) Perform surgical treatment of the ankle and tendons at the
9level of the ankle pursuant to subdivision (e).

10(B) Perform services under the direct supervision of a physician
11and surgeon, as an assistant at surgery, in surgical procedures that
12are otherwise beyond the scope of practice of a doctor of podiatric
13medicine.

14(C) Perform a partial amputation of the foot no further proximal
15than the Chopart’s joint.

16(2) Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to permit a
17doctor of podiatric medicine to function as a primary surgeon for
18any procedure beyond his or her scope of practice.

19(e) A doctor of podiatric medicine may perform surgical
20treatment of the ankle and tendons at the level of the ankle only
21in the following locations:

22(1) A licensed general acute care hospital, as defined in Section
231250 of the Health and Safety Code.

24(2) A licensed surgical clinic, as defined in Section 1204 of the
25Health and Safety Code, if the doctor of podiatric medicine has
26surgical privileges, including the privilege to perform surgery on
27the ankle, in a general acute care hospital described in paragraph
28(1) and meets all the protocols of the surgical clinic.

29(3) An ambulatory surgical center that is certified to participate
30in the Medicare program under Title XVIII (42 U.S.C. Sec. 1395
31et seq.) of the federal Social Security Act, if the doctor of podiatric
32medicine has surgical privileges, including the privilege to perform
33surgery on the ankle, in a general acute care hospital described in
34paragraph (1) and meets all the protocols of the surgical center.

35(4) A freestanding physical plant housing outpatient services
36of a licensed general acute care hospital, as defined in Section
371250 of the Health and Safety Code, if the doctor of podiatric
38medicine has surgical privileges, including the privilege to perform
39surgery on the ankle, in a general acute care hospital described in
40paragraph (1). For purposes of this section, a “freestanding physical
P35   1plant” means any building that is not physically attached to a
2building where inpatient services are provided.

3(5) An outpatient setting accredited pursuant to subdivision (g)
4of Section 1248.1 of the Health and Safety Code.

5

1474.  

Any person who uses in any sign or in any advertisement
6or otherwise, the word or words “doctor of podiatric medicine,”
7“doctor of podiatry,” “podiatric doctor,” “D.P.M.,” “podiatrist,”
8“foot specialist,” or any other term or terms or any letters indicating
9or implying that he or she is a doctor of podiatric medicine, or that
10he or she practices podiatric medicine, or holds himself out as
11practicing podiatric medicine or foot correction as defined in
12Section 1472, without having at the time of so doing a valid,
13unrevoked, and unsuspended certificate as provided for in this
14chapter or Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), is guilty
15of a misdemeanor.

16

begin delete2475.end delete
17
begin insert1475.end insert  

Unless otherwise provided by law, no postgraduate
18trainee, intern, resident postdoctoral fellow, or instructor may
19engage in the practice of podiatric medicine, or receive
20compensation therefor, or offer to engage in the practice of
21podiatric medicine unless he or she holds a valid, unrevoked, and
22unsuspended certificate to practice podiatric medicine issued by
23the board. However, a graduate of an approved college or school
24of podiatric medicine upon whom the degree doctor of podiatric
25medicine has been conferred, who is issued a resident’s license,
26which may be renewed annually for up to eight years for this
27purpose by the board, and who is enrolled in a postgraduate training
28program approved by the board, may engage in the practice of
29podiatric medicine whenever and wherever required as a part of
30that program and may receive compensation for that practice under
31the following conditions:

32(a) A graduate with a resident’s license in an approved
33internship, residency, or fellowship program may participate in
34training rotations outside the scope of podiatric medicine, under
35the supervision of a physician and surgeon who holds a medical
36doctor or doctor of osteopathy degree wherever and whenever
37required as a part of the training program, and may receive
38compensation for that practice. If the graduate fails to receive a
39license to practice podiatric medicine under this chapter within
40three years from the commencement of the postgraduate training,
P36   1all privileges and exemptions under this section shall automatically
2cease.

3(b)  Hospitals functioning as a part of the teaching program of
4an approved college or school of podiatric medicine in this state
5may exchange instructors or resident or assistant resident doctors
6of podiatric medicine with another approved college or school of
7podiatric medicine not located in this state, or those hospitals may
8appoint a graduate of an approved school as such a resident for
9purposes of postgraduate training. Those instructors and residents
10may practice and be compensated as provided in this section, but
11that practice and compensation shall be for a period not to exceed
12two years.

13

1475.1.  

Before a resident’s license may be issued, each
14applicant shall show by evidence satisfactory to the board,
15submitted directly to the board by the national score reporting
16institution, that he or she has, within the past 10 years, passed Parts
17I and II of the examination administered by the National Board of
18Podiatric Medical Examiners of the United States or has passed a
19written examination that is recognized by the board to be the
20equivalent in content to the examination administered by the
21National Board of Podiatric Medical Examiners of the United
22States.

23

1475.2.  

As used in this chapter, “podiatric residency” means
24a program of supervised postgraduate clinical training, one year
25or more in duration, approved by the board.

26

1475.3.  

(a) The board shall approve podiatric residency
27programs, as defined in Section 1475.2, in the field of podiatric
28medicine, for persons who are applicants for or have been issued
29a certificate to practice podiatric medicine pursuant to this article.

30(b) The board may only approve a podiatric residency that it
31determines meets all of the following requirements:

32(1) Reasonably conforms with the Accreditation Council for
33Graduate Medical Education’s Institutional Requirements of the
34Essentials of Accredited Residencies in Graduate Medical
35Education: Institutional and Program Requirements.

36(2) Is approved by the Council on Podiatric Medical Education.

37(3) Complies with the requirements of this state.

38

1476.  

Nothing in this chapter or Chapter 5 (commencing with
39Section 2000) shall be construed to prevent a regularly matriculated
40student undertaking a course of professional instruction in an
P37   1approved college or school of podiatric medicine from participating
2in training beyond the scope of podiatric medicine under the
3supervision of a physician and surgeon who holds a medical doctor
4or doctor of osteopathy degree whenever and wherever prescribed
5as part of his or her course of study.

6

1477.  

Nothing in this chapter prohibits the manufacture, the
7recommendation, or the sale of either corrective shoes or appliances
8for the human feet.

9

1479.  

The board shall issue a certificate to practice podiatric
10medicine to each applicant who meets the requirements of this
11chapter. Every applicant for a certificate to practice podiatric
12medicine shall comply with the provisions of Article 4
13(commencing with Section 2080) of Chapter 5 which are not
14specifically applicable to applicants for a physician’s and surgeon’s
15certificate, in addition to the provisions of this chapter and Chapter
165 (commencing with Section 2000).

17

1480.  

The board shall have full authority to investigate and to
18evaluate each applicant applying for a certificate to practice
19podiatric medicine and to make a determination of the admission
20of the applicant to the examination and the issuance of a certificate
21in accordance with this chapter and Chapter 5 (commencing with
22Section 2000).

23

1481.  

Each applicant who commenced professional instruction
24in podiatric medicine after September 1, 1959, shall show by an
25official transcript or other official evidence submitted directly to
26the board by the academic institution that he or she has completed
27two years of preprofessional postsecondary education, or its
28equivalent, including the subjects of chemistry, biology or other
29biological science, and physics or mathematics, before completing
30the resident course of professional instruction.

31

1483.  

(a) Each applicant for a certificate to practice podiatric
32medicine shall show by an official transcript or other official
33evidence satisfactory to the board that is submitted directly to the
34board by the academic institution that he or she has successfully
35completed a medical curriculum extending over a period of at least
36four academic years, or 32 months of actual instruction, in a college
37or school of podiatric medicine approved by the board. The total
38number of hours of all courses shall consist of a minimum of 4,000
39hours.

P38   1The board, by regulation, shall adopt standards for determining
2equivalent training authorized by this section.

3(b) The curriculum for all applicants shall provide for adequate
4instruction related to podiatric medicine in the following:

5(1) Alcoholism and other chemical substance detection

6(2) Local anesthesia

7(3) Anatomy, including embryology, histology, and
8neuroanatomy

9(4) Behavioral science

10(5) Biochemistry

11(6) Biomechanics-foot and ankle

12(7) Child abuse detection

13(8) Dermatology

14(9) Geriatric medicine

15(10) Human sexuality

16(11) Infectious diseases

17(12) Medical ethics

18(13) Neurology

19(14) Orthopedic surgery

20(15) Pathology, microbiology, and immunology

21(16) Pediatrics

22(17) Pharmacology, including materia medica and toxicology

23(18) Physical and laboratory diagnosis

24(19) Physical medicine

25(20) Physiology

26(21) Podiatric medicine

27(22) Podiatric surgery

28(23) Preventive medicine, including nutrition

29(24) Psychiatric problem detection

30(25) Radiology and radiation safety

31(26) Spousal or partner abuse detection

32(27) Therapeutics

33(28) Women’s health

34

1484.  

In addition to any other requirements of this chapter or
35Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 2000), before a certificate
36to practice podiatric medicine may be issued, each applicant shall
37show by evidence satisfactory to the board, submitted directly to
38the board by the sponsoring institution, that he or she has
39satisfactorily completed at least two years of postgraduate podiatric
P39   1medical and podiatric surgical training in a general acute care
2hospital approved by the Council on Podiatric Medical Education.

3

1486.  

The board shall issue a certificate to practice podiatric
4medicine if the applicant has submitted directly to the board from
5the credentialing organizations verification that he or she meets
6all of the following requirements:

7(a) The applicant has graduated from an approved school or
8college of podiatric medicine and meets the requirements of Section
92483.

10(b) The applicant, within the past 10 years, has passed parts I,
11II, and III of the examination administered by the National Board
12of Podiatric Medical Examiners of the United States or has passed
13a written examination that is recognized by the board to be the
14equivalent in content to the examination administered by the
15National Board of Podiatric Medical Examiners of the United
16States.

17(c) The applicant has satisfactorily completed the postgraduate
18training required by Section 2484.

19(d) The applicant has passed within the past 10 years any oral
20and practical examination that may be required of all applicants
21by the board to ascertain clinical competence.

22(e) The applicant has committed no acts or crimes constituting
23grounds for denial of a certificate under Division 1.5 (commencing
24with Section 475).

25(f) The board determines that no disciplinary action has been
26taken against the applicant by any podiatric licensing authority
27and that the applicant has not been the subject of adverse judgments
28or settlements resulting from the practice of podiatric medicine
29that the board determines constitutes evidence of a pattern of
30negligence or incompetence.

31(g) A disciplinary databank report regarding the applicant is
32received by the board from the Federation of Podiatric Medical
33Boards.

34

1488.  

Notwithstanding any other law, the board shall issue a
35certificate to practice podiatric medicine by credentialing if the
36applicant has submitted directly to the board from the credentialing
37organizations verification that he or she is licensed as a doctor of
38podiatric medicine in any other state and meets all of the following
39requirements:

P40   1(a) The applicant has graduated from an approved school or
2college of podiatric medicine.

3(b) The applicant, within the past 10 years, has passed either
4part III of the examination administered by the National Board of
5Podiatric Medical Examiners of the United States or a written
6examination that is recognized by the board to be the equivalent
7in content to the examination administered by the National Board
8of Podiatric Medical Examiners of the United States.

9(c) The applicant has satisfactorily completed a postgraduate
10training program approved by the Council on Podiatric Medical
11Education.

12(d) The applicant, within the past 10 years, has passed any oral
13and practical examination that may be required of all applicants
14by the board to ascertain clinical competence.

15(e) The applicant has committed no acts or crimes constituting
16grounds for denial of a certificate under Division 1.5 (commencing
17with Section 475).

18(f) The board determines that no disciplinary action has been
19taken against the applicant by any podiatric licensing authority
20and that the applicant has not been the subject of adverse judgments
21or settlements resulting from the practice of podiatric medicine
22that the board determines constitutes evidence of a pattern of
23negligence or incompetence.

24(g) A disciplinary databank report regarding the applicant is
25received by the board from the Federation of Podiatric Medical
26Boards.

27

1492.  

(a) The board shall examine every applicant for a
28certificate to practice podiatric medicine to ensure a minimum of
29entry-level competence at the time and place designated by the
30board in its discretion, but at least twice a year.

31(b) Unless the applicant meets the requirements of Section 1486,
32applicants shall be required to have taken and passed the
33examination administered by the National Board of Podiatric
34Medical Examiners.

35(c) The board may appoint qualified persons to give the whole
36or any portion of any examination as provided in this article, who
37shall be designated as examination commissioners. The board may
38fix the compensation of those persons subject to the provisions of
39applicable state laws and regulations.

P41   1(d) The provisions of Article 9 (commencing with Section 2170)
2of Chapter 5 shall apply to examinations administered by the board
3except where those provisions are in conflict with or inconsistent
4with the provisions of this chapter.

5

1493.  

An applicant for a certificate to practice podiatric
6medicine shall pass an examination in the subjects required by
7Section 1483 in order to ensure a minimum of entry-level
8competence.

9

1495.  

Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, the
10board may delegate to officials of the board the authority to
11approve the admission of applicants to the examination and to
12approve the issuance of certificates to practice podiatric medicine
13to applicants who have met the specific requirements therefor in
14routine cases where applicants clearly meet the requirements of
15this chapter.

16

1496.  

In order to ensure the continuing competence of persons
17licensed to practice podiatric medicine, the board shall adopt and
18administer regulations requiring continuing education of those
19licensees. The board shall require those licensees to demonstrate
20satisfaction of the continuing education requirements and one of
21the following requirements at each license renewal:

22(a) Passage of an examination administered by the board within
23the past 10 years.

24(b) Passage of an examination administered by an approved
25specialty certifying board within the past 10 years.

26(c) Current diplomate, board-eligible, or board-qualified status
27granted by an approved specialty certifying board within the past
2810 years.

29(d) Recertification of current status by an approved specialty
30certifying board within the past 10 years.

31(e) Successful completion of an approved residency or
32fellowship program within the past 10 years.

33(f) Granting or renewal of current staff privileges within the
34past five years by a health care facility that is licensed, certified,
35accredited, conducted, maintained, operated, or otherwise approved
36by an agency of the federal or state government or an organization
37approved by the Medical Board of California.

38(g) Successful completion within the past five years of an
39extended course of study approved by the board.

P42   1(h) Passage within the past 10 years of Part III of the
2examination administered by the National Board of Podiatric
3Medical Examiners.

4

1497.  

(a) The board may order the denial of an application
5for, or the suspension of, or the revocation of, or the imposition
6of probationary conditions upon, a certificate to practice podiatric
7medicine for any of the causes set forth in Article 12 (commencing
8with Section 2220) of Chapter 5 in accordance with Section 2222.

9(b) The board may hear all matters, including but not limited
10to, any contested case or may assign any such matters to an
11administrative law judge. The proceedings shall be held in
12accordance with Section 2230. If a contested case is heard by the
13board itself, the administrative law judge who presided at the
14hearing shall be present during the board’s consideration of the
15case and shall assist and advise the board.

16

1497.5.  

(a) The board may request the administrative law
17judge, under his or her proposed decision in resolution of a
18disciplinary proceeding before the board, to direct any licensee
19found guilty of unprofessional conduct to pay to the board a sum
20not to exceed the actual and reasonable costs of the investigation
21and prosecution of the case.

22(b) The costs to be assessed shall be fixed by the administrative
23law judge and shall not be increased by the board unless the board
24does not adopt a proposed decision and in making its own decision
25finds grounds for increasing the costs to be assessed, not to exceed
26the actual and reasonable costs of the investigation and prosecution
27of the case.

28(c) When the payment directed in the board’s order for payment
29of costs is not made by the licensee, the board may enforce the
30order for payment by bringing an action in any appropriate court.
31This right of enforcement shall be in addition to any other rights
32the board may have as to any licensee directed to pay costs.

33(d) In any judicial action for the recovery of costs, proof of the
34board’s decision shall be conclusive proof of the validity of the
35order of payment and the terms for payment.

36(e) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the board shall not
37renew or reinstate the license of any licensee who has failed to pay
38all of the costs ordered under this section.

39(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the board may, in its
40discretion, conditionally renew or reinstate for a maximum of one
P43   1year the license of any licensee who demonstrates financial
2hardship and who enters into a formal agreement with the board
3to reimburse the board within that one-year period for those unpaid
4costs.

5(f) All costs recovered under this section shall be deposited in
6the Board of Podiatric Medicine Fund as a reimbursement in either
7the fiscal year in which the costs are actually recovered or the
8previous fiscal year, as the board may direct.

9

1498.  

(a) The board shall have the responsibility for reviewing
10the quality of podiatric medical practice carried out by persons
11licensed to practice podiatric medicine.

12(b) Each member of the board, or any licensed doctor of
13podiatric medicine appointed by the board, shall additionally have
14the authority to inspect, or require reports from, a general or
15specialized hospital and the podiatric medical staff thereof, with
16respect to the podiatric medical care, services, or facilities provided
17therein, and may inspect podiatric medical patient records with
18respect to the care, services, or facilities. The authority to make
19inspections and to require reports as provided by this section shall
20not be delegated by a member of the board to any person other
21than a doctor of podiatric medicine and shall be subject to the
22restrictions against disclosure described in Section 2263.

23

1499.  

There is in the State Treasury the Board of Podiatric
24Medicine Fund. Notwithstanding Section 2445, the board shall
25report to the Controller at the beginning of each calendar month
26for the month preceding the amount and source of all revenue
27received by the board, pursuant to this chapter, and shall pay the
28entire amount thereof to the Treasurer for deposit into the fund.
29All revenue received by the board from fees authorized to be
30charged relating to the practice of podiatric medicine shall be
31deposited in the fund as provided in this section, and shall be used
32to carry out this chapter or the provisions of Chapter 5
33(commencing with Section 2000) relating to the regulation of the
34practice of podiatric medicine.

35

1499.5.  

The following fees apply to certificates to practice
36podiatric medicine. The amount of fees prescribed for doctors of
37podiatric medicine shall be those set forth in this section unless a
38lower fee is established by the board in accordance with Section
391499.6. Fees collected pursuant to this section shall be fixed by
P44   1the board in amounts not to exceed the actual costs of providing
2the service for which the fee is collected.

3(a) Each applicant for a certificate to practice podiatric medicine
4shall pay an application fee ofbegin delete twenty dollars ($20)end deletebegin insert one hundred
5dollars ($100)end insert
at the time the application is filed. If the applicant
6qualifies for a certificate, he or she shall pay a fee which shall be
7fixed by the board at an amount not to exceed one hundred dollars
8($100) nor less than five dollars ($5) for the issuance of the
9certificate.

10(b) The oral examination fee shall be seven hundred dollars
11($700), or the actual cost, whichever is lower, and shall be paid
12by each applicant. If the applicant’s credentials are insufficient or
13if the applicant does not desire to take the examination, and has
14so notified the board 30 days prior to the examination date, only
15the examination fee is returnable to the applicant. The board may
16charge an examination fee for any subsequent reexamination of
17the applicant.

18(c) Each applicant who qualifies for a certificate, as a condition
19precedent to its issuance, in addition to other fees required by this
20section, shall pay an initial license fee. The initial license fee shall
21be eight hundred dollars ($800). The initial license shall expire
22the second year after its issuance on the last day of the month of
23birth of the licensee. The board may reduce the initial license fee
24by up to 50 percent of the amount of the fee for any applicant who
25is enrolled in a postgraduate training program approved by the
26board or who has completed a postgraduate training program
27approved by the board within six months prior to the payment of
28the initial license fee.

29(d) The biennial renewal fee shall be nine hundred dollars
30($900). Any licensee enrolled in an approved residency program
31shall be required to pay only 50 percent of the biennial renewal
32fee at the time of his or her first renewal.

33(e) The delinquency fee is one hundred fifty dollars ($150).

34(f) The duplicate wall certificate fee isbegin delete forty dollars ($40).end deletebegin insert one
35hundred dollars ($100).end insert

36(g) The duplicate renewal receipt fee isbegin delete forty dollars ($40).end deletebegin insert fifty
37dollars ($50).end insert

38(h) The endorsement fee is thirty dollars ($30).

39(i) The letter of good standing fee or for loan deferment isbegin delete thirty
40dollars ($30).end delete
begin insert one hundred dollars ($100).end insert

P45   1(j) There shall be a fee ofbegin delete sixty dollars ($60)end deletebegin insert one hundred dollars
2($100)end insert
for the issuance of a resident’s license under Section 1475.

begin delete

3(k) The application fee for ankle certification under Section
41472 for persons licensed prior to January 1, 1984, shall be fifty
5dollars ($50). The examination and reexamination fee for this
6certification shall be seven hundred dollars ($700).

7(l)

end delete

8begin insert(k)end insert The filing fee to appeal the failure of an oral examination
9shall bebegin delete twenty-five dollars ($25).end deletebegin insert one hundred dollars ($100).end insert

begin delete

33 10(m)

end delete

11begin insert(l)end insert The fee for approval of a continuing education course or
12program shall bebegin delete one hundred dollars ($100).end deletebegin insert two hundred fifty
13dollars ($250).end insert

14

1499.6.  

The fees in this chapter shall be fixed by the board in
15accordance with Section 313.1.begin insert The fees shall not exceed the
16reasonable regulatory cost.end insert

17

1499.7.  

(a) Certificates to practice podiatric medicine shall
18expire at 12 midnight on the last day of the birth month of the
19licensee during the second year of a two-year term.

20(b) To renew an unexpired certificate, the licensee, on or before
21the date on which the certificate would otherwise expire, shall
22apply for renewal on a form prescribed by the board and pay the
23prescribed renewal fee.

24

1499.8.  

Any licensee who demonstrates to the satisfaction of
25the board that he or she is unable to practice podiatric medicine
26due to a disability may request a waiver of the license renewal fee.
27The granting of a waiver shall be at the discretion of the board and
28may be terminated at any time. Waivers shall be based on the
29inability of a licensee to practice podiatric medicine. A licensee
30whose renewal fee has been waived pursuant to this section shall
31not engage in the practice of podiatric medicine unless and until
32the licensee pays the current renewal fee and does either of the
33following:

34(a) Establishes to the satisfaction of the board, on a form
35prescribed by the board and signed under penalty of perjury, that
36the licensee’s disability either no longer exists or does not affect
37his or her ability to practice podiatric medicine safely.

38(b) Signs an agreement on a form prescribed by the board, signed
39under penalty of perjury, in which the licensee agrees to limit his
40or her practice in the manner prescribed by the reviewing physician.

P46   1begin insert

begin insertSEC. 15.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 1944 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
2
begin insert is amended to read:end insert

3

1944.  

(a) The committee shall establish by resolution the
4amount of the fees that relate to the licensing of a registered dental
5hygienist, a registered dental hygienist in alternative practice, and
6a registered dental hygienist in extended functions. The fees
7established by board resolution in effect on June 30, 2009, as they
8relate to the licensure of registered dental hygienists, registered
9dental hygienists in alternative practice, and registered dental
10hygienists in extended functions, shall remain in effect until
11modified by the committee. The fees are subject to the following
12limitations:

13(1) The application fee for an original license and the fee for
14issuance of an original license shall not exceed two hundred fifty
15dollars ($250).

16(2) The fee for examination for licensure as a registered dental
17hygienist shall not exceed the actual cost of the examination.

18(3) The fee for examination for licensure as a registered dental
19hygienist in extended functions shall not exceed the actual cost of
20the examination.

21(4) The fee for examination for licensure as a registered dental
22hygienist in alternative practice shall not exceed the actual cost of
23administering the examination.

24(5) The biennial renewal fee shall not exceedbegin delete one hundred sixty
25dollars ($160).end delete
begin insert five hundred dollars ($500).end insert

26(6) The delinquency fee shall not exceed one-half of the renewal
27fee. Any delinquent license may be restored only upon payment
28of all fees, including the delinquency fee, and compliance with all
29other applicable requirements of this article.

30(7) The fee for issuance of a duplicate license to replace one
31that is lost or destroyed, or in the event of a name change, shall
32not exceed twenty-five dollars ($25) or one-half of the renewal
33fee, whichever is greater.

34(8) The fee for certification of licensure shall not exceed one-half
35of the renewal fee.

36(9) The fee for each curriculum review, feasibility study review,
37and site evaluation for educational programs for dental hygienists
38who are not accredited by a committee-approved agency shall not
39exceed two thousand one hundred dollars ($2,100).

P47   1(10) The fee for each review or approval of course requirements
2for licensure or procedures that require additional training shall
3not exceed seven hundred fifty dollars ($750).

4(11) The initial application and biennial fee for a provider of
5continuing education shall not exceed five hundred dollars ($500).

6(12) The amount of fees payable in connection with permits
7issued under Section 1962 is as follows:

8(A) The initial permit fee is an amount equal to the renewal fee
9for the applicant’s license to practice dental hygiene in effect on
10the last regular renewal date before the date on which the permit
11is issued.

12(B) If the permit will expire less than one year after its issuance,
13then the initial permit fee is an amount equal to 50 percent of the
14renewal fee in effect on the last regular renewal date before the
15date on which the permit is issued.

16(b) The renewal and delinquency fees shall be fixed by the
17committee by resolution at not more than the current amount of
18the renewal fee for a license to practice under this article nor less
19than five dollars ($5).

20(c) Fees fixed by the committee by resolution pursuant to this
21section shall not be subject to the approval of the Office of
22Administrative Law.

23(d) Fees collected pursuant to this section shall be collected by
24the committee and deposited into the State Dental Hygiene Fund,
25which is hereby created. All money in this fund shall, upon
26appropriation by the Legislature in the annual Budget Act, be used
27to implement this article.

28(e) No fees or charges other than those listed in this section shall
29be levied by the committee in connection with the licensure of
30registered dental hygienists, registered dental hygienists in
31alternative practice, or registered dental hygienists in extended
32functions.

33(f) The fee for registration of an extramural dental facility shall
34not exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250).

35(g) The fee for registration of a mobile dental hygiene unit shall
36not exceed one hundred fifty dollars ($150).

37(h) The biennial renewal fee for a mobile dental hygiene unit
38shall not exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250).

39(i) The fee for an additional office permit shall not exceed two
40 hundred fifty dollars ($250).

P48   1(j) The biennial renewal fee for an additional office as described
2in Section 1926.4 shall not exceed two hundred fifty dollars ($250).

3(k) The initial application and biennial special permit fee is an
4amount equal to the biennial renewal fee specified in paragraph
5(6) of subdivision (a).

6(l) The fees in this section shall not exceed an amount sufficient
7to cover the reasonable regulatory cost of carrying out this article.

8

begin deleteSEC. 15.end delete
9
begin insertSEC. 16.end insert  

Section 2052.5 of the Business and Professions Code
10 is amended to read:

11

2052.5.  

(a) The proposed registration program developed
12pursuant to subdivision (b) shall provide that, for purposes of the
13proposed registration program:

14(1) A physician and surgeon practices medicine in this state
15across state lines when that person is located outside of this state
16but, through the use of any medium, including an electronic
17medium, practices or attempts to practice, or advertises or holds
18himself or herself out as practicing, any system or mode of treating
19the sick or afflicted in this state, or diagnoses, treats, operates for,
20or prescribes for any ailment, blemish, deformity, disease,
21disfigurement, disorder, injury, or other physical or mental
22condition of any person in this state.

23(2) A doctor of podiatric medicine practices podiatric medicine
24in this state across state lines when that person is located outside
25of this state but, through the use of any medium, including an
26electronic medium, practices or attempts to practice podiatric
27medicine, as defined in Section 1472, in this state.

28(3) The proposed registration program shall not apply to any
29consultation described in Section 2060.

30(b) The board may, at its discretion, develop a proposed
31registration program to permit a physician and surgeon, or a doctor
32of podiatric medicine, located outside this state to register with
33the board to practice medicine or podiatric medicine in this state
34across state lines.

35(1) The proposed registration program shall include proposed
36requirements for registration, including, but not limited to, licensure
37in the state or country where the physician and surgeon, or the
38doctor of podiatric medicine, resides, and education and training
39requirements.

P49   1(2) The proposed registration program may also include all of
2the following: (A) standards for confidentiality, format, and
3retention of medical records, (B) access to medical records by the
4board, (C) registration fees, renewal fees, delinquency fees, and
5replacement document fees in an amount not to exceed the actual
6cost of administering the registration program, and (D) provisions
7ensuring that enforcement and consumer education shall be integral
8parts of administering the registration program.

9(3) The proposed registration program may also provide all of
10the following:

11(A) All laws, rules, and regulations that govern the practice of
12medicine or podiatric medicine in this state, including, but not
13limited to, confidentiality and reporting requirements, shall apply
14to a physician and surgeon, or a doctor of podiatric medicine, who
15is registered by the board to practice medicine or podiatric medicine
16in this state across state lines.

17(B) The board may deny an application for registration or may
18suspend, revoke, or otherwise discipline a registrant for any of the
19following: (i) on any ground prescribed by this chapter, (ii) failure
20to possess or to maintain a valid license in the state where the
21registrant resides, or (iii) if the applicant or registrant is not licensed
22by the state or country in which he or she resides, and that state or
23country prohibits the practice of medicine or podiatric medicine
24from that state or country into any other state or country without
25a valid registration or license issued by the state or country in
26which the applicant or registrant practices. Action to deny or
27discipline a registrant shall be taken in the manner provided for in
28this chapter.

29(C) Any of the following shall be grounds for discipline of a
30registrant: (i) to allow any person to engage in the practice of
31medicine or podiatric medicine in this state across state lines under
32his or her registration, including, but not limited to, any nurse,
33physician assistant, medical assistant, or other person, (ii) to fail
34to include his or her registration number on any invoice or other
35type of billing statement submitted for care or treatment provided
36to a patient located in this state, (iii) to practice medicine or
37podiatric medicine in any other state or country without meeting
38the legal requirements to practice medicine or podiatric medicine
39in that state or country, or (iv) to fail to notify the board, in a
P50   1manner prescribed by the board, of any restrictions placed on his
2or her medical license, or podiatric medical license, in any state.

3(D) A registration issued pursuant to the registration program
4shall automatically be suspended upon receipt of a copy, from the
5state that issued the license, of the surrender, revocation,
6suspension, or other similar type of action taken by another state
7or country against a medical license, or podiatric medical license,
8issued to a registrant. The board shall notify the registrant in writing
9of the suspension and of the registrant’s right to a hearing.

10(4) Section 2314 shall not apply to the registration program.

11(c) This section shall not be construed to authorize the board to
12implement a registration program for physicians and surgeons or
13doctors of podiatric medicine located outside this state. This section
14is intended to authorize the board to develop a proposed registration
15program to be authorized for implementation by future legislation.

16(d) For purposes of this section, “board” refers to either the
17Medical Board of California or the California Board of Podiatric
18Medicine, as applicable.

19

begin deleteSEC. 16.end delete
20
begin insertSEC. 17.end insert  

Section 2423 of the Business and Professions Code
21 is amended to read:

22

2423.  

(a) Notwithstanding Section 2422:

23(1) All physician and surgeon’sbegin delete certificatesend deletebegin insert certificates,
24registrations of spectacle lens dispensers and contact lens
25dispensers,end insert
and certificates to practice midwifery shall expire at
2612 midnight on the last day of the birth month of the licensee
27during the second year of a two-year term if not renewed.

28(2) Registrations of dispensing opticians will expire at midnight
29on the last day of the month in which the license was issued during
30the second year of a two-year term if not renewed.

31(b) The board shall establish by regulation procedures for the
32administration of a birth date renewal program, including, but not
33limited to, the establishment of a system of staggered license
34expiration dates such that a relatively equal number of licenses
35expire monthly.

36(c) To renew an unexpired license, the licensee shall, on or
37before the dates on which it would otherwise expire, apply for
38renewal on a form prescribed by the licensing authority and pay
39the prescribed renewal fee.

P51   1

begin deleteSEC. 17.end delete
2
begin insertSEC. 18.end insert  

Article 22 (commencing with Section 2460) of
3Chapter 5 of Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code is
4repealed.

5begin insert

begin insertSEC. 19.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 2546.9 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
6
begin insert is repealed.end insert

begin delete
7

2546.9.  

The amount of fees prescribed in connection with the
8registration of nonresident contact lens sellers is that established
9by the following schedule:

10(a) The initial registration fee shall be one hundred dollars
11($100).

12(b) The renewal fee shall be one hundred dollars ($100).

13(c) The delinquency fee shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

14(d) The fee for replacement of a lost, stolen, or destroyed
15registration shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

16(e) The fees collected pursuant to this chapter shall be deposited
17in the Dispensing Opticians Fund, and shall be available, upon
18appropriation, to the State Board of Optometry for the purposes
19of this chapter.

end delete
20begin insert

begin insertSEC. 20.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 2546.9 is added to the end insertbegin insertBusiness and
21Professions Code
end insert
begin insert, to read:end insert

begin insert
22

begin insert2546.9.end insert  

The amount of fees prescribed in connection with the
23registration of nonresident contact lens sellers is that established
24by the following schedule:

25
(a) The application fee for a nonresident contact lens seller
26shall be a minimum of one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and shall
27not exceed two hundred dollars ($200).

28
(b) The initial registration fee shall be a minimum of two
29hundred dollars ($200) and shall not exceed three hundred dollars
30($300).

31
(c) The renewal fee shall be a minimum of two hundred dollars
32($200) and shall not exceed three hundred dollars ($300).

33
(d) The delinquency fee shall be a minimum of fifty dollars ($50)
34and shall not exceed seventy- five dollars ($75).

35
(e) The fee for replacement of a lost, stolen, or destroyed
36registration shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

37
(f) The State Board of Optometry may periodically revise and
38fix by regulation the fees specified in subdivisions (a), (b), (c), and
39(d), and these revised fees shall not exceed the reasonable
40regulatory cost.

P52   1
(g) The fees collected pursuant to this chapter shall be deposited
2in the Dispensing Opticians Fund, and shall be available, upon
3appropriation, to the State Board of Optometry for the purposes
4of this chapter.

end insert
5begin insert

begin insertSEC. 21.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 2565 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
6
begin insert is repealed.end insert

begin delete
7

2565.  

The amount of fees prescribed in connection with the
8registration of dispensing opticians shall be as set forth in this
9section unless a lower fee is fixed by the division:

10(a) The initial registration fee is one hundred dollars ($100).

11(b) The renewal fee is one hundred dollars ($100).

12(c) The delinquency fee is twenty-five dollars ($25).

13(d) The fee for replacement of a lost, stolen, or destroyed
14certificate is twenty-five dollars ($25).

15This section shall become operative on January 1, 1988.

end delete
16begin insert

begin insertSEC. 22.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 2565 is added to the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
17Code
end insert
begin insert, to read:end insert

begin insert
18

begin insert2565.end insert  

The amount of fees prescribed in connection with the
19registration of dispensing opticians shall be as set forth in this
20section.

21
(a) The application fee for registration shall be a minimum of
22one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and shall not exceed two hundred
23dollars ($200).

24
(b) The initial registration fee shall be a minimum of two
25hundred dollars ($200) and shall not exceed three hundred dollars
26($300).

27
(c) The renewal fee shall be a minimum of two hundred dollars
28($200) and shall not exceed three hundred dollars ($300).

29
(d) The delinquency fee shall be a minimum of fifty dollars ($50)
30and shall not exceed seventy-five dollars ($75).

31
(e) The fee for replacement of a lost, stolen, or destroyed
32certificate shall be twenty-five dollars ($25).

33
(f) The State Board of Optometry may periodically revise and
34fix by regulation the fees specified in subdivisions (a), (b), (c), and
35(d), and these revised fees shall not exceed the reasonable
36regulatory cost.

end insert
37begin insert

begin insertSEC. 23.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 2566 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
38
begin insert is repealed.end insert

begin delete
P53   1

2566.  

The amount of fees prescribed in connection with
2certificates for contact lens dispensers, unless a lower fee is fixed
3by the division, is as follows:

4(a) The application fee for a registered contact lens dispenser
5shall be one hundred dollars ($100).

6(b) The biennial fee for the renewal of certificates shall be fixed
7by the division in an amount not to exceed one hundred dollars
8($100).

9(c) The delinquency fee is twenty-five dollars ($25).

10(d) The division may by regulation provide for a refund of a
11portion of the application fee to applicants who do not meet the
12requirements for registration.

13(e) The fee for replacement of a lost, stolen, or destroyed
14certificate is twenty-five dollars ($25).

15This section shall become operative on January 1, 1988.

end delete
16begin insert

begin insertSEC. 24.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 2566 is added to the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions
17Code
end insert
begin insert, to read:end insert

begin insert
18

begin insert2566.end insert  

The amount of fees prescribed in connection with
19certificates for contact lens dispensers is as follows:

20
(a) The application fee for a registered contact lens dispenser
21shall be a minimum of one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and shall
22not exceed two hundred dollars ($200).

23
(b) The initial registration fee shall be a minimum of two
24hundred dollars ($200) and shall not exceed three hundred dollars
25($300).

26
(c) The biennial fee for the renewal of certificates shall be a
27minimum of two hundred dollars ($200) and shall not exceed three
28hundred dollars ($300).

29
(d) The delinquency fee shall be a minimum of fifty dollars ($50)
30and shall not exceed seventy-five dollars ($75).

31
(e) The division may by regulation provide for a refund of a
32portion of the application fee to applicants who do not meet the
33requirements for registration.

34
(f) The State Board of Optometry may periodically revise and
35fix by regulation the fees specified in subdivisions (a), (b), (c), and
36(d), and these revised fees shall not exceed the reasonable
37regulatory cost.

38
(g) The fee for replacement of a lost, stolen, or destroyed
39certificate is twenty-five dollars ($25).

end insert
P54   1begin insert

begin insertSEC. 25.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 2566.1 of the end insertbegin insertBusiness and Professions Codeend insert
2
begin insert is repealed.end insert

begin delete
3

2566.1.  

The amount of fees prescribed in connection with
4certificates for spectacle lens dispensers shall be as set forth in this
5section unless a lower fee is fixed by the division:

6(a) The initial registration fee is one hundred dollars ($100).

7(b) The renewal fee shall be one hundred dollars ($100).

8(c) The delinquency fee is twenty-five dollars ($25).

9(d) The fee for replacement of a lost, stolen or destroyed
10certificate is twenty-five dollars ($25).

end delete
11begin insert

begin insertSEC. 26.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 2566.1 is added to the end insertbegin insertBusiness and
12Professions Code
end insert
begin insert, to read:end insert

begin insert
13

begin insert2566.1.end insert  

The amount of fees prescribed in connection with
14certificates for spectacle lens dispensers shall be as set forth in
15this section:

16
(a) The application for registration fee shall be a minimum of
17one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and shall not exceed two hundred
18dollars ($200).

19
(b) The initial registration fee shall be a minimum of two
20hundred dollars ($200) and shall not exceed three hundred dollars
21($300).

22
(c) The renewal fee shall be a minimum of two hundred dollars
23($200) and shall not exceed three hundred dollars ($300).

24
(d) The delinquency fee shall be a minimum of fifty dollars ($50)
25and shall not exceed seventy-five dollars ($75).

26
(e) The fee for replacement of a lost, stolen or destroyed
27certificate is twenty-five dollars ($25).

28
(f) The State Board of Optometry may periodically revise and
29fix by regulation the fees specified in subdivisions (a), (b), (c), and
30(d), and these revised fees shall not exceed the reasonable
31regulatory cost.

end insert
32

begin deleteSEC. 18.end delete
33
begin insertSEC. 27.end insert  

Section 2733 of the Business and Professions Code
34 is amended to read:

35

2733.  

(a) (1) (A) Upon approval of an application filed
36pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 2732.1, and upon the
37payment of the fee prescribed by subdivision (k) of Section 2815,
38the board may issue a temporary license to practice professional
39nursing, and a temporary certificate to practice as a certified public
40health nurse for a period of six months from the date of issuance.

P55   1(B) Upon approval of an application filed pursuant to
2subdivision (b) of Section 2732.1, and upon the payment of the
3fee prescribed by subdivision (d) of Section 2838.2, the board may
4issue a temporary certificate to practice as a certified clinical nurse
5specialist for a period of six months from the date of issuance.

6(C) Upon approval of an application filed pursuant to
7subdivision (b) of Section 2732.1, and upon the payment of the
8fee prescribed by subdivision (e) of Section 2815.5, the board may
9issue a temporary certificate to practice as a certified nurse-midwife
10for a period of six months from the date of issuance.

11(D) Upon approval of an application filed pursuant to
12subdivision (b) of Section 2732.1, and upon the payment of the
13fee prescribed by subdivision (d) of Section 2830.7, the board may
14issue a temporary certificate to practice as a certified nurse
15anesthetist for a period of six months from the date of issuance.

16(E) Upon approval of an application filed pursuant to subdivision
17(b) of Section 2732.1, and upon the payment of the fee prescribed
18by subdivision (p) of Section 2815, the board may issue a
19 temporary certificate to practice as a certified nurse practitioner
20for a period of six months from the date of issuance.

21(2) A temporary license or temporary certificate shall terminate
22upon notice thereof by certified mail, return receipt requested, if
23it is issued by mistake or if the application for permanent licensure
24is denied.

25(b) Upon written application, the board may reissue a temporary
26license or temporary certificate to any person who has applied for
27a regular renewable license pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section
282732.1 and who, in the judgment of the board has been excusably
29delayed in completing his or her application for or the minimum
30requirements for a regular renewable license, but the board may
31not reissue a temporary license or temporary certificate more than
32twice to any one person.

33

begin deleteSEC. 19.end delete
34
begin insertSEC. 28.end insert  

Section 2746.51 of the Business and Professions Code
35 is amended to read:

36

2746.51.  

(a) Neither this chapter nor any other provision of
37law shall be construed to prohibit a certified nurse-midwife from
38furnishing or ordering drugs or devices, including controlled
39substances classified in Schedule II, III, IV, or V under the
40California Uniform Controlled Substances Act (Division 10
P56   1(commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety Code),
2when all of the following apply:

3(1) The drugs or devices are furnished or ordered incidentally
4to the provision of any of the following:

5(A) Family planning services, as defined in Section 14503 of
6the Welfare and Institutions Code.

7(B) Routine health care or perinatal care, as defined in
8subdivision (d) of Section 123485 of the Health and Safety Code.

9(C) Care rendered, consistent with the certified nurse-midwife’s
10educational preparation or for which clinical competency has been
11established and maintained, to persons within a facility specified
12in subdivision (a), (b), (c), (d), (i), or (j) of Section 1206 of the
13Health and Safety Code, a clinic as specified in Section 1204 of
14the Health and Safety Code, a general acute care hospital as defined
15in subdivision (a) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety Code,
16a licensed birth center as defined in Section 1204.3 of the Health
17and Safety Code, or a special hospital specified as a maternity
18hospital in subdivision (f) of Section 1250 of the Health and Safety
19Code.

20(2) The drugs or devices are furnished or ordered by a certified
21nurse-midwife in accordance with standardized procedures or
22protocols. For purposes of this section, standardized procedure
23means a document, including protocols, developed and approved
24by the supervising physician and surgeon, the certified
25nurse-midwife, and the facility administrator or his or her designee.
26The standardized procedure covering the furnishing or ordering
27of drugs or devices shall specify all of the following:

28(A) Which certified nurse-midwife may furnish or order drugs
29or devices.

30(B) Which drugs or devices may be furnished or ordered and
31under what circumstances.

32(C) The extent of physician and surgeon supervision.

33(D) The method of periodic review of the certified
34nurse-midwife’s competence, including peer review, and review
35of the provisions of the standardized procedure.

36(3) If Schedule II or III controlled substances, as defined in
37Sections 11055 and 11056 of the Health and Safety Code, are
38furnished or ordered by a certified nurse-midwife, the controlled
39substances shall be furnished or ordered in accordance with a
40patient-specific protocol approved by the treating or supervising
P57   1physician and surgeon. For Schedule II controlled substance
2protocols, the provision for furnishing the Schedule II controlled
3substance shall address the diagnosis of the illness, injury, or
4condition for which the Schedule II controlled substance is to be
5furnished.

6(4) The furnishing or ordering of drugs or devices by a certified
7nurse-midwife occurs under physician and surgeon supervision.
8For purposes of this section, no physician and surgeon shall
9supervise more than four certified nurse-midwives at one time.
10Physician and surgeon supervision shall not be construed to require
11the physical presence of the physician, but does include all of the
12following:

13(A) Collaboration on the development of the standardized
14procedure or protocol.

15(B) Approval of the standardized procedure or protocol.

16(C) Availability by telephonic contact at the time of patient
17examination by the certified nurse-midwife.

18(b) (1) The furnishing or ordering of drugs or devices by a
19certified nurse-midwife is conditional on the issuance by the board
20of a number to the applicant who has successfully completed the
21requirements of paragraph (2). The number shall be included on
22all transmittals of orders for drugs or devices by the certified
23nurse-midwife. The board shall maintain a list of the certified
24nurse-midwives that it has certified pursuant to this paragraph and
25the number it has issued to each one. The board shall make the list
26available to the California State Board of Pharmacy upon its
27request. Every certified nurse-midwife who is authorized pursuant
28to this section to furnish or issue a drug order for a controlled
29substance shall register with the United States Drug Enforcement
30Administration.

31(2) The board has certified in accordance with paragraph (1)
32that the certified nurse-midwife has satisfactorily completed a
33course in pharmacology covering the drugs or devices to be
34furnished or ordered under this section. The board shall establish
35the requirements for satisfactory completion of this paragraph.
36The board may charge the applicant a fee to cover all necessary
37costs to implement this section, that shall be not less than four
38hundred dollars ($400) nor more than one thousand five hundred
39dollars ($1,500) for an initial application, nor less than one hundred
40fifty dollars ($150) nor more than one thousand dollars ($1,000)
P58   1for an application for renewal. The board may charge a penalty
2fee for failure to renew a furnishing number within the prescribed
3time that shall be not less than seventy-five dollars ($75) nor more
4than five hundred dollars ($500).

5(3) A physician and surgeon may determine the extent of
6supervision necessary pursuant to this section in the furnishing or
7ordering of drugs and devices.

8(4) A copy of the standardized procedure or protocol relating
9to the furnishing or ordering of controlled substances by a certified
10nurse-midwife shall be provided upon request to any licensed
11pharmacist who is uncertain of the authority of the certified
12nurse-midwife to perform these functions.

13(5) Certified nurse-midwives who are certified by the board and
14hold an active furnishing number, who are currently authorized
15through standardized procedures or protocols to furnish Schedule
16II controlled substances, and who are registered with the United
17 States Drug Enforcement Administration shall provide
18documentation of continuing education specific to the use of
19Schedule II controlled substances in settings other than a hospital
20based on standards developed by the board.

21(c) Drugs or devices furnished or ordered by a certified
22nurse-midwife may include Schedule II controlled substances
23under the California Uniform Controlled Substances Act (Division
2410 (commencing with Section 11000) of the Health and Safety
25Code) under the following conditions:

26(1) The drugs and devices are furnished or ordered in accordance
27with requirements referenced in paragraphs (2) to (4), inclusive,
28of subdivision (a) and in paragraphs (1) to (3), inclusive, of
29 subdivision (b).

30(2) When Schedule II controlled substances, as defined in
31Section 11055 of the Health and Safety Code, are furnished or
32ordered by a certified nurse-midwife, the controlled substances
33shall be furnished or ordered in accordance with a patient-specific
34protocol approved by the treating or supervising physician and
35surgeon.

36(d) Furnishing of drugs or devices by a certified nurse-midwife
37means the act of making a pharmaceutical agent or agents available
38to the patient in strict accordance with a standardized procedure
39or protocol. Use of the term “furnishing” in this section shall
40include the following:

P59   1(1) The ordering of a drug or device in accordance with the
2standardized procedure or protocol.

3(2) Transmitting an order of a supervising physician and
4surgeon.

5(e) “Drug order” or “order” for purposes of this section means
6an order for medication or for a drug or device that is dispensed
7to or for an ultimate user, issued by a certified nurse-midwife as
8an individual practitioner, within the meaning of Section 1306.03
9of Title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Notwithstanding
10any other provision of law, (1) a drug order issued pursuant to this
11section shall be treated in the same manner as a prescription of the
12supervising physician; (2) all references to “prescription” in this
13code and the Health and Safety Code shall include drug orders
14issued by certified nurse-midwives; and (3) the signature of a
15certified nurse-midwife on a drug order issued in accordance with
16this section shall be deemed to be the signature of a prescriber for
17purposes of this code and the Health and Safety Code.

18

begin deleteSEC. 20.end delete
19
begin insertSEC. 29.end insert  

Section 2786.5 of the Business and Professions Code
20 is amended to read:

21

2786.5.  

(a) An institution of higher education or a private
22postsecondary school of nursing approved by the board pursuant
23to subdivision (b) of Section 2786 shall remit to the board for
24deposit in the Board of Registered Nursing Fund the following
25fees, in accordance with the following schedule:

26(1) The fee for approval of a school of nursing shall be fixed
27by the board at not less than forty thousand dollars ($40,000) nor
28more than eighty thousand dollars ($80,000).

29(2) The fee for continuing approval of a nursing program
30established after January 1, 2013, shall be fixed by the board at
31not less than fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) nor more than
32thirty thousand dollars ($30,000).

33(3) The processing fee for authorization of a substantive change
34to an approval of a school of nursing shall be fixed by the board
35at not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) nor
36more than five thousand dollars ($5,000).

37(b) If the board determines that the annual cost of providing
38oversight and review of a school of nursing, as required by this
39article, is less than the amount of any fees required to be paid by
40that institution pursuant to this article, the board may decrease the
P60   1fees applicable to that institution to an amount that is proportional
2to the board’s costs associated with that institution.

3

begin deleteSEC. 21.end delete
4
begin insertSEC. 30.end insert  

Section 2811 of the Business and Professions Code
5 is amended to read:

6

2811.  

(a) Each person holding a regular renewable license
7under this chapter, whether in an active or inactive status, shall
8apply for a renewal of his or her license and pay the biennial
9renewal fee required by this chapter each two years on or before
10the last day of the month following the month in which his or her
11birthday occurs, beginning with the second birthday following the
12date on which the license was issued, whereupon the board shall
13renew the license.

14(b) Each such license not renewed in accordance with this
15section shall expire but may within a period of eight years
16thereafter be reinstated upon payment of the fee required by this
17chapter and upon submission of such proof of the applicant’s
18qualifications as may be required by the board, except that during
19such eight-year period no examination shall be required as a
20condition for the reinstatement of any such expired license which
21has lapsed solely by reason of nonpayment of the renewal fee.
22After the expiration of such eight-year period the board may require
23as a condition of reinstatement that the applicant pass such
24examination as it deems necessary to determine his present fitness
25to resume the practice of professional nursing.

26(c) A license in an inactive status may be restored to an active
27status if the licensee meets the continuing education standards of
28Section 2811.5.

29

begin deleteSEC. 22.end delete
30
begin insertSEC. 31.end insert  

Section 2811.5 of the Business and Professions Code
31 is amended to read:

32

2811.5.  

(a) Each person renewing his or her license under
33Section 2811 shall submit proof satisfactory to the board that,
34during the preceding two-year period, he or she has been informed
35of the developments in the registered nurse field or in any special
36area of practice engaged in by the licensee, occurring since the
37last renewal thereof, either by pursuing a course or courses of
38continuing education in the registered nurse field or relevant to
39the practice of the licensee, and approved by the board, or by other
40means deemed equivalent by the board.

P61   1(b) For purposes of this section, the board shall, by regulation,
2establish standards for continuing education. The standards shall
3be established in a manner to ensure that a variety of alternative
4forms of continuing education are available to licensees, including,
5but not limited to, academic studies, in-service education, institutes,
6seminars, lectures, conferences, workshops, extension studies, and
7home study programs. The standards shall take cognizance of
8specialized areas of practice, and content shall be relevant to the
9practice of nursing and shall be related to the scientific knowledge
10or technical skills required for the practice of nursing or be related
11to direct or indirect patient or client care. The continuing education
12standards established by the board shall not exceed 30 hours of
13direct participation in a course or courses approved by the board,
14or its equivalent in the units of measure adopted by the board.

15(c) The board shall audit continuing education providers at least
16once every five years to ensure adherence to regulatory
17requirements, and shall withhold or rescind approval from any
18provider that is in violation of the regulatory requirements.

19(d) The board shall encourage continuing education in spousal
20or partner abuse detection and treatment. In the event the board
21establishes a requirement for continuing education coursework in
22spousal or partner abuse detection or treatment, that requirement
23shall be met by each licensee within no more than four years from
24the date the requirement is imposed.

25(e) In establishing standards for continuing education, the board
26shall consider including a course in the special care needs of
27individuals and their families facing end-of-life issues, including,
28but not limited to, all of the following:

29(1) Pain and symptom management.

30(2) The psycho-social dynamics of death.

31(3) Dying and bereavement.

32(4) Hospice care.

33(f) In establishing standards for continuing education, the board
34may include a course on pain management.

35(g) This section shall not apply to licensees during the first two
36years immediately following their initial licensure in California
37or any other governmental jurisdiction.

38(h) The board may, in accordance with the intent of this section,
39make exceptions from continuing education requirements for
P62   1licensees residing in another state or country, or for reasons of
2health, military service, or other good cause.

3

begin deleteSEC. 23.end delete
4
begin insertSEC. 32.end insert  

Section 2815 of the Business and Professions Code
5 is amended to read:

6

2815.  

Subject to the provisions of Section 128.5, the amount
7of the fees prescribed by this chapter in connection with the
8issuance of licenses for registered nurses under its provisions is
9that fixed by the following schedule:

10(a) (1) The fee to be paid upon the filing by a graduate of an
11approved school of nursing in this state of an application for a
12licensure by examination shall be fixed by the board at not less
13than three hundred dollars ($300) nor more than one thousand
14dollars ($1,000).

15(2) The fee to be paid upon the filing by a graduate of a school
16of nursing in another state, district, or territory of the United States
17of an application for a licensure by examination shall be fixed by
18the board at not less than three hundred fifty dollars ($350) nor
19more than one thousand dollars ($1,000).

20(3) The fee to be paid upon the filing by a graduate of a school
21of nursing in another country of an application for a licensure by
22examination shall be fixed by the board at not less than seven
23hundred fifty dollars ($750) nor more than one thousand five
24hundred dollars ($1,500).

25(4) The fee to be paid upon the filing of an application for
26licensure by a repeat examination shall be fixed by the board at
27not less than two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and not more than
28one thousand dollars ($1,000).

29(b) The fee to be paid for taking each examination shall be the
30actual cost to purchase an examination from a vendor approved
31by the board.

32(c) (1) The fee to be paid for application by a person who is
33licensed or registered as a nurse in another state, district, or territory
34of the United States for licensure by endorsement shall be fixed
35by the board at not less than three hundred fifty dollars ($350) nor
36more than one thousand dollars ($1,000).

37(2) The fee to be paid for application by a person who is licensed
38or registered as a nurse in another country for licensure by
39endorsement shall be fixed by the board at not less than seven
P63   1hundred fifty dollars ($750) nor more than one thousand five
2hundred dollars ($1,500).

3(d) (1) The biennial fee to be paid upon the filing of an
4application for renewal of the license shall be not less than one
5hundred eighty dollars ($180) nor more than seven hundred fifty
6dollars ($750). In addition, an assessment of ten dollars ($10) shall
7be collected and credited to the Registered Nurse Education Fund,
8pursuant to Section 2815.1.

9(2) The fee to be paid upon the filing of an application for
10reinstatement pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 2811 shall be
11not less than three hundred fifty dollars ($350) nor more than one
12thousand dollars ($1,000).

13(e) The penalty fee for failure to renew a license within the
14prescribed time shall be fixed by the board at not more than 50
15percent of the regular renewal fee, but not less than ninety dollars
16($90) nor more than three hundred seventy-five dollars ($375).

17(f) The fee to be paid for approval of a continuing education
18provider shall be fixed by the board at not less than five hundred
19dollars ($500) nor more than one thousand dollars ($1,000).

20(g) The biennial fee to be paid upon the filing of an application
21for renewal of provider approval shall be fixed by the board at not
22less than seven hundred fifty dollars ($750) nor more than one
23thousand dollars ($1,000).

24(h) The penalty fee for failure to renew provider approval within
25the prescribed time shall be fixed at not more than 50 percent of
26the regular renewal fee, but not less than one hundred twenty-five
27dollars ($125) nor more than five hundred dollars ($500).

28(i) The penalty for submitting insufficient funds or fictitious
29check, draft or order on any bank or depository for payment of
30any fee to the board shall be fixed at not less than fifteen dollars
31($15) nor more than thirty dollars ($30).

32(j) The fee to be paid for an interim permit shall be fixed by the
33board at not less than one hundred dollars ($100) nor more than
34two hundred fifty dollars ($250).

35(k) The fee to be paid for a temporary license shall be fixed by
36the board at not less than one hundred dollars ($100) nor more
37than two hundred fifty dollars ($250).

38(l) The fee to be paid for processing endorsement papers to other
39states shall be fixed by the board at not less than one hundred
40dollars ($100) nor more than two hundred dollars ($200).

P64   1(m) The fee to be paid for a certified copy of a school transcript
2shall be fixed by the board at not less than fifty dollars ($50) nor
3more than one hundred dollars ($100).

4(n) (1) The fee to be paid for a duplicate pocket license shall
5be fixed by the board at not less than fifty dollars ($50) nor more
6than seventy-five dollars ($75).

7(2) The fee to be paid for a duplicate wall certificate shall be
8fixed by the board at not less than sixty dollars ($60) nor more
9than one hundred dollars ($100).

10(o) (1) The fee to be paid by a registered nurse for an evaluation
11of his or her qualifications to use the title “nurse practitioner” shall
12be fixed by the board at not less than five hundred dollars ($500)
13nor more than one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500).

14(2) The fee to be paid by a registered nurse for a temporary
15certificate to practice as a nurse practitioner shall be fixed by the
16board at not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) nor more
17than five hundred dollars ($500).

18(3) The fee to be paid upon the filing of an application for
19renewal of a certificate to practice as a nurse practitioner shall be
20not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) nor more than one
21thousand dollars ($1,000).

22(4) The penalty fee for failure to renew a certificate to practice
23as a nurse practitioner within the prescribed time shall be not less
24than seventy-five dollars ($75) nor more than five hundred dollars
25($500).

26(p) The fee to be paid by a registered nurse for listing as a
27“psychiatric mental health nurse” shall be fixed by the board at
28not less than three hundred fifty dollars ($350) nor more than seven
29hundred fifty dollars ($750).

30(q) The fee to be paid for duplicate National Council Licensure
31Examination for registered nurses (NCLEX-RN) examination
32results shall be not less than sixty dollars ($60) nor more than one
33hundred dollars ($100).

34(r) The fee to be paid for a letter certifying a license shall be
35not less than twenty dollars ($20) nor more than thirty dollars
36($30).

37No further fee shall be required for a license or a renewal thereof
38other than as prescribed by this chapter.

P65   1

begin deleteSEC. 24.end delete
2
begin insertSEC. 33.end insert  

Section 2815.5 of the Business and Professions Code
3 is amended to read:

4

2815.5.  

The amount of the fees prescribed by this chapter in
5connection with the issuance of certificates as nurse-midwives is
6that fixed by the following schedule:

7(a) The fee to be paid upon the filing of an application for a
8certificate shall be fixed by the board at not less than five hundred
9dollars ($500) nor more than one thousand five hundred dollars
10($1,500).

11(b) The biennial fee to be paid upon the application for a renewal
12of a certificate shall be fixed by the board at not less than one
13hundred fifty dollars ($150) nor more than one thousand dollars
14($1,000).

15(c) The penalty fee for failure to renew a certificate within the
16prescribed time shall be 50 percent of the renewal fee in effect on
17the date of the renewal of the license, but not less than seventy-five
18dollars ($75) nor more than five hundred dollars ($500).

19(d) The fee to be paid upon the filing of an application for the
20nurse-midwife equivalency examination shall be fixed by the board
21at not less than one hundred dollars ($100) nor more than two
22hundred dollars ($200).

23(e) The fee to be paid for a temporary certificate shall be fixed
24by the board at not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) nor
25more than five hundred dollars ($500).

26

begin deleteSEC. 25.end delete
27
begin insertSEC. 34.end insert  

Section 2816 of the Business and Professions Code
28 is amended to read:

29

2816.  

The nonrefundable fee to be paid by a registered nurse
30for an evaluation of his or her qualifications to use the title “public
31health nurse” shall be equal to the fees set out in subdivision (o)
32of Section 2815. The fee to be paid upon the application for
33renewal of the certificate to practice as a public health nurse shall
34be fixed by the board at not less than one hundred twenty-five
35dollars ($125) and not more than five hundred dollars ($500). All
36fees payable under this section shall be collected by and paid to
37the Registered Nursing Fund. It is the intention of the Legislature
38that the costs of carrying out the purposes of this article shall be
39covered by the revenue collected pursuant to this section.

P66   1

begin deleteSEC. 26.end delete
2
begin insertSEC. 35.end insert  

Section 2830.7 of the Business and Professions Code
3 is amended to read:

4

2830.7.  

The amount of the fees prescribed by this chapter in
5connection with the issuance of certificates as nurse anesthetists
6is that fixed by the following schedule:

7(a) The fee to be paid upon the filing of an application for a
8certificate shall be fixed by the board at not less than five hundred
9dollars ($500) nor more than one thousand five hundred dollars
10($1,500).

11(b) The biennial fee to be paid upon the application for a renewal
12of a certificate shall be fixed by the board at not less than one
13hundred fifty dollars ($150) nor more than one thousand dollars
14 ($1,000).

15(c) The penalty fee for failure to renew a certificate within the
16prescribed time shall be 50 percent of the renewal fee in effect on
17the date of the renewal of the license, but not less than seventy-five
18dollars ($75) nor more than five hundred dollars ($500).

19(d) The fee to be paid for a temporary certificate shall be fixed
20by the board at not less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) nor
21more than five hundred dollars ($500).

22

begin deleteSEC. 27.end delete
23
begin insertSEC. 36.end insert  

Section 2836.3 of the Business and Professions Code
24 is amended to read:

25

2836.3.  

(a) The furnishing of drugs or devices by nurse
26practitioners is conditional on issuance by the board of a number
27to the nurse applicant who has successfully completed the
28requirements of subdivision (g) of Section 2836.1. The number
29shall be included on all transmittals of orders for drugs or devices
30by the nurse practitioner. The board shall make the list of numbers
31issued available to the Board of Pharmacy. The board may charge
32the applicant a fee to cover all necessary costs to implement this
33section, that shall be not less than four hundred dollars ($400) nor
34more than one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500) for an initial
35application, nor less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150) nor more
36than one thousand dollars ($1,000) for an application for renewal.
37The board may charge a penalty fee for failure to renew a
38furnishing number within the prescribed time that shall be not less
39than seventy-five dollars ($75) nor more than five hundred dollars
40($500).

P67   1(b) The number shall be renewable at the time of the applicant’s
2registered nurse license renewal.

3(c) The board may revoke, suspend, or deny issuance of the
4numbers for incompetence or gross negligence in the performance
5of functions specified in Sections 2836.1 and 2836.2.

6

begin deleteSEC. 28.end delete
7
begin insertSEC. 37.end insert  

Section 2838.2 of the Business and Professions Code
8 is amended to read:

9

2838.2.  

(a) A clinical nurse specialist is a registered nurse with
10advanced education, who participates in expert clinical practice,
11education, research, consultation, and clinical leadership as the
12major components of his or her role.

13(b) The board may establish categories of clinical nurse
14specialists and the standards required to be met for nurses to hold
15themselves out as clinical nurse specialists in each category. The
16standards shall take into account the types of advanced levels of
17nursing practice that are or may be performed and the clinical and
18didactic education, experience, or both needed to practice safety
19at those levels. In setting the standards, the board shall consult
20with clinical nurse specialists, physicians and surgeons appointed
21by the Medical Board with expertise with clinical nurse specialists,
22and health care organizations that utilize clinical nurse specialists.

23(c) A registered nurse who meets one of the following
24requirements may apply to become a clinical nurse specialist:

25(1) Possession of a master’s degree in a clinical field of nursing.

26(2) Possession of a master’s degree in a clinical field related to
27nursing with coursework in the components referred to in
28subdivision (a).

29(3) On or before July 1, 1998, meets the following requirements:

30(A) Current licensure as a registered nurse.

31(B) Performs the role of a clinical nurse specialist as described
32in subdivision (a).

33(C) Meets any other criteria established by the board.

34(d) (1) A nonrefundable fee of not less than five hundred dollars
35($500), but not to exceed one thousand five hundred dollars
36($1,500) shall be paid by a registered nurse applying to be a clinical
37nurse specialist for the evaluation of his or her qualifications to
38use the title “clinical nurse specialist.”

P68   1(2) The fee to be paid for a temporary certificate to practice as
2a clinical nurse specialist shall be not less than thirty dollars ($30)
3nor more than fifty dollars ($50).

4(3) A biennial renewal fee shall be paid upon submission of an
5application to renew the clinical nurse specialist certificate and
6shall be established by the board at no less than one hundred fifty
7dollars ($150) and no more than one thousand dollars ($1,000).

8(4) The penalty fee for failure to renew a certificate within the
9prescribed time shall be 50 percent of the renewal fee in effect on
10the date of the renewal of the license, but not less than seventy-five
11dollars ($75) nor more than five hundred dollars ($500).

12(5) The fees authorized by this subdivision shall not exceed the
13amount necessary to cover the costs to the board to administer this
14section.

15

begin deleteSEC. 29.end delete
16
begin insertSEC. 38.end insert  

Section 4128.2 of the Business and Professions Code
17 is amended to read:

18

4128.2.  

(a) In addition to the pharmacy license requirement
19described in Section 4110, a centralized hospital packaging
20pharmacy shall obtain a specialty license from the board prior to
21engaging in the functions described in Section 4128.

22(b) An applicant seeking a specialty license pursuant to this
23article shall apply to the board on forms established by the board.

24(c) Before issuing the specialty license, the board shall inspect
25the pharmacy and ensure that the pharmacy is in compliance with
26this article and regulations established by the board.

27(d) A license to perform the functions described in Section 4128
28may only be issued to a pharmacy that is licensed by the board as
29a hospital pharmacy.

30(e) A license issued pursuant to this article shall be renewed
31annually and is not transferrable.

32(f) An applicant seeking renewal of a specialty license shall
33apply to the board on forms established by the board.

34(g) A license to perform the functions described in Section 4128
35shall not be renewed until the pharmacy has been inspected by the
36board and found to be in compliance with this article and
37regulations established by the board.

38(h) Until July 1, 2017, the fee for issuance or annual renewal
39of a centralized hospital packaging pharmacy license shall be six
P69   1hundred dollars ($600) and may be increased by the board to eight
2hundred dollars ($800).

3

begin deleteSEC. 30.end delete
4
begin insertSEC. 39.end insert  

Section 4170 of the Business and Professions Code
5 is amended to read:

6

4170.  

(a) No prescriber shall dispense drugs or dangerous
7devices to patients in his or her office or place of practice unless
8all of the following conditions are met:

9(1) The dangerous drugs or dangerous devices are dispensed to
10the prescriber’s own patient, and the drugs or dangerous devices
11are not furnished by a nurse or physician attendant.

12(2) The dangerous drugs or dangerous devices are necessary in
13the treatment of the condition for which the prescriber is attending
14the patient.

15(3) The prescriber does not keep a pharmacy, open shop, or
16drugstore, advertised or otherwise, for the retailing of dangerous
17drugs, dangerous devices, or poisons.

18(4) The prescriber fulfills all of the labeling requirements
19imposed upon pharmacists by Section 4076, all of the
20recordkeeping requirements of this chapter, and all of the packaging
21requirements of good pharmaceutical practice, including the use
22of childproof containers.

23(5) The prescriber does not use a dispensing device unless he
24or she personally owns the device and the contents of the device,
25and personally dispenses the dangerous drugs or dangerous devices
26to the patient packaged, labeled, and recorded in accordance with
27paragraph (4).

28(6) The prescriber, prior to dispensing, offers to give a written
29prescription to the patient that the patient may elect to have filled
30by the prescriber or by any pharmacy.

31(7) The prescriber provides the patient with written disclosure
32that the patient has a choice between obtaining the prescription
33from the dispensing prescriber or obtaining the prescription at a
34pharmacy of the patient’s choice.

35(8) A certified nurse-midwife who functions pursuant to a
36standardized procedure or protocol described in Section 2746.51,
37a nurse practitioner who functions pursuant to a standardized
38procedure described in Section 2836.1, or protocol, a physician
39assistant who functions pursuant to Section 3502.1, or a
40naturopathic doctor who functions pursuant to Section 3640.5,
P70   1may hand to a patient of the supervising physician and surgeon a
2properly labeled prescription drug prepackaged by a physician and
3surgeon, a manufacturer as defined in this chapter, or a pharmacist.

4(b) The Medical Board of California, the California Board of
5Podiatric Medicine, the State Board of Optometry, the Bureau of
6Naturopathic Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the
7Osteopathic Medical Board of California, the Board of Registered
8Nursing, the Veterinary Medical Board, and the Physician Assistant
9Committee shall have authority with the California State Board of
10Pharmacy to ensure compliance with this section, and those boards
11are specifically charged with the enforcement of this chapter with
12respect to their respective licensees.

13(c) “Prescriber,” as used in this section, means a person, who
14holds a physician’s and surgeon’s certificate, a license to practice
15optometry, a license to practice naturopathic medicine, a license
16to practice dentistry, a license to practice veterinary medicine, or
17a certificate to practice podiatry, and who is duly registered by the
18Medical Board of California, the California Board of Podiatric
19Medicine, the State Board of Optometry, the Bureau of
20Naturopathic Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the
21Veterinary Medical Board, or the Board of Osteopathic Examiners
22of this state.

23

begin deleteSEC. 31.end delete
24
begin insertSEC. 40.end insert  

Section 4175 of the Business and Professions Code
25 is amended to read:

26

4175.  

(a) The California State Board of Pharmacy shall
27promptly forward to the appropriate licensing entity, including the
28Medical Board of California, the California Board of Podiatric
29Medicine, the Veterinary Medical Board, the Dental Board of
30California, the State Board of Optometry, the Osteopathic Medical
31Board of California, the Board of Registered Nursing, the Bureau
32of Naturopathic Medicine, or the Physician Assistant Committee,
33all complaints received related to dangerous drugs or dangerous
34devices dispensed by a prescriber, certified nurse-midwife, nurse
35practitioner, naturopathic doctor, or physician assistant pursuant
36to Section 4170.

37(b) All complaints involving serious bodily injury due to
38dangerous drugs or dangerous devices dispensed by prescribers,
39certified nurse-midwives, nurse practitioners, naturopathic doctors,
40or physician assistants pursuant to Section 4170 shall be handled
P71   1by the Medical Board of California, the California Board of
2Podiatric Medicine, the Dental Board of California, the State Board
3of Optometry, the Osteopathic Medical Board of California, the
4Bureau of Naturopathic Medicine, the Board of Registered Nursing,
5the Veterinary Medical Board, or the Physician Assistant
6Committee as a case of greatest potential harm to a patient.

7

begin deleteSEC. 32.end delete
8
begin insertSEC. 41.end insert  

Section 4400 of the Business and Professions Code
9 is amended to read:

10

4400.  

The amount of fees and penalties prescribed by this
11chapter, except as otherwise provided, is that fixed by the board
12according to the following schedule:

13(a) The fee for a nongovernmental pharmacy license shall be
14four hundred dollars ($400) and may be increased to five hundred
15twenty dollars ($520). The fee for the issuance of a temporary
16nongovernmental pharmacy permit shall be two hundred fifty
17dollars ($250) and may be increased to three hundred twenty-five
18dollars ($325).

19(b) The fee for a nongovernmental pharmacy license annual
20renewal shall be two hundred fifty dollars ($250) and may be
21increased to three hundred twenty-five dollars ($325).

22(c) The fee for the pharmacist application and examination shall
23be two hundred dollars ($200) and may be increased to two
24hundred sixty dollars ($260).

25(d) The fee for regrading an examination shall be ninety dollars
26($90) and may be increased to one hundred fifteen dollars ($115).
27If an error in grading is found and the applicant passes the
28examination, the regrading fee shall be refunded.

29(e) The fee for a pharmacist license and biennial renewal shall
30be one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and may be increased to one
31hundred ninety-five dollars ($195).

32(f) The fee for a nongovernmental wholesaler or third-party
33logistics provider license and annual renewal shall be seven
34hundred eighty dollars ($780) and may be decreased to no less
35than six hundred dollars ($600). The application fee for any
36additional location after licensure of the first 20 locations shall be
37three hundred dollars ($300) and may be decreased to no less than
38two hundred twenty-five dollars ($225). A temporary license fee
39shall be seven hundred fifteen dollars ($715) and may be decreased
40to no less than five hundred fifty dollars ($550).

P72   1(g) The fee for a hypodermic license and renewal shall be one
2hundred twenty-five dollars ($125) and may be increased to one
3hundred sixty-five dollars ($165).

4(h) (1) The fee for application, investigation, and issuance of
5a license as a designated representative pursuant to Section 4053,
6or as a designated representative-3PL pursuant to Section 4053.1,
7shall be three hundred thirty dollars ($330) and may be decreased
8to no less than two hundred fifty-five dollars ($255).

9(2) The fee for the annual renewal of a license as a designated
10representative or designated representative-3PL shall be one
11hundred ninety-five dollars ($195) and may be decreased to no
12less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150).

13(i) (1) The fee for the application, investigation, and issuance
14of a license as a designated representative for a veterinary
15food-animal drug retailer pursuant to Section 4053 shall be three
16hundred thirty dollars ($330) and may be decreased to no less than
17two hundred fifty-five dollars ($255).

18(2) The fee for the annual renewal of a license as a designated
19representative for a veterinary food-animal drug retailer shall be
20one hundred ninety-five dollars ($195) and may be decreased to
21no less than one hundred fifty dollars ($150).

22(j) (1) The application fee for a nonresident wholesaler or
23third-party logistics provider license issued pursuant to Section
244161 shall be seven hundred eighty dollars ($780) and may be
25decreased to no less than six hundred dollars ($600).

26(2) For nonresident wholesalers or third-party logistics providers
27that have 21 or more facilities operating nationwide the application
28fees for the first 20 locations shall be seven hundred eighty dollars
29($780) and may be decreased to no less than six hundred dollars
30($600). The application fee for any additional location after
31licensure of the first 20 locations shall be three hundred dollars
32($300) and may be decreased to no less than two hundred
33twenty-five dollars ($225). A temporary license fee shall be seven
34hundred fifteen dollars ($715) and may be decreased to no less
35than five hundred fifty dollars ($550).

36(3) The annual renewal fee for a nonresident wholesaler license
37or third-party logistics provider license issued pursuant to Section
384161 shall be seven hundred eighty dollars ($780) and may be
39decreased to no less than six hundred dollars ($600).

P73   1(k) The fee for evaluation of continuing education courses for
2accreditation shall be set by the board at an amount not to exceed
3forty dollars ($40) per course hour.

4(l) The fee for an intern pharmacist license shall be ninety dollars
5($90) and may be increased to one hundred fifteen dollars ($115).
6The fee for transfer of intern hours or verification of licensure to
7another state shall be twenty-five dollars ($25) and may be
8increased to thirty dollars ($30).

9(m) The board may waive or refund the additional fee for the
10issuance of a license where the license is issued less than 45 days
11before the next regular renewal date.

12(n) The fee for the reissuance of any license, or renewal thereof,
13that has been lost or destroyed or reissued due to a name change
14shall be thirty-five dollars ($35) and may be increased to forty-five
15dollars ($45).

16(o) The fee for the reissuance of any license, or renewal thereof,
17that must be reissued because of a change in the information, shall
18be one hundred dollars ($100) and may be increased to one hundred
19thirty dollars ($130).

20(p) It is the intent of the Legislature that, in setting fees pursuant
21to this section, the board shall seek to maintain a reserve in the
22Pharmacy Board Contingent Fund equal to approximately one
23year’s operating expenditures.

24(q) The fee for any applicant for a nongovernmental clinic
25license shall be four hundred dollars ($400) and may be increased
26to five hundred twenty dollars ($520) for each license. The annual
27fee for renewal of the license shall be two hundred fifty dollars
28($250) and may be increased to three hundred twenty-five dollars
29($325) for each license.

30(r) The fee for the issuance of a pharmacy technician license
31shall be eighty dollars ($80) and may be increased to one hundred
32five dollars ($105). The fee for renewal of a pharmacy technician
33license shall be one hundred dollars ($100) and may be increased
34to one hundred thirty dollars ($130).

35(s) The fee for a veterinary food-animal drug retailer license
36shall be four hundred five dollars ($405) and may be increased to
37four hundred twenty-five dollars ($425). The annual renewal fee
38for a veterinary food-animal drug retailer license shall be two
39hundred fifty dollars ($250) and may be increased to three hundred
40twenty-five dollars ($325).

P74   1(t) The fee for issuance of a retired license pursuant to Section
24200.5 shall be thirty-five dollars ($35) and may be increased to
3forty-five dollars ($45).

4(u) The fee for issuance or renewal of a nongovernmental sterile
5compounding pharmacy license shall be six hundred dollars ($600)
6and may be increased to seven hundred eighty dollars ($780). The
7fee for a temporary license shall be five hundred fifty dollars ($550)
8and may be increased to seven hundred fifteen dollars ($715).

9(v) The fee for the issuance or renewal of a nonresident sterile
10compounding pharmacy license shall be seven hundred eighty
11dollars ($780). In addition to paying that application fee, the
12nonresident sterile compounding pharmacy shall deposit, when
13submitting the application, a reasonable amount, as determined by
14the board, necessary to cover the board’s estimated cost of
15performing the inspection required by Section 4127.2. If the
16required deposit is not submitted with the application, the
17application shall be deemed to be incomplete. If the actual cost of
18the inspection exceeds the amount deposited, the board shall
19provide to the applicant a written invoice for the remaining amount
20and shall not take action on the application until the full amount
21has been paid to the board. If the amount deposited exceeds the
22amount of actual and necessary costs incurred, the board shall
23remit the difference to the applicant.

24(w) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2017, and
25as of January 1, 2018, is repealed.

26

begin deleteSEC. 33.end delete
27
begin insertSEC. 42.end insert  

Section 4400 is added to the Business and Professions
28Code
, to read:

29

4400.  

The amount of fees and penalties prescribed by this
30chapter, except as otherwise provided, is that fixed by the board
31according to the following schedule:

32(a) The fee for a nongovernmental pharmacy license shall be
33five hundred twenty dollars ($520) and may be increased to five
34hundred seventy dollars ($570). The fee for the issuance of a
35temporary nongovernmental pharmacy permit shall be two hundred
36fifty dollars ($250) and may be increased to three hundred
37twenty-five dollars ($325).

38(b) The fee for a nongovernmental pharmacy license annual
39renewal shall be six hundred sixty-five dollars ($665) and may be
40increased to nine hundred thirty dollars ($930).

P75   1(c) The fee for the pharmacist application and examination shall
2be two hundred sixty dollars ($260) and may be increased to two
3hundred eighty-five dollars ($285).

4(d) The fee for regrading an examination shall be ninety dollars
5($90) and may be increased to one hundred fifteen dollars ($115).
6If an error in grading is found and the applicant passes the
7examination, the regrading fee shall be refunded.

8(e) The fee for a pharmacist license shall be one hundred
9ninety-five dollars ($195) and may be increased to two hundred
10fifteen dollars ($215). The fee for a pharmacist biennial renewal
11shall be three hundred sixty dollars ($360) and may be increased
12to five hundred five dollars ($505).

13(f) The fee for a nongovernmental wholesaler or third-party
14logistics provider license and annual renewal shall be seven
15hundred eighty dollars ($780) and may be increased to eight
16hundred twenty dollars ($820). The application fee for any
17additional location after licensure of the first 20 locations shall be
18three hundred dollars ($300) and may be decreased to no less than
19two hundred twenty-five dollars ($225). A temporary license fee
20shall be seven hundred fifteen dollars ($715) and may be decreased
21to no less than five hundred fifty dollars ($550).

22(g) The fee for a hypodermic license shall be one hundred
23seventy dollars ($170) and may be increased to two hundred forty
24dollars ($240). The fee for a hypodermic license renewal shall be
25two hundred dollars ($200) and may be increased to two hundred
26eighty dollars ($280).

27(h) (1) The fee for application, investigation, and issuance of
28a license as a designated representative pursuant to Section 4053,
29or as a designated representative-3PL pursuant to Section 4053.1,
30shall be one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and may be increased to
31two hundred ten dollars ($210).

32(2) The fee for the annual renewal of a license as a designated
33representative or designated representative-3PL shall be two
34hundred fifteen dollars ($215) and may be increased to three
35hundred dollars ($300).

36(i) (1) The fee for the application, investigation, and issuance
37of a license as a designated representative for a veterinary
38food-animal drug retailer pursuant to Section 4053 shall be one
39hundred fifty dollars ($150) and may be increased to two hundred
40ten dollars ($210).

P76   1(2) The fee for the annual renewal of a license as a designated
2representative for a veterinary food-animal drug retailer shall be
3 two hundred fifteen dollars ($215) and may be increased to three
4hundred dollars ($300).

5(j) (1) The application fee for a nonresident wholesaler or
6third-party logistics provider license issued pursuant to Section
74161 shall be seven hundred eighty dollars ($780) and may be
8increased to eight hundred twenty dollars ($820).

9(2) For nonresident wholesalers or third-party logistics providers
10that have 21 or more facilities operating nationwide the application
11fees for the first 20 locations shall be seven hundred eighty dollars
12 ($780) and may be increased to eight hundred twenty dollars
13($820). The application fee for any additional location after
14licensure of the first 20 locations shall be three hundred dollars
15($300) and may be decreased to no less than two hundred
16twenty-five dollars ($225). A temporary license fee shall be seven
17hundred fifteen dollars ($715) and may be decreased to no less
18than five hundred fifty dollars ($550).

19(3) The annual renewal fee for a nonresident wholesaler license
20or third-party logistics provider license issued pursuant to Section
214161 shall be seven hundred eighty dollars ($780) and may be
22increased to eight hundred twenty dollars ($820).

23(k) The fee for evaluation of continuing education courses for
24accreditation shall be set by the board at an amount not to exceed
25forty dollars ($40) per course hour.

26(l) The fee for an intern pharmacist license shall be one hundred
27sixty-five dollars ($165) and may be increased to two hundred
28 thirty dollars ($230). The fee for transfer of intern hours or
29verification of licensure to another state shall be twenty-five dollars
30($25) and may be increased to thirty dollars ($30).

31(m) The board may waive or refund the additional fee for the
32issuance of a license where the license is issued less than 45 days
33before the next regular renewal date.

34(n) The fee for the reissuance of any license, or renewal thereof,
35that has been lost or destroyed or reissued due to a name change
36shall be thirty-five dollars ($35) and may be increased to forty-five
37dollars ($45).

38(o) The fee for the reissuance of any license, or renewal thereof,
39that must be reissued because of a change in the information, shall
P77   1be one hundred dollars ($100) and may be increased to one hundred
2thirty dollars ($130).

3(p) It is the intent of the Legislature that, in setting fees pursuant
4to this section, the board shall seek to maintain a reserve in the
5Pharmacy Board Contingent Fund equal to approximately one
6year’s operating expenditures.

7(q) The fee for any applicant for a nongovernmental clinic
8license shall be five hundred twenty dollars ($520) for each license
9and may be increased to five hundred seventy dollars ($570). The
10annual fee for renewal of the license shall be three hundred
11twenty-five dollars ($325) for each license and may be increased
12to three hundred sixty dollars ($360).

13(r) The fee for the issuance of a pharmacy technician license
14shall be one hundred forty dollars ($140) and may be increased to
15one hundred ninety-five dollars ($195). The fee for renewal of a
16pharmacy technician license shall be one hundred forty dollars
17($140) and may be increased to one hundred ninety-five dollars
18($195).

19(s) The fee for a veterinary food-animal drug retailer license
20shall be four hundred thirty-five dollars ($435) and may be
21increased to six hundred ten dollars ($610). The annual renewal
22fee for a veterinary food-animal drug retailer license shall be three
23hundred thirty dollars ($330) and may be increased to four hundred
24sixty dollars ($460).

25(t) The fee for issuance of a retired license pursuant to Section
264200.5 shall be thirty-five dollars ($35) and may be increased to
27forty-five dollars ($45).

28(u) The fee for issuance of a nongovernmental sterile
29compounding pharmacy license shall be one thousand six hundred
30forty-five dollars ($1,645) and may be increased to two thousand
31three hundred five dollars ($2,305). The fee for a temporary license
32shall be five hundred fifty dollars ($550) and may be increased to
33seven hundred fifteen dollars ($715). The annual renewal fee of
34the license shall be one thousand three hundred twenty-five dollars
35($1,325) and may be increased to one thousand eight hundred
36fifty-five dollars ($1,855).

37(v) The fee for the issuance of a nonresident sterile compounding
38pharmacy license shall be two thousand three hundred eighty
39dollars ($2,380) and may be increased to three thousand three
40hundred thirty-five dollars ($3,335). The annual renewal of the
P78   1license shall be two thousand two hundred seventy dollars ($2,270)
2and may be increased to three thousand one hundred eighty dollars
3($3,180). In addition to paying that application fee, the nonresident
4sterile compounding pharmacy shall deposit, when submitting the
5application, a reasonable amount, as determined by the board,
6necessary to cover the board’s estimated cost of performing the
7inspection required by Section 4127.2. If the required deposit is
8not submitted with the application, the application shall be deemed
9to be incomplete. If the actual cost of the inspection exceeds the
10amount deposited, the board shall provide to the applicant a written
11invoice for the remaining amount and shall not take action on the
12application until the full amount has been paid to the board. If the
13amount deposited exceeds the amount of actual and necessary
14costs incurred, the board shall remit the difference to the applicant.

15(w) The fee for the issuance of a centralized hospital packaging
16license shall be eight hundred twenty dollars ($820) and may be
17increased to one thousand one hundred fifty dollars ($1,150). The
18annual renewal of the license shall be eight hundred five dollars
19($805) and may be increased to one thousand one hundred
20twenty-five dollars ($1,125).

21(x) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2017.

22

begin deleteSEC. 34.end delete
23
begin insertSEC. 43.end insert  

Section 4830 of the Business and Professions Code
24 is amended to read:

25

4830.  

(a) This chapter does not apply to:

26(1) Veterinarians while serving in any armed branch of the
27military service of the United States or the United States
28Department of Agriculture while actually engaged and employed
29in their official capacity.

30(2) Veterinarians holding a current, valid license in good
31standing in another state or country who provide assistance to a
32California licensed veterinarian and attend on a specific case. The
33California licensed veterinarian shall maintain a valid
34veterinarian-client-patient relationship. The veterinarian providing
35the assistance shall not establish a veterinarian-client-patient
36relationship with the client by attending the case or at a future time
37and shall not practice veterinary medicine, open an office, appoint
38a place to meet patients, communicate with clients who reside
39within the limits of this state, give orders, or have ultimate authority
P79   1over the care or primary diagnosis of a patient that is located within
2this state.

3(3) Veterinarians called into the state by a law enforcement
4agency or animal control agency pursuant to subdivision (b).

5(4) Veterinarians employed by the University of California
6while engaged in the performance of duties in connection with the
7College of Agriculture, the Agricultural Experiment Station, the
8School of Veterinary Medicine, or the agricultural extension work
9of the university or employed by the Western University of Health
10Sciences while engaged in the performance of duties in connection
11with the College of Veterinary Medicine or the agricultural
12extension work of the university.

13(5) Students in the School of Veterinary Medicine of the
14University of California or the College of Veterinary Medicine of
15the Western University of Health Sciences who participate in
16diagnosis and treatment as part of their educational experience,
17including those in off-campus educational programs under the
18 direct supervision of a licensed veterinarian in good standing, as
19defined in paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 4848,
20appointed by the University of California, Davis, or the Western
21University of Health Sciences.

22(6) A veterinarian who is employed by the Meat and Poultry
23Inspection Branch of the California Department of Food and
24Agriculture while actually engaged and employed in his or her
25official capacity. A person exempt under this paragraph shall not
26otherwise engage in the practice of veterinary medicine unless he
27or she is issued a license by the board.

28(7) Unlicensed personnel employed by the Department of Food
29and Agriculture or the United States Department of Agriculture
30when in the course of their duties they are directed by a veterinarian
31supervisor to conduct an examination, obtain biological specimens,
32apply biological tests, or administer medications or biological
33products as part of government disease or condition monitoring,
34investigation, control, or eradication activities.

35(b) (1) For purposes of paragraph (3) of subdivision (a), a
36regularly licensed veterinarian in good standing who is called from
37another state by a law enforcement agency or animal control
38agency, as defined in Section 31606 of the Food and Agricultural
39Code, to attend to cases that are a part of an investigation of an
40alleged violation of federal or state animal fighting or animal
P80   1cruelty laws within a single geographic location shall be exempt
2from the licensing requirements of this chapter if the law
3enforcement agency or animal control agency determines that it
4is necessary to call the veterinarian in order for the agency or
5officer to conduct the investigation in a timely, efficient, and
6effective manner. In determining whether it is necessary to call a
7veterinarian from another state, consideration shall be given to the
8availability of veterinarians in this state to attend to these cases.
9An agency, department, or officer that calls a veterinarian pursuant
10to this subdivision shall notify the board of the investigation.

11(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, a
12regularly licensed veterinarian in good standing who is called from
13another state to attend to cases that are a part of an investigation
14described in paragraph (1) may provide veterinary medical care
15for animals that are affected by the investigation with a temporary
16shelter facility, and the temporary shelter facility shall be exempt
17from the registration requirement of Section 4853 if all of the
18following conditions are met:

19(A) The temporary shelter facility is established only for the
20purpose of the investigation.

21(B) The temporary shelter facility provides veterinary medical
22care, shelter, food, and water only to animals that are affected by
23the investigation.

24(C) The temporary shelter facility complies with Section 4854.

25(D) The temporary shelter facility exists for not more than 60
26days, unless the law enforcement agency or animal control agency
27determines that a longer period of time is necessary to complete
28the investigation.

29(E) Within 30 calendar days upon completion of the provision
30of veterinary health care services at a temporary shelter facility
31established pursuant to this section, the veterinarian called from
32another state by a law enforcement agency or animal control agency
33to attend to a case shall file a report with the board. The report
34shall contain the date, place, type, and general description of the
35care provided, along with a listing of the veterinary health care
36practitioners who participated in providing that care.

37(c) For purposes of paragraph (3) of subdivision (a), the board
38may inspect temporary facilities established pursuant to this
39section.

P81   1

begin deleteSEC. 35.end delete
2
begin insertSEC. 44.end insert  

Section 4999 of the Business and Professions Code
3 is amended to read:

4

4999.  

“Telephone medical advice service” means any business
5entity that employs, or contracts or subcontracts, directly or
6indirectly, with, the full-time equivalent of five or more persons
7functioning as health care professionals, whose primary function
8is to provide telephone medical advice, that provides telephone
9medical advice services to a patient at a California address.
10“Telephone medical advice service” does not include a medical
11group that operates in multiple locations in California if no more
12than five full-time equivalent persons at any one location perform
13telephone medical advice services and those persons limit the
14telephone medical advice services to patients being treated at that
15 location.

16

begin deleteSEC. 36.end delete
17
begin insertSEC. 45.end insert  

Section 4999.1 of the Business and Professions Code
18 is repealed.

19

begin deleteSEC. 37.end delete
20
begin insertSEC. 46.end insert  

Section 4999.2 of the Business and Professions Code
21 is amended to read:

22

4999.2.  

A telephone medical advice service shall be responsible
23for complying with the following requirements:

24(a) (1) Ensuring that all health care professionals who provide
25medical advice services are appropriately licensed, certified, or
26registered as a physician and surgeon pursuant to Chapter 5
27(commencing with Section 2000) or the Osteopathic Initiative Act,
28as a dentist, dental hygienist, dental hygienist in alternative
29practice, or dental hygienist in extended functions pursuant to
30Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 1600), as an occupational
31therapist pursuant to Chapter 5.6 (commencing with Section 2570),
32as a registered nurse pursuant to Chapter 6 (commencing with
33Section 2700), as a psychologist pursuant to Chapter 6.6
34(commencing with Section 2900), as a naturopathic doctor pursuant
35to Chapter 8.2 (commencing with Section 3610), as a marriage
36and family therapist pursuant to Chapter 13 (commencing with
37Section 4980), as a licensed clinical social worker pursuant to
38Chapter 14 (commencing with Section 4991), as a licensed
39professional clinical counselor pursuant to Chapter 16
40(commencing with Section 4999.10), as an optometrist pursuant
P82   1to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 3000), or as a chiropractor
2pursuant to the Chiropractic Initiative Act, and operating consistent
3with the laws governing their respective scopes of practice in the
4state within which they provide telephone medical advice services,
5except as provided in subdivision (b).

6(2) Ensuring that all health care professionals who provide
7telephone medical advice services from an out-of-state location,
8as identified in paragraph (1), are licensed, registered, or certified
9in the state within which they are providing the telephone medical
10advice services and are operating consistent with the laws
11governing their respective scopes of practice.

12(b) Ensuring that the telephone medical advice provided is
13consistent with good professional practice.

14(c) Maintaining records of telephone medical advice services,
15including records of complaints, provided to patients in California
16for a period of at least five years.

17(d) Ensuring that no staff member uses a title or designation
18when speaking to an enrollee, subscriber, or consumer that may
19cause a reasonable person to believe that the staff member is a
20licensed, certified, or registered health care professional described
21in paragraph (1) of subdivision (a), unless the staff member is a
22licensed, certified, or registered professional.

23(e) Complying with all directions and requests for information
24 made by the department.

25(f) Notifying the department within 30 days of any change of
26name, physical location, mailing address, or telephone number of
27any business, owner, partner, corporate officer, or agent for service
28of process in California, together with copies of all resolutions or
29other written communications that substantiate these changes.

30

begin deleteSEC. 38.end delete
31
begin insertSEC. 47.end insert  

Section 4999.3 of the Business and Professions Code
32 is repealed.

33

begin deleteSEC. 39.end delete
34
begin insertSEC. 48.end insert  

Section 4999.4 of the Business and Professions Code
35 is repealed.

36

begin deleteSEC. 40.end delete
37
begin insertSEC. 49.end insert  

Section 4999.5 of the Business and Professions Code
38 is repealed.

P83   1

begin deleteSEC. 41.end delete
2
begin insertSEC. 50.end insert  

Section 4999.5 is added to the Business and
3Professions Code
, to read:

4

4999.5.  

The respective healing arts licensing boards shall be
5responsible for enforcing this chapter and any other laws and
6regulations affecting California licensed health care professionals
7providing telephone medical advice services.

8

begin deleteSEC. 42.end delete
9
begin insertSEC. 51.end insert  

Section 4999.6 of the Business and Professions Code
10 is repealed.

11

begin deleteSEC. 43.end delete
12
begin insertSEC. 52.end insert  

Section 7137 of the Business and Professions Code
13 is amended to read:

14

7137.  

The board shall set fees by regulation. These fees shall
15not exceed the following schedule:

16(a) The application fee for an original license in a single
17classification shall not be more than three hundred dollars ($300).

18The application fee for each additional classification applied for
19in connection with an original license shall not be more than
20seventy-five dollars ($75).

21The application fee for each additional classification pursuant
22to Section 7059 shall not be more than seventy-five dollars ($75).

23The application fee to replace a responsible managing officer,
24responsible managing manager, responsible managing member,
25or responsible managing employee pursuant to Section 7068.2
26shall not be more than seventy-five dollars ($75).

27(b) The fee for rescheduling an examination for an applicant
28who has applied for an original license, additional classification,
29a change of responsible managing officer, responsible managing
30manager, responsible managing member, or responsible managing
31employee, or for an asbestos certification or hazardous substance
32removal certification, shall not be more than sixty dollars ($60).

33(c) The fee for scheduling or rescheduling an examination for
34a licensee who is required to take the examination as a condition
35of probation shall not be more than sixty dollars ($60).

36(d) The initial license fee for an active or inactive license shall
37not be more than one hundred eighty dollars ($180).

38(e) The renewal fee for an active license shall not be more than
39three hundred sixty dollars ($360).

P84   1The renewal fee for an inactive license shall not be more than
2one hundred eighty dollars ($180).

3(f) The delinquency fee is an amount equal to 50 percent of the
4renewal fee, if the license is renewed after its expiration.

5(g) The registration fee for a home improvement salesperson
6shall not be more than seventy-five dollars ($75).

7(h) The renewal fee for a home improvement salesperson
8registration shall not be more than seventy-five dollars ($75).

9(i) The application fee for an asbestos certification examination
10shall not be more than seventy-five dollars ($75).

11(j) The application fee for a hazardous substance removal or
12remedial action certification examination shall not be more than
13seventy-five dollars ($75).

14(k) In addition to any other fees charged to C-10 and C-7
15contractors, the board may charge a fee not to exceed twenty dollars
16($20), which shall be used by the board to enforce provisions of
17the Labor Code related to electrician certification.

18(l) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2017, and
19as of January 1, 2018, is repealed.

20

begin deleteSEC. 44.end delete
21
begin insertSEC. 53.end insert  

Section 7137 is added to the Business and Professions
22Code
, to read:

23

7137.  

The board may set fees by regulation. These fees shall
24be set according to the following schedule:

25(a) (1) The application fee for an original license in a single
26classification shall be three hundred thirty dollars ($330) and may
27be increased to not more than three hundred seventy-five dollars
28($375).

29(2) The application fee for each additional classification applied
30for in connection with an original license shall not be more than
31eighty-five dollars ($85).

32(3) The application fee for each additional classification pursuant
33to Section 7059 shall be one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and may
34be increased to not more than one hundred seventy-five dollars
35($175).

36(4) The application fee to replace a responsible managing officer,
37responsible managing manager, responsible managing member,
38or responsible managing employee pursuant to Section 7068.2
39shall be one hundred fifty dollars ($150) and may be increased to
40not more than one hundred seventy-five dollars ($175).

P85   1(5) The application fee to add personnel, other than a qualifying
2individual, to an existing license shall be one hundred dollars
3($100) and may be increased to not more than one hundred fifteen
4dollars ($115).

5(b) The fee for rescheduling an examination for an applicant
6who has applied for an original license, additional classification,
7a change of responsible managing officer, responsible managing
8manager, responsible managing member, or responsible managing
9employee, or for an asbestos certification or hazardous substance
10removal certification, shall not be more than seventy dollars ($70).

11(c) The fee for scheduling or rescheduling an examination for
12a licensee who is required to take the examination as a condition
13of probation shall not be more than seventy dollars ($70).

14(d) The initial license fee for an active or inactive license shall
15be two hundred dollars ($200) and may be increased to not more
16than two hundred twenty-five dollars ($225).

17(e) (1) The renewal fee for an active license shall be four
18hundred dollars ($400) and may be increased to not more than four
19hundred fifty dollars ($450).

20(2) The renewal fee for an inactive license shall be two hundred
21dollars ($200) and may be increased to not more than two hundred
22twenty-five dollars ($225).

23(f) The delinquency fee is an amount equal to 50 percent of the
24renewal fee, if the license is renewed after its expiration.

25(g) The registration fee for a home improvement salesperson
26shall be eighty-three dollars ($83) and may be increased to not
27more than ninety-five dollars ($95).

28(h) The renewal fee for a home improvement salesperson
29registration shall be eighty-three dollars ($83) and may be increased
30to not more than ninety-five dollars ($95).

31(i) The application fee for an asbestos certification examination
32shall be eighty-three dollars ($83) and may be increased to not
33more than ninety-five dollars ($95).

34(j) The application fee for a hazardous substance removal or
35remedial action certification examination shall be eighty-three
36dollars ($83) and may be increased to not more than ninety-five
37dollars ($95).

38(k) In addition to any other fees charged to C-10 and C-7
39contractors, the board may charge a fee not to exceed twenty dollars
P86   1($20), which shall be used by the board to enforce provisions of
2the Labor Code related to electrician certification.

3(l) The board shall, by regulation, establish criteria for the
4approval of expedited processing of applications. Approved
5expedited processing of applications for licensure or registration,
6as required by other provisions of law, shall not be subject to this
7subdivision.

8(m) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2017.

9

begin deleteSEC. 45.end delete
10
begin insertSEC. 54.end insert  

Section 7153.3 of the Business and Professions Code
11 is amended to read:

12

7153.3.  

(a) To renew a home improvement salesperson
13registration, which has not expired, the registrant shall before the
14time at which the registration would otherwise expire, apply for
15renewal on a form prescribed by the registrar and pay a renewal
16fee prescribed by this chapter. Renewal of an unexpired registration
17shall continue the registration in effect for the two-year period
18following the expiration date of the registration, when it shall
19expire if it is not again renewed.

20(b) An application for renewal of registration is delinquent if
21the application is not postmarked or received via electronic
22transmission as authorized by Section 7156.6 by the date on which
23the registration would otherwise expire. A registration may,
24however, still be renewed at any time within three years after its
25expiration upon the filing of an application for renewal on a form
26prescribed by the registrar and the payment of the renewal fee
27prescribed by this chapter and a delinquent renewal penalty in the
28amount of twenty-five dollars ($25). If a registration is not renewed
29within three years, the person shall make a new application for
30registration pursuant to Section 7153.1.

31(c) The registrar may refuse to renew a registration for failure
32by the registrant to complete the application for renewal of
33registration. If a registrant fails to return the application rejected
34for insufficiency or incompleteness within 90 days from the
35original date of rejection, the application and fee shall be deemed
36abandoned. Any application abandoned may not be reinstated.
37However, the person may file a new application for registration
38pursuant to Section 7153.1.

39The registrar may review and accept the petition of a person who
40disputes the abandonment of his or her renewal application upon
P87   1a showing of good cause. This petition shall be received within 90
2days of the date the application for renewal is deemed abandoned.

3(d) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2017, and
4as of January 1, 2018, is repealed.

5

begin deleteSEC. 46.end delete
6
begin insertSEC. 55.end insert  

Section 7153.3 is added to the Business and
7Professions Code
, to read:

8

7153.3.  

(a) To renew a home improvement salesperson
9registration, which has not expired, the registrant shall before the
10time at which the registration would otherwise expire, apply for
11renewal on a form prescribed by the registrar and pay a renewal
12fee prescribed by this chapter. Renewal of an unexpired registration
13shall continue the registration in effect for the two-year period
14following the expiration date of the registration, when it shall
15expire if it is not again renewed.

16(b) An application for renewal of registration is delinquent if
17the application is not postmarked or received via electronic
18transmission as authorized by Section 7156.6 by the date on which
19the registration would otherwise expire. A registration may,
20however, still be renewed at any time within three years after its
21expiration upon the filing of an application for renewal on a form
22prescribed by the registrar and the payment of the renewal fee
23prescribed by this chapter and a delinquent renewal penalty equal
24to 50 percent of the renewal fee. If a registration is not renewed
25within three years, the person shall make a new application for
26registration pursuant to Section 7153.1.

27(c) (1) The registrar may refuse to renew a registration for
28failure by the registrant to complete the application for renewal of
29registration. If a registrant fails to return the application rejected
30for insufficiency or incompleteness within 90 days from the
31original date of rejection, the application and fee shall be deemed
32abandoned. Any application abandoned may not be reinstated.
33However, the person may file a new application for registration
34pursuant to Section 7153.1.

35(2) The registrar may review and accept the petition of a person
36who disputes the abandonment of his or her renewal application
37upon a showing of good cause. This petition shall be received
38within 90 days of the date the application for renewal is deemed
39abandoned.

40(d) This section shall become operative on July 1, 2017.

begin delete
P88   1

SEC. 47.  

Section 8031 of the Business and Professions Code
2 is amended to read:

3

8031.  

The amount of the fees required by this chapter is that
4fixed by the board in accordance with the following schedule:

5(a) The fee for filing an application for each examination shall
6be no more than forty dollars ($40).

7(b) The fee for examination and reexamination for the written
8or practical part of the examination shall be in an amount fixed by
9the board, which shall be equal to the actual cost of preparing,
10administering, grading, and analyzing the examination, but shall
11not exceed seventy-five dollars ($75) for each separate part, for
12each administration.

13(c) The initial certificate fee is an amount equal to the renewal
14fee in effect on the last regular renewal date before the date on
15which the certificate is issued, except that, if the certificate will
16expire less than 180 days after its issuance, then the fee is 50
17percent of the renewal fee in effect on the last regular renewal date
18before the date on which the certificate is issued, or fifty dollars
19($50), whichever is greater. The board may, by appropriate
20regulation, provide for the waiver or refund of the initial certificate
21fee where the certificate is issued less than 45 days before the date
22on which it will expire.

23(d) By a resolution adopted by the board, a renewal fee may be
24established in such amounts and at such times as the board may
25deem appropriate to meet its operational expenses and funding
26responsibilities as set forth in this chapter. The renewal fee shall
27not be more than two hundred fifty dollars ($250) nor less than
28ten dollars ($10) annually, with the following exception:

29Any person who is employed full time by the State of California
30as a hearing reporter and who does not otherwise render shorthand
31reporting services for a fee shall be exempt from licensure while
32in state employment and shall not be subject to the renewal fee
33provisions of this subdivision until 30 days after leaving state
34employment. The renewal fee shall, in addition to the amount fixed
35by this subdivision, include any unpaid fees required by this section
36plus any delinquency fee.

37(e) The duplicate certificate fee shall be no greater than ten
38dollars ($10).

P89   1(f) The penalty for failure to notify the board of a change of
2name or address as required by Section 8024.6 shall be no greater
3than fifty dollars ($50).

end delete
4

begin deleteSEC. 48.end delete
5
begin insertSEC. 56.end insert  

Section 8516 of the Business and Professions Code
6 is amended to read:

7

8516.  

(a) This section, and Section 8519, apply only to wood
8destroying pests or organisms.

9(b) A registered company or licensee shall not commence work
10on a contract, or sign, issue, or deliver any documents expressing
11an opinion or statement relating to the absence or presence of wood
12destroying pests or organisms until an inspection has been made
13by a licensed Branch 3 field representative or operator employed
14by a registered company, except as provided in Section 8519.5.
15The address of each property inspected or upon which work is
16completed shall be reported on a form prescribed by the board and
17shall be filed with the board no later than 10 business days after
18the commencement of an inspection or upon completed work.

19Every property inspected pursuant to this subdivision or Section
208518 shall be assessed a filing fee pursuant to Section 8674.

21Failure of a registered company to report and file with the board
22the address of any property inspected or work completed pursuant
23to Section 8518 or this section is grounds for disciplinary action
24and shall subject the registered company to a fine of not more than
25two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500). The address of an
26inspection report prepared for use by an attorney for litigation
27purposes shall not be required to be reported to the board and shall
28not be assessed a filing fee.

29A written inspection report conforming to this section and a form
30approved by the board shall be prepared and delivered to the person
31requesting the inspection and the property owner, or to the property
32owner’s designated agent, within 10 business days from the start
33of the inspection, except that an inspection report prepared for use
34by an attorney for litigation purposes is not required to be reported
35to the board or the property owner. An inspection report may be
36a complete, limited, supplemental, or reinspection report, as defined
37by Section 1993 of Title 16 of the California Code of Regulations.
38The report shall be delivered before work is commenced on any
39property. The registered company shall retain for three years all
40inspection reports, field notes, and activity forms.

P90   1Reports shall be made available for inspection and reproduction
2to the executive officer of the board or his or her duly authorized
3representative during business hours. All inspection reports or
4copies thereof shall be submitted to the board upon demand within
5two business days. The following shall be set forth in the report:

6(1) The start date of the inspection and the name of the licensed
7field representative or operator making the inspection.

8(2) The name and address of the person or firm ordering the
9report.

10(3) The name and address of the property owner and any person
11who is a party in interest.

12(4) The address or location of the property.

13(5) A general description of the building or premises inspected.

14(6) A foundation diagram or sketch of the structure or structures
15or portions of the structure or structures inspected, including the
16approximate location of any infested or infected areas evident, and
17the parts of the structure where conditions that would ordinarily
18subject those parts to attack by wood destroying pests or organisms
19exist. Reporting of the infested or infected wood members, or parts
20of the structure identified, shall be listed in the inspection report
21to clearly identify them, as is typical in standard construction
22components, including, but not limited to, siding, studs, rafters,
23floor joists, fascia, subfloor, sheathing, and trim boards.

24(7) Information regarding the substructure, foundation walls
25and footings, porches, patios and steps, air vents, abutments, attic
26spaces, roof framing that includes the eaves, rafters, fascias,
27exposed timbers, exposed sheathing, ceiling joists, and attic walls,
28or other parts subject to attack by wood destroying pests or
29organisms. Conditions usually deemed likely to lead to infestation
30or infection, such as earth-wood contacts, excessive cellulose
31debris, faulty grade levels, excessive moisture conditions, evidence
32of roof leaks, and insufficient ventilation are to be reported.

33(8) One of the following statements, as appropriate, printed in
34bold type:

35(A) The exterior surface of the roof was not inspected. If you
36want the water tightness of the roof determined, you should contact
37a roofing contractor who is licensed by the Contractors’ State
38License Board.

39(B) The exterior surface of the roof was inspected to determine
40 whether or not wood destroying pests or organisms are present.

P91   1(9) Indication or description of any areas that are inaccessible
2or not inspected with recommendation for further inspection if
3practicable. If, after the report has been made in compliance with
4this section, authority is given later to open inaccessible areas, a
5supplemental report on conditions in these areas shall be made.

6(10) Recommendations for corrective measures.

7(11) Information regarding the pesticide or pesticides to be used
8for their control or prevention as set forth in subdivision (a) of
9Section 8538.

10(12) The inspection report shall clearly disclose that if requested
11by the person ordering the original report, a reinspection of the
12structure will be performed if an estimate or bid for making repairs
13was given with the original inspection report, or thereafter.

14An estimate or bid shall be given separately allocating the costs
15to perform each and every recommendation for corrective measures
16as specified in subdivision (c) with the original inspection report
17if the person who ordered the original inspection report so requests,
18and if the registered company is regularly in the business of
19performing each corrective measure.

20If no estimate or bid was given with the original inspection
21report, or thereafter, then the registered company shall not be
22required to perform a reinspection.

23A reinspection shall be an inspection of those items previously
24listed on an original report to determine if the recommendations
25have been completed. Each reinspection shall be reported on an
26original inspection report form and shall be labeled “Reinspection.”
27Each reinspection shall also identify the original report by date.

28After four months from an original inspection, all inspections
29shall be original inspections and not reinspections.

30Any reinspection shall be performed for not more than the price
31of the registered company’s original inspection price and shall be
32completed within 10 business days after a reinspection has been
33ordered.

34(13) The inspection report shall contain the following statement,
35printed in boldface type:


37“NOTICE: Reports on this structure prepared by various
38registered companies should list the same findings (i.e. termite
39infestations, termite damage, fungus damage, etc.). However,
40recommendations to correct these findings may vary from company
P92   1to company. You have a right to seek a second opinion from
2another company.”


4(c) At the time a report is ordered, the registered company or
5licensee shall inform the person or entity ordering the report, that
6a separate report is available pursuant to this subdivision. If a
7separate report is requested at the time the inspection report is
8ordered, the registered company or licensee shall separately identify
9on the report each recommendation for corrective measures as
10follows:

11(1) The infestation or infection that is evident.

12(2) The conditions that are present that are deemed likely to
13lead to infestation or infection.

14If a registered company or licensee fails to inform as required
15by this subdivision and a dispute arises, or if any other dispute
16arises as to whether this subdivision has been complied with, a
17separate report shall be provided within 24 hours of the request
18but, in no event, later than the next business day, and at no
19additional cost.

20(d) When a corrective condition is identified, either as paragraph
21(1) or (2) of subdivision (c), and the property owner or the property
22owner’s designated agent chooses not to correct those conditions,
23the registered company or licensee shall not be liable for damages
24resulting from a failure to correct those conditions or subject to
25any disciplinary action by the board. Nothing in this subdivision,
26however, shall relieve a registered company or a licensee of any
27liability resulting from negligence, fraud, dishonest dealing, other
28violations pursuant to this chapter, or contractual obligations
29between the registered company or licensee and the responsible
30parties.

31(e) The inspection report form prescribed by the board shall
32separately identify the infestation or infection that is evident and
33the conditions that are present that are deemed likely to lead to
34infestation or infection. If a separate form is requested, the form
35shall explain the infestation or infection that is evident and the
36conditions that are present that are deemed likely to lead to
37infestation or infection and the difference between those conditions.
38In no event, however, shall conditions deemed likely to lead to
39infestation or infection be characterized as actual “defects” or as
40actual “active” infestations or infections or in need of correction
P93   1as a precondition to issuing a certification pursuant to Section
28519.

3(f) The report and any contract entered into shall also state
4specifically when any guarantee for the work is made, and if so,
5the specific terms of the guarantee and the period of time for which
6the guarantee shall be in effect. If a guarantee extends beyond three
7years, the registered company shall maintain all original inspection
8reports, field notes, activity forms, and notices of completion for
9the duration of the guarantee period and for one year after the
10guarantee expires.

11(g) For purposes of this section, “control service agreement”
12means an agreement, including extended warranties, to have a
13licensee conduct over a period of time regular inspections and
14other activities related to the control or eradication of wood
15destroying pests and organisms. Under a control service agreement
16a registered company shall refer to the original report and contract
17in a manner as to identify them clearly, and the report shall be
18assumed to be a true report of conditions as originally issued,
19except it may be modified after a control service inspection. A
20registered company is not required to issue a report as outlined in
21paragraphs (1) to (11), inclusive, of subdivision (b) after each
22control service inspection. If after control service inspection, no
23modification of the original report is made in writing, then it will
24be assumed that conditions are as originally reported. A control
25service contract shall state specifically the particular wood
26destroying pests or organisms and the portions of the buildings or
27structures covered by the contract.

28(h) A registered company or licensee may enter into and
29maintain a control service agreement provided the following
30requirements are met:

31(1) The control service agreement shall be in writing, signed by
32both parties, and shall specifically include the following:

33(A) The wood destroying pests and organisms covered by the
34control service agreement.

35(B) Any wood destroying pest or organism that is not covered
36must be specifically listed.

37(C) The type and manner of treatment to be used to correct the
38infestations or infections.

39(D) The structures or buildings, or portions thereof, covered by
40the agreement, including a statement specifying whether the
P94   1coverage for purposes of periodic inspections is limited or full.
2Any exclusions from those described in the original report must
3be specifically listed.

4(E) A reference to the original inspection report.

5(F) The frequency of the inspections to be provided, the fee to
6be charged for each renewal, and the duration of the agreement.

7(G) Whether the fee includes structural repairs.

8(H) If the services provided are guaranteed, and, if so, the terms
9of the guarantee.

10(I) A statement that all corrections of infestations or infections
11covered by the control service agreement shall be completed within
12six months of discovery, unless otherwise agreed to in writing by
13both parties.

14(2) The original inspection report, the control service agreement,
15and completion report shall be maintained for three years after the
16cancellation of the control service agreement.

17(3) Inspections made pursuant to a control service agreement
18shall be conducted by a Branch 3 licensee. Section 8506.1 does
19not modify this provision.

20(4) A full inspection of the property covered by the control
21service agreement shall be conducted and a report filed pursuant
22to subdivision (b) at least once every three years from the date that
23the agreement was entered into, unless the consumer cancels the
24contract within three years from the date the agreement was entered
25into.

26(5) Under a control service agreement, a written report shall be
27required for the correction of any infestation or infection unless
28all of the following conditions are met:

29(A) The infestation or infection has been previously reported.

30(B) The infestation or infection is covered by the control service
31agreement.

32(C) There is no additional charge for correcting the infestation
33or infection.

34(D) Correction of the infestation or infection takes place within
3545 days of its discovery.

36(E) Correction of the infestation or infection does not include
37fumigation.

38(6) All notice requirements pursuant to Section 8538 shall apply
39to all pesticide treatments conducted under control service
40agreements.

P95   1(i) All work recommended by a registered company, where an
2estimate or bid for making repairs was given with the original
3inspection report, or thereafter, shall be recorded on this report or
4a separate work agreement and shall specify a price for each
5recommendation. This information shall be provided to the person
6requesting the inspection, and shall be retained by the registered
7company with the inspection report copy for three years.

8

begin deleteSEC. 49.end delete
9
begin insertSEC. 57.end insert  

Section 8518 of the Business and Professions Code
10 is amended to read:

11

8518.  

(a) When a registered company completes work under
12a contract, it shall prepare, on a form prescribed by the board, a
13notice of work completed and not completed, and shall furnish
14that notice to the owner of the property or the owner’s agent within
1510 business days after completing the work. The notice shall
16include a statement of the cost of the completed work and estimated
17cost of work not completed.

18(b) The address of each property inspected or upon which work
19was completed shall be reported on a form prescribed by the board
20and shall be filed with the board no later than 10 business days
21after completed work.

22(c) A filing fee shall be assessed pursuant to Section 8674 for
23every property upon which work is completed.

24(d) Failure of a registered company to report and file with the
25board the address of any property upon which work was completed
26pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 8516 or this section is
27grounds for disciplinary action and shall subject the registered
28company to a fine of not more than two thousand five hundred
29dollars ($2,500).

30(e) The registered company shall retain for three years all
31original notices of work completed, work not completed, and
32activity forms.

33(f) Notices of work completed and not completed shall be made
34available for inspection and reproduction to the executive officer
35of the board or his or her duly authorized representative during
36business hours. Original notices of work completed or not
37completed or copies thereof shall be submitted to the board upon
38request within two business days.

39(g) This section shall only apply to work relating to wood
40destroying pests or organisms.

P96   1

begin deleteSEC. 50.end delete
2
begin insertSEC. 58.end insert  

Section 13401 of the Corporations Code is amended
3to read:

4

13401.  

As used in this part:

5(a) “Professional services” means any type of professional
6services that may be lawfully rendered only pursuant to a license,
7certification, or registration authorized by the Business and
8Professions Code, the Chiropractic Act, or the Osteopathic Act.

9(b) “Professional corporation” means a corporation organized
10under the General Corporation Law or pursuant to subdivision (b)
11of Section 13406 that is engaged in rendering professional services
12in a single profession, except as otherwise authorized in Section
1313401.5, pursuant to a certificate of registration issued by the
14governmental agency regulating the profession as herein provided
15and that in its practice or business designates itself as a professional
16or other corporation as may be required by statute. However, any
17professional corporation or foreign professional corporation
18rendering professional services by persons duly licensed by the
19Medical Board of California, the California Board of Podiatric
20Medicine, the Osteopathic Medical Board of California, the Dental
21Board of California, the Dental Hygiene Committee of California,
22the California State Board of Pharmacy, the Veterinary Medical
23Board, the California Architects Board, the Court Reporters Board
24of California, the Board of Behavioral Sciences, the
25Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Board, the Board of
26Registered Nursing, or the State Board of Optometry shall not be
27required to obtain a certificate of registration in order to render
28those professional services.

29(c) “Foreign professional corporation” means a corporation
30organized under the laws of a state of the United States other than
31this state that is engaged in a profession of a type for which there
32is authorization in the Business and Professions Code for the
33performance of professional services by a foreign professional
34corporation.

35(d) “Licensed person” means any natural person who is duly
36licensed under the provisions of the Business and Professions
37Code, the Chiropractic Act, or the Osteopathic Act to render the
38same professional services as are or will be rendered by the
39professional corporation or foreign professional corporation of
P97   1which he or she is, or intends to become, an officer, director,
2shareholder, or employee.

3(e) “Disqualified person” means a licensed person who for any
4reason becomes legally disqualified (temporarily or permanently)
5to render the professional services that the particular professional
6corporation or foreign professional corporation of which he or she
7is an officer, director, shareholder, or employee is or was rendering.

8

begin deleteSEC. 51.end delete
9
begin insertSEC. 59.end insert  

Section 1348.8 of the Health and Safety Code is
10amended to read:

11

1348.8.  

(a) A health care service plan that provides, operates,
12or contracts for telephone medical advice services to its enrollees
13and subscribers shall do all of the following:

14(1) Ensure that the in-state or out-of-state telephone medical
15advice service complies with the requirements of Chapter 15
16(commencing with Section 4999) of Division 2 of the Business
17and Professions Code.

18(2) Ensure that the staff providing telephone medical advice
19services for the in-state or out-of-state telephone medical advice
20service are licensed as follows:

21(A) For full service health care service plans, the staff hold a
22valid California license as a registered nurse or a valid license in
23the state within which they provide telephone medical advice
24services as a physician and surgeon or physician assistant, and are
25operating in compliance with the laws governing their respective
26scopes of practice.

27(B) (i) For specialized health care service plans providing,
28operating, or contracting with a telephone medical advice service
29in California, the staff shall be appropriately licensed, registered,
30or certified as a dentist pursuant to Chapter 4 (commencing with
31Section 1600) of Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code,
32as a dental hygienist pursuant to Article 7 (commencing with
33Section 1740) of Chapter 4 of Division 2 of the Business and
34Professions Code, as a physician and surgeon pursuant to Chapter
355 (commencing with Section 2000) of Division 2 of the Business
36and Professions Code or the Osteopathic Initiative Act, as a
37registered nurse pursuant to Chapter 6 (commencing with Section
382700) of Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code, as a
39psychologist pursuant to Chapter 6.6 (commencing with Section
402900) of Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code, as an
P98   1optometrist pursuant to Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 3000)
2of Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code, as a marriage
3and family therapist pursuant to Chapter 13 (commencing with
4Section 4980) of Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code,
5as a licensed clinical social worker pursuant to Chapter 14
6(commencing with Section 4991) of Division 2 of the Business
7and Professions Code, as a professional clinical counselor pursuant
8to Chapter 16 (commencing with Section 4999.10) of Division 2
9of the Business and Professions Code, or as a chiropractor pursuant
10to the Chiropractic Initiative Act, and operating in compliance
11with the laws governing their respective scopes of practice.

12(ii) For specialized health care service plans providing,
13operating, or contracting with an out-of-state telephone medical
14advice service, the staff shall be health care professionals, as
15identified in clause (i), who are licensed, registered, or certified
16in the state within which they are providing the telephone medical
17advice services and are operating in compliance with the laws
18governing their respective scopes of practice. All registered nurses
19providing telephone medical advice services to both in-state and
20out-of-state business entities registered pursuant to this chapter
21shall be licensed pursuant to Chapter 6 (commencing with Section
222700) of Division 2 of the Business and Professions Code.

23(3) Ensure that every full service health care service plan
24provides for a physician and surgeon who is available on an on-call
25basis at all times the service is advertised to be available to
26enrollees and subscribers.

27(4) Ensure that staff members handling enrollee or subscriber
28calls, who are not licensed, certified, or registered as required by
29paragraph (2), do not provide telephone medical advice. Those
30staff members may ask questions on behalf of a staff member who
31is licensed, certified, or registered as required by paragraph (2),
32in order to help ascertain the condition of an enrollee or subscriber
33so that the enrollee or subscriber can be referred to licensed staff.
34However, under no circumstances shall those staff members use
35the answers to those questions in an attempt to assess, evaluate,
36advise, or make any decision regarding the condition of an enrollee
37or subscriber or determine when an enrollee or subscriber needs
38to be seen by a licensed medical professional.

39(5) Ensure that no staff member uses a title or designation when
40speaking to an enrollee or subscriber that may cause a reasonable
P99   1person to believe that the staff member is a licensed, certified, or
2registered professional described in Section 4999.2 of the Business
3and Professions Code unless the staff member is a licensed,
4certified, or registered professional.

5(6) Ensure that the in-state or out-of-state telephone medical
6advice service designates an agent for service of process in
7California and files this designation with the director.

8(7) Require that the in-state or out-of-state telephone medical
9advice service makes and maintains records for a period of five
10years after the telephone medical advice services are provided,
11including, but not limited to, oral or written transcripts of all
12medical advice conversations with the health care service plan’s
13enrollees or subscribers in California and copies of all complaints.
14If the records of telephone medical advice services are kept out of
15state, the health care service plan shall, upon the request of the
16director, provide the records to the director within 10 days of the
17request.

18(8) Ensure that the telephone medical advice services are
19provided consistent with good professional practice.

20(b) The director shall forward to the Department of Consumer
21Affairs, within 30 days of the end of each calendar quarter, data
22regarding complaints filed with the department concerning
23telephone medical advice services.

24(c) For purposes of this section, “telephone medical advice”
25means a telephonic communication between a patient and a health
26care professional in which the health care professional’s primary
27function is to provide to the patient a telephonic response to the
28patient’s questions regarding his or her or a family member’s
29medical care or treatment. “Telephone medical advice” includes
30assessment, evaluation, or advice provided to patients or their
31family members.

32

begin deleteSEC. 52.end delete
33
begin insertSEC. 60.end insert  

Section 10279 of the Insurance Code is amended to
34read:

35

10279.  

(a) Every disability insurer that provides group or
36individual policies of disability, or both, that provides, operates,
37or contracts for, telephone medical advice services to its insureds
38shall do all of the following:

39(1) Ensure that the in-state or out-of-state telephone medical
40advice service complies with the requirements of Chapter 15
P100  1(commencing with Section 4999) of Division 2 of the Business
2and Professions Code.

3(2) Ensure that the staff providing telephone medical advice
4services for the in-state or out-of-state telephone medical advice
5service hold a valid California license as a registered nurse or a
6valid license in the state within which they provide telephone
7medical advice services as a physician and surgeon or physician
8assistant and are operating consistent with the laws governing their
9respective scopes of practice.

10(3) Ensure that a physician and surgeon is available on an on-call
11basis at all times the service is advertised to be available to
12enrollees and subscribers.

13(4) Ensure that the in-state or out-of-state telephone medical
14advice service designates an agent for service of process in
15California and files this designation with the commissioner.

16(5) Require that the in-state or out-of-state telephone medical
17advice service makes and maintains records for a period of five
18 years after the telephone medical advice services are provided,
19including, but not limited to, oral or written transcripts of all
20medical advice conversations with the disability insurer’s insureds
21in California and copies of all complaints. If the records of
22telephone medical advice services are kept out of state, the insurer
23shall, upon the request of the director, provide the records to the
24director within 10 days of the request.

25(6) Ensure that the telephone medical advice services are
26provided consistent with good professional practice.

27(b) The commissioner shall forward to the Department of
28Consumer Affairs, within 30 days of the end of each calendar
29quarter, data regarding complaints filed with the department
30concerning telephone medical advice services.

31

begin deleteSEC. 53.end delete
32
begin insertSEC. 61.end insert  

No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
33Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
34the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school
35district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or
36infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty
37for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of
38the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within
P101  1the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California
2Constitution.



O

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