2022 -- H 7270 | |
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LC004225 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2022 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO BUSINESSES AND PROFESSIONS -- OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING | |
REVIEW ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Place, and Chippendale | |
Date Introduced: February 02, 2022 | |
Referred To: House Corporations | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 5 of the General Laws entitled "BUSINESSES AND PROFESSIONS" |
2 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 91 |
4 | OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING REVIEW ACT |
5 | 5-91-1. Title. |
6 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Occupational Licensing Review Act". |
7 | 5-91-2. Purpose. |
8 | It is the purpose of this chapter to establish a policy for the regulation of occupations, |
9 | specifying criteria for government regulation to increase opportunities, promote competition, |
10 | encourage innovation, protect consumers, establish canons of statutory interpretation, and create a |
11 | process to review the criminal history of business owners to reduce offenders' disqualifications. |
12 | 5-91-3. Legislative findings. |
13 | The general assembly finds and it shall be the policy of this state that: |
14 | (1) The right of an individual to pursue a lawful occupation is a fundamental right. |
15 | (2) Where the state finds it is necessary to displace competition, it will use the least |
16 | restrictive regulation to protect consumers from present, significant, and substantiated harms that |
17 | threaten public health and safety. |
18 | (3) Legislative leaders will assign the responsibility to review legislation and laws related |
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1 | to occupational regulations. |
2 | 5-91-4. Definitions. |
3 | As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings: |
4 | (1) "Governmental certification" means a voluntary, government-granted, and non- |
5 | transferable recognition to an individual who meets personal qualifications related to a lawful |
6 | occupation. Upon the government's initial and continuing approval, the individual may use |
7 | "government certified" or "state certified" as a title. A non-certified individual also may perform |
8 | the lawful occupation for compensation, but may not use the terms "government certified" or "state |
9 | certified" as a title. In this chapter, the term "government certified" is not synonymous with |
10 | "occupational license." It is also not intended to include credentials, such as those used for medical- |
11 | board certification or held by a certified public accountant, that are prerequisites to working |
12 | lawfully in an occupation. |
13 | (2) "Government registration" means a requirement to give notice to the government that |
14 | may include the individual's name and address, the individual's agent for service of process, the |
15 | location of the activity to be performed, and a description of the service the individual provides. |
16 | "Government registration" does not include personal qualifications and is not transferable but it |
17 | may require a bond or insurance. Upon the government's receipt of notice, the individual may use |
18 | "government registered" as a title. A non-registered individual may not perform the occupation for |
19 | compensation or use "government registered" as a title. In this chapter, "government registration" |
20 | is not intended to be synonymous with "occupational license." It is also not intended to include |
21 | credentials, such as those held by a registered nurse, which are prerequisites to working lawfully in |
22 | an occupation. |
23 | (3) "Lawful occupation" means a course of conduct, pursuit or profession that includes the |
24 | sale of goods or services that are not themselves illegal to sell, irrespective of whether the individual |
25 | selling them is subject to an occupational regulation or not. |
26 | (4) "Least restrictive regulation" means, from the least to the most restrictive: |
27 | (i) Market competition; |
28 | (ii) Third-party or consumer-created ratings and reviews; |
29 | (iii) Private certification; |
30 | (iv) Voluntary bonding or insurance; |
31 | (v) Specific private civil cause of action to remedy consumer harm; |
32 | (vi) Chapter 13.1 of title 6, "deceptive trade practices"; |
33 | (vii) Mandatory disclosure of attributes of the specific good or service; |
34 | (viii) Regulation of the process of providing the specific good or service; |
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1 | (ix) Regulation of the facility where the specific goods or services are sold; |
2 | (x) Inspection; |
3 | (xi) Bonding; |
4 | (xii) Insurance; |
5 | (xiii) Government registration; |
6 | (xiv) Government certification; |
7 | (xv) Specialty occupational license for medical reimbursement; and |
8 | (xvi) Occupational license. |
9 | (5) "Occupational license" means a lawful non-transferable authorization for an individual |
10 | to perform exclusively a lawful occupation for compensation based on meeting personal |
11 | qualifications established by the general assembly. In an occupation for which a license is required, |
12 | it is illegal for an individual who does not possess a valid occupational license to perform the |
13 | occupation for compensation. |
14 | (6) "Occupational regulation" means a statute, rule, practice, policy, or other state law that |
15 | allows an individual to use an occupational title or work in a lawful occupation. It includes |
16 | government registration, government certification, and occupational license. It excludes a business |
17 | license, facility license, building permit, or zoning and land use regulation, except to the extent |
18 | those state laws regulate an individual's personal qualifications to perform a lawful occupation. |
19 | (7) "Personal qualifications" means criteria that are related to an individual's personal |
20 | background and characteristics. They may include one or more of the following: completion of an |
21 | approved educational program, satisfactory performance on an examination, work experience, |
22 | apprenticeship, other evidence of attainment of requisite knowledge and skills, passing a review of |
23 | the individual's criminal record and completion of continuing education. |
24 | (8) "Private certification" means a voluntary program in which a private organization grants |
25 | non-transferable recognition to an individual who meets personal qualifications and standards |
26 | relevant to performing the occupation as determined by the private organization. The individual |
27 | may use a designated title of "certified," as permitted by the organization. |
28 | (9) "Specialty occupational license for medical reimbursement" means a non-transferable |
29 | authorization in law for an individual to qualify for payment or reimbursement from a government |
30 | agency for the non-exclusive provision of new or niche medical services based on meeting personal |
31 | qualifications established by the general assembly. A private health insurance company or other |
32 | private company may recognize this credential. Notwithstanding this specialty license, it is legal |
33 | for a person regulated under another occupational regulation to provide similar services as defined |
34 | in state law for compensation and reimbursement. It is also legal for an individual who does not |
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1 | possess this specialty license to provide the identified medical services for compensation, but the |
2 | non-licensed individual will not qualify for payment or reimbursement from a government agency. |
3 | 5-91-5. Review of occupational regulations. |
4 | (a) The speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the senate shall assign |
5 | to the small business committee of the house and the labor committee of the senate, hereinafter |
6 | "committees," the responsibility to analyze proposals and legislation to create new occupational |
7 | regulations and/or modify existing occupational regulations. |
8 | (b) The committees shall be responsible for reviewing legislation to enact or modify an |
9 | occupational regulation to ensure compliance with the policies set forth in § 5-91-3. |
10 | (1) The committees shall require proponents to submit evidence of present, significant, and |
11 | substantiated harms to consumers in the state. The committees may also request information from |
12 | state agencies that contract with individuals in regulated occupations and others knowledgeable of |
13 | the occupation, labor-market economics, or other factors, cost and benefits. |
14 | (2) The committees shall determine if the proposed regulation meets the state's policy in § |
15 | 5-91-3 of using the least restrictive regulation necessary to protect consumers from present, |
16 | significant, and substantiated harms. |
17 | (3) The committees' analysis in subsection (b)(2) of this section shall employ a rebuttable |
18 | presumption that consumers are sufficiently protected by market competition and private remedies |
19 | as listed in § 5-91-4(4)(i) through (iv). The committees shall give added consideration to the use of |
20 | private certification programs that allow a provider to give consumers information about the |
21 | provider's knowledge, skills and association with a private certification organization. |
22 | (4) The committees may rebut the presumption in subsection (b)(3) of this section if they |
23 | find both credible, empirical evidence of present, significant, and substantiated harm, and that |
24 | consumers do not have the information and means to protect themselves against such harm. If |
25 | evidence of such unmanageable harm is found, the committees may recommend the least restrictive |
26 | government regulation to address the harm as listed in § 5-91-4(4)(v) through (xvi). |
27 | (5) The committees shall use the following guidelines to form their recommendation in |
28 | subsection (b)(2) of this section. If the harm arises from: |
29 | (i) Contractual disputes, including pricing disputes, the committees may recommend |
30 | enacting a specific civil cause of action in district court to remedy consumer harm. This cause of |
31 | action may provide for reimbursement of attorneys' fees and/or court costs, if a consumer's claim |
32 | is successful; |
33 | (ii) Fraud, if found, the committees may recommend strengthening powers under chapter |
34 | 13.1 of title 6, "deceptive trade practices", or by requiring disclosure that will reduce misleading |
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1 | attributes of the specific good or services; |
2 | (iii) General health and safety risks, the committees may recommend enacting a regulation |
3 | on the related process or requiring a facility license; |
4 | (iv) Unclean facilities, the committees may recommend requiring periodic facility |
5 | inspections; |
6 | (v) A provider's failure to complete a contract fully or to professional standards, the |
7 | committees may recommend requiring the provider to be bonded; |
8 | (vi) A lack of protection for a person who is not a party to a contract between providers |
9 | and consumers, the committees may recommend requiring the provider have insurance; |
10 | (vii) Transactions with transient, out-of-state, or fly-by-night providers, the committees |
11 | may recommend requiring the provider to register its business with the secretary of state; |
12 | (viii) A shortfall or imbalance in the consumer's knowledge about the goods or services |
13 | relative to the provider's knowledge (asymmetrical information), the committees may recommend |
14 | enacting government certification; |
15 | (ix) An inability to qualify providers of new or highly-specialized medical services for |
16 | reimbursement by the state, the committees may recommend enacting a specialty license for |
17 | medical reimbursement; |
18 | (x) A systematic information shortfall in which a reasonable consumer of the goods or |
19 | services is permanently unable to distinguish between the quality of providers and there is an |
20 | absence of institutions that provide guidance to consumers, the committees may recommend |
21 | enacting an occupational license; or |
22 | (xi) The need to address multiple types of harm, the committees may recommend a |
23 | combination of regulations to include, but not be limited to, a government regulation combined |
24 | with a private remedy including third-party or consumer-created ratings and reviews, or private |
25 | certification. |
26 | (6) The committees' analysis of the need for regulation in subsection (b)(3) of this section, |
27 | will include the effects of legislation on opportunities for workers, consumer choices and costs, |
28 | general unemployment, market competition, governmental costs, and other effects. |
29 | (7) The committees' analysis of the need for regulation in subsection (b)(3) of this section, |
30 | shall compare the legislation to determine whether and how other states regulate the occupation, |
31 | including the occupation's scope of practice that other states use, and the personal qualifications |
32 | other states require. |
33 | (8) The committees shall report their findings and recommendations to the initial and other |
34 | subsequent committees that shall consider the legislation. The report shall include |
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1 | recommendations addressing: |
2 | (i) The type of regulation, if any; |
3 | (ii) The requisite personal qualifications, if any; and |
4 | (iii) The scope of practice, if applicable. |
5 | (9) The committees may also comment on whether and how much responsibility the |
6 | legislation delegates to a licensing board to promulgate administrative rules, particularly rules |
7 | relating to establishing the occupation's scope of practice or the personal qualifications required to |
8 | work in the occupation. The comments should make the general assembly aware of exposure to |
9 | antitrust litigation that the legislation may cause because of excessive or ambiguous delegation of |
10 | authority to licensing boards to engage in administrative rulemaking. |
11 | (c) The house of representatives and the senate shall each adopt rules requiring the |
12 | committees considering the legislation to enact or modify an occupational regulation to receive the |
13 | committees' analysis and recommendations in subsection (b) of this section prior to voting on the |
14 | legislation. |
15 | (d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to preempt federal regulation or to require a |
16 | private certification organization to grant or deny private certification to any individual. |
17 | 5-91-6. Analysis of existing occupational licenses. |
18 | (a) Commencing on January 1, 2023, the speaker of the house of representatives and the |
19 | president of the senate shall assign the committees the overall responsibility to analyze existing |
20 | occupational licenses. |
21 | (1) Each relevant standing committee of the legislature is responsible for reviewing |
22 | approximately twenty percent (20%) of the current occupational licenses under the committees' |
23 | jurisdiction per year. The chairpersons of the committees shall select the occupational licenses to |
24 | be reviewed annually. |
25 | (2) Each relevant standing committee of the legislature will review all occupational |
26 | licenses under the committees' jurisdiction within the subsequent five (5) years, and will repeat |
27 | such a review in each five (5) year period thereafter. |
28 | (b) The committees must use the criteria in § 5-91-5(b)(2) through (8) to analyze the |
29 | existing occupational licenses. |
30 | (c) Commencing on January 1, 2024, the committees shall report on an annual basis |
31 | thereafter the findings of their reviews to the speaker of the house of representatives, the president |
32 | of the senate, the governor and the attorney general. In their report, the committees may recommend |
33 | the legislature enact new legislation that: |
34 | (1) Repeals the occupational licenses; |
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1 | (2) Converts the occupational licenses to the least restrictive regulations in § 5-91-4; |
2 | (3) Instructs the relevant licensing board or agency to promulgate revised regulations |
3 | reflecting the legislature's decision to use least restrictive alternatives to occupational licenses; |
4 | (4) Changes the requisite personal qualifications of an occupational license; |
5 | (5) Redefines the scope of practice in an occupational license; or |
6 | (6) Reflects other recommendations to the legislature. |
7 | (d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to preempt federal regulation or authorize the |
8 | committees to review the means that a private certification organization uses to issue, deny or |
9 | revoke a private certification to any individual, or to require a private certification organization to |
10 | grant or deny private certification to any individual. |
11 | 5-91-7. Interpretations of statutes and rules. |
12 | (a) Occupational regulations shall be construed and applied to increase economic |
13 | opportunities, promote competition, and encourage innovation. |
14 | (b) Any ambiguities in occupational regulations will be construed in favor of workers and |
15 | aspiring workers to work. |
16 | (c) The scope of practice in occupational regulations is to be construed narrowly to avoid |
17 | burdening individuals with regulatory requirements that only have an attenuated relationship to the |
18 | goods or services they provide. |
19 | 5-91-8. Review of criminal record. |
20 | (a) The right of an individual to pursue a lawful occupation is a fundamental right. |
21 | (b) Notwithstanding any other law, a board, agency, department or other state agency |
22 | (hereafter "board") shall only utilize § 28-5.1-14 to deny, diminish, suspend, revoke, withhold or |
23 | otherwise limit state recognition because of a criminal conviction. |
24 | 5-91-9. Petition for board determination prior to obtaining personal qualifications. |
25 | (a) An individual with a criminal record may petition a board at any time, including before |
26 | obtaining any requested personal qualifications, for a decision whether the individual's criminal |
27 | record will disqualify them from obtaining state recognition. |
28 | (b) The individual shall include in the petition their criminal record or authorize the board |
29 | to obtain their criminal record. |
30 | (c) The board shall make its decision using the criteria and process in § 5-91-8. |
31 | (d) The board shall issue its decision no later than sixty (60) days after the board receives |
32 | the petition, or no later than ninety (90) days after the board receives the petition if a hearing is |
33 | held. Any decision by the board shall be in writing, and include the criminal record, findings of fact |
34 | and conclusions of law. |
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1 | (e) A decision concluding that the state recognition shall be granted or granted with |
2 | conditions is binding on the board in any later ruling on state recognition of the petitioner, unless |
3 | there is a relevant, material and adverse change in the petitioner's criminal record. |
4 | (f) If the board decides that state recognition should not be granted, the board shall advise |
5 | the petitioner of actions the petitioner may take to remedy the disqualification. |
6 | (g) The petitioner may submit a revised petition reflecting completion of the remedial |
7 | actions set forth in subsection (f) of this section before any deadline, which deadline shall not be |
8 | less than twenty (20) days from the issuance date of the decision, the board may set in its alternative |
9 | advisory decision. |
10 | (h) The petitioner may appeal the board's decision as provided for in chapter 35 of title 42 |
11 | ("administrative procedures act"). |
12 | (i) The petitioner may submit a new petition to the board not less than one year following |
13 | a final judgment on the initial petition, or upon obtaining the required qualifications, whichever is |
14 | earlier. |
15 | (j) The board may charge a fee to the petitioner to recoup its costs not to exceed one |
16 | hundred dollars ($100) for each petition. |
17 | 5-91-10. Reporting requirements. |
18 | (a) The house of representatives and the senate shall establish an annual reporting |
19 | requirement of the committees specifying: |
20 | (1) The number of times that each board acted to deny, diminish, suspend, revoke, withhold |
21 | or otherwise limit state recognition from a licensed individual because of criminal convictions; |
22 | (2) The offenses upon which each board relied in acting to deny, diminish, suspend, revoke, |
23 | withhold or otherwise limit state recognition; |
24 | (3) The numbers of each board's approvals and denials under §§ 5-91-8 and 5-91-9; |
25 | (4) The offenses for which the board approved or denied petitions under §§ 5-91-8 and 5- |
26 | 91-9; and |
27 | (5) Other data which the house of representatives and senate determines as relevant. |
28 | (b) The house of representatives and the senate shall compile and publish annually a report |
29 | on a searchable public website. |
30 | 5-91-11. Limitation. |
31 | Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to require a private certification organization to |
32 | grant or deny private certification to any individual. |
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1 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC004225 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO BUSINESSES AND PROFESSIONS -- OCCUPATIONAL LICENSING | |
REVIEW ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would establish a policy for the regulation of occupations, specifying criteria for |
2 | government regulation to increase opportunities, promote competition, encourage innovation, |
3 | protect consumers, establish canons of statutory interpretation and a process to review the criminal |
4 | history of business owners to reduce offenders' disqualifications. |
5 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC004225 | |
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